Ear Culture and Gram Stain




Test Mnemonic

EARCSM

CPT Codes

  • 87070 - QTY (1)
  • 87205 - QTY (1)

LOINC ®

608-0

Performing Laboratory

Cleveland Clinic Laboratories


Specimen Requirements

Volume Type Container Collect Temperature Transport Temperature Special Instructions
UnspecifiedAspirate(s)Sterile salineAmbientAmbient 
UnspecifiedSwab(s)See noteAmbientAmbientDrainage on a swab in either Amies or Stuart's bacterial transport medium.

Minimum Specimen Requirements

Volume Type Container Collect Temperature Transport Temperature Special Instructions
0.1 mL     

Stability

Environmental Condition Description
Ambient24 hours
RefrigeratedUnacceptable
FrozenUnacceptable

Days Performed

Sun - Sat

Turnaround Time

7 days

Methodology

Name Description
Culture, Identification 
Gram Stain 

Reference Range

Special Info

Inner ear: For intact eardrum, clean ear canal with soap solution and collect fluid via syringe aspiration. Submit in sterile container. For ruptured eardrum, collect fluid on flexible shaft swab via an auditory speculum. Outer ear: Use moistened swab to remove any debris or crust from ear canal. Obtain sample by firmly rotating swab in outer canal. For otitis externa, vigorous swabbing is required – surface swabbing may miss streptococcal cellulitis. If culture is positive, identification will be performed on clinically significant organisms at an additional charge. Identification CPT codes that may apply include: 87077, 87106, 87107, 87153, 87158. Antimicrobial susceptibilities are performed when indicated, and the following CPT codes may apply: 87181, 87184, 87185, 87186.

Clinical Info

Otitis media can usually be diagnosed and treated without culture. Tympanocentesis should be reserved for complicated, recurrent, or chronic persistent otitis media. Respiratory viruses, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae and Moraxella catarrhalis are the most common organisms causing acute otitis media. Chronic external otitis is often due to seborrhea. The primary etiology of necrotizing otitis externa infection is Pseudomonas aeruginosa.