4.6 Article

Using digital photography to implement the McFarland method

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY INTERFACE
Volume 9, Issue 73, Pages 1892-1897

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsif.2011.0809

Keywords

colorimetric imaging analysis; digital photography; McFarland method; charge-coupled device; IMAGEJ

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The McFarland method allows the concentration of bacterial cells in a liquid medium to be determined by either of two instrumental techniques: turbidimetry or nephelometry. The microbes act by absorbing and scattering incident light, so the absorbance (turbidimetry) or light intensity (nephelometry) measured is directly proportional to their concentration in the medium. In this work, we developed a new analytical imaging method for determining the concentration of bacterial cells in liquid media. Digital images of a series of McFarland standards are used to assign turbidity-based colour values with the aid of dedicated software. Such values are proportional to bacterial concentrations, which allow a calibration curve to be readily constructed. This paper assesses the calibration reproducibility of an intra-laboratory study and compares the turbidimetric and nephelometric results with those provided by the proposed method, which is relatively simple and affordable; in fact, it can be implemented with a digital camera and the public domain software IMAGEJ.

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