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Why Many Urologists Rely on MicroGen DX to Diagnose Infections 6 лет назад


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Why Many Urologists Rely on MicroGen DX to Diagnose Infections

MicroGenDX.com Dr. Timothy Hlavinka: As a urologist, I could say that there is probably near incontinence when I heard how exciting this technology was. Dr. Timothy Hlavinka: For the majority of patients that I see with my complex urology practice, traditional antimicrobial cultured testing and sensitivity has just failed to show me what I need. Dr. Ginger Ison-Batz: But there were certainly a lot of times that we were pretty convinced somebody had some type of infection in their bladder and the tests were coming up negative. Dr. Roscoe Nelson: You'd know they were infected or you'd think they were infected and you treat them as if they were infected, but you didn't have the evidence to back it up. Dr. Michael Hayyeri: As a result, all we have available is just antibiotics. We can presume it's infection and here's some antibiotics. Dr. Margarita Johnston: Sometimes 10, 15 rounds of antibiotics, usually one after the other. Dr. Nabell Syed: You can imagine some women who's came here already, who's been treated with three or four different antibiotics, who's frustrated because she's had this for months at a time. They want a diagnosis accurately, they want it fast, and they want to get treated quickly. Dr. Timothy Hlavinka: The chronic patient for whom there have been no other answers in multiple referrals by different doctors, that's a critical aspect of the Next-Gen sequencing. Dr. Roscoe Nelson: I had a patient showed up to me from his primary care doctor with a results from the MicroGen test. I looked at it, I had no idea what it was. I made a phone call because I thought this is revolutionary. Dr. Ginger Ison-Batz: If somebody's having a lot of symptoms and they're really uncomfortable then we will go ahead and start treatment just based on the PCR. Dr. Margarity Johnston: The PCR is nice and fast. If that is positive and it's clear and there is a sensitivity, I will start with that. But sometimes I will still wait for the MicroGen because sometimes they'll pick up other bacteria that the PCR didn't. Dr. Michael Hayyeri: There are some unusual bacteria that sometimes happen that you don't expect that initially don't get on PCR. Dr. Roscoe Nelson: If there are mutations, it may show up negative. There've been a handful of cases where the PCR for what I'm testing for shows up negative but it still shows up as the predominant organism on the genetic testing. Dr. Michael Hayyeri: Once the sequencing is done, it's much more accurate and much more precise. Dr. Roscoe Nelson: You're checking your PCRs on these standard things that you think you might find but then the Next-Gen Sequencing just gives you the answer. It's almost like cheating. Dr. Timothy Hlavinka: I was a little skeptical at first to see what this would bring. What I was surprised so quickly after starting the therapy was not how many negatives there were but how many positives there were. In fact, how few negatives there were. Dr. Michael Hayyeri: Small microorganisms that I wouldn't even think about, that I didn't even know about. Dr. Ginger Ison-Batz: They're picking up on some things that maybe you've never heard of. I will look up the organisms, try to get some data about them, see if they've ever been found in the urinary tract or the genital tract. Dr. Roscoe Nelson: The Next-Gen Sequencing doesn't care what you order. It looks at all the DNA and says, "Here's what you have." It compares it to a huge panel of bacteria and fungus and says, "This is what we found from a DNA standpoint. This is what's there." Dr. Nabell Syed: As far as figuring out the correct antibiotic for the patient, it's like a key in a lock. You have to have an appropriate antibiotic for the specific organism that you have. The advantage to MicroGen is that it gives us the right key. Dr. Timothy Hlavinka: You can see that "Okay, this made a difference." This really found what was there and treated it. Dr. Ginger Ison-Batz: I definitely have had a good number of patients who have shown improvement when we finally found something to treat. Dr. Timothy Hlavinka: They just rolled their eyes when they've been six months without an infection. They're waiting for the next wave to hit them. Guess what, the next wave hasn't hit them. Dr. Roscoe Nelson: With this test, you got to be the hero a lot of times. Now, we come in and we say, "Look, this is what you have." Dr. Timothy Hlavinka: MicroGen and your company is the best thing that's happened in this space and as long as I've been in my career. You need to know about this technology and you need to know about it yesterday. I talked to my colleagues about MicroGen, I say, "This has revolutionized my practice, it will revolutionize your practice."

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