 Todd Deppe, DVM, DACVIM
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I frequently notice a disparity between referred patients' in-house urinalysis results and laboratory-read urinalysis results.
Cocci are frequently identified in the in-house examinations but subsequent urinalysis and culture at a laboratory often show
no evidence of bacteria. I believe this disparity occurs because tiny particles of debris, crystals, and fat droplets with
brownian movement (spontaneous movement under the microscope) are misidentified as bacteria during in-house evaluations. These
particles are especially prevalent in free-catch samples but can also be present in samples obtained by catheterization or
cystocentesis.
All elements visible in the 10X field (e.g. casts, large cells) and most larger elements in the 40X field (smaller cells, most crystals, most fat droplets) can be differentiated
from bacteria by size. However, I, too, often can't distinguish between cocci and other small particles. And using new methylene
blue as a wet-mount stain doesn't help me because stain particles mimic cocci bacteria. To confidently differentiate between
cocci and other particles, I dry a wet-mount sediment sample and stain it with a modified Wright's stain or Gram stain. Cocci
reliably stain this way and are easy to distinguish from other nonstaining particles. Make sure to periodically check your
stains, however, as these can be contaminated with bacteria and lead you to an erroneous diagnosis of bacteriuria.
Todd Deppe, DVM, DACVIM (internal medicine)
Veterinary Medical and Surgical Group
2199 Sperry Ave.
Ventura, CA 93003