Brain heart infusion

Brain heart infusion (BHI) is a growth medium for growing microorganisms. It is a nutrient-rich medium, and can therefore be used to culture a variety of fastidious organisms. In particular, it has been used to culture streptococci, pneumococci and meningococci, which can be otherwise challenging to grow.[1] BHI is made by combining an infusion from boiled bovine or porcine heart and brain with a variety of other nutrients.[2][3] BHI broth is often used in food safety, water safety, and antibiotic sensitivity tests.[3]

Brain heart infusion media made from Difco powdered media

Uses

BHI is broadly used for culturing a variety of microorganisms, both in clinical and research settings.[4] A number of fastidious organisms, including some bacteria, yeasts, and other fungi, grow well on BHI.[5] It can also be used to differentiate between enterococci and group D streptococci.[4]

History

The earliest version of brain heart infusion media was made in 1899 when Edward Rosenow combined dextrose broth with calf brain tissue to grow streptococci. This was modified in 1923 by Russell Haden while working on dental pathogens.[3] Modern BHI typically uses an infusion from porcine brains and hearts rather than calf brain tissue, and uses disodium phosphate as a buffer, rather than the calcium carbonate used by Rosenow and Haden.[1]

Components

BHI typically contains infusion of beef or pig heart as well as calf brain, a source of amino acids (often either digested gelatin or other animal tissue), salt, disodium phosphate as a buffer, and glucose as a source of sugar. Many formulations for BHI agar also exist, in which agar is added as a gelling agent for growing plates of microorganisms.[5]

gollark: Please note that this is the backup Esobot and may not work too well.
gollark: !pingwhen online Moooosey
gollark: nyfb borl zrffntrf eha guebhtu ebg13
gollark: gnigassem lanimilbus yebo
gollark: segassem ruoy lla esrever

See also

  • Lysogeny broth
  • Brain heart infusion broth is very important in extracting antimicrobial metabolites which are isolated bacterial strains from natural samples like soil, water and etc. Because it supports not only non-fastidious but also for fastidious microorganisms.


References

  1. "Brain Heart Infusion Broth (Powder)". US Biological. Archived from the original on 29 March 2014.
  2. "5-1: Bacterial nutrition". Virtual Microbiology Textbook for Microbiology 102. University of Wisconsin. Archived from the original on 2013-05-24.
  3. "Brain-Heart Infusion Broth (7116)" (PDF). Acumedia. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 February 2015.
  4. "BHI (Brain Heart Infusion) Broth, 5 mL". BD. Archived from the original on 4 February 2015.
  5. Atlas RM (2004-05-27). Handbook of Microbiological Media (3 ed.). CRC Press. pp. 237–247. ISBN 9780849318184.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.