Miles and Misra method

The Miles and Misra Method (or surface viable count) is a technique used in Microbiology to determine the number of colony forming units in a bacterial suspension or homogenate. The technique was first described in 1938 by Miles, Misra and Irwin who at the time were working at the LSHTM[1]. The Miles and Misra method has been shown to be precise[2].

Materials

Method

CFU per ml = Average number of colonies for a dilution x 50 x dilution factor.

See also

References

  1. ^ Miles, AA; Misra, SS, Irwin, JO (1938 Nov). "The estimation of the bactericidal power of the blood.". The Journal of hygiene 38 (6): 732–49. PMID 20475467. 
  2. ^ Hedges, AJ (2002 Jun 25). "Estimating the precision of serial dilutions and viable bacterial counts.". International journal of food microbiology 76 (3): 207–14. PMID 12051477.