A
fluorescent compound is embedded in
silicone on the bottom of 16 × 100 mm round bottom tubes. The fluorescent compound is sensitive to the presence of
oxygen dissolved in the broth. Initially, the large amount of dissolved oxygen quenches emissions from the compound and little fluorescence can be detected. Later, actively respiring
microorganisms consume the oxygen and allow the fluorescence to be detected. Tubes are filled with samples in the broth and continuously
incubated at 37 °C. The tubes are monitored for increasing fluorescence to determine if the tube is instrument positive; i.e., the test sample contains viable organisms. Fluorescence can be recorded by automated instruments such as
Becton Dickinson's BACTEC MGIT 960 System, or manually using the BD BACTEC microMGIT fluorescence reader or a
Wood's lamp or other long-wave
UV light source. ==Instruments==