How It Is Done
Stool samples can be collected at home,
in your doctor's office, at a medical clinic, or at the hospital. If you
collect the samples at home, you will be given stool collection kits to use
each day. Each kit contains applicator sticks and two sterile
containers.
You may need to collect more than one sample over 1 to
3 days. Follow the same procedure for each day.
Collect the
samples as follows:
- Urinate before collecting the stool so that you
do not get any urine in the stool sample.
- Put on gloves before
handling your stool. Stool can contain material that spreads infection.
Wash
your hands after you remove your gloves.
- Pass stool (but no
urine) into a dry container. You may be given a plastic basin that can be
placed under the toilet seat to catch the stool.
- Either solid or liquid stool can be
collected.
- If you have diarrhea, a large plastic bag taped to the
toilet seat may make the collection process easier; the bag is then placed in a
plastic container.
- If you are constipated, you may be given a small
enema.
- Do not collect the sample from the toilet
bowl.
- Do not mix toilet paper, water, or soap with the sample.
- Place the lid on the container and label it with your name, your
doctor's name, and the date the stool was collected. Use one container for each
day's collection, and collect a sample only once a day unless your doctor gives
you other directions.
Take the sealed container to your doctor's office or the
laboratory as soon as possible. You may need to deliver your sample to the lab
within a certain time. Tell your doctor if you think you may have trouble
getting the sample to the lab on time.
If the stool is collected
in your doctor's office or the hospital, you will pass the stool in a plastic
container that is inserted under the toilet seat or in a bedpan. A health
professional will package the sample for laboratory analysis.
You
will need to collect stool for 3 days in a row if the sample is being tested
for quantitative fats. You will begin collecting stool on the morning of the
first day. The samples are placed in a large container and then
refrigerated.
You may need to collect several stool samples over 7
to 10 days if you have digestive symptoms after traveling outside the
country.
Samples from babies and young children may be collected
from diapers (if the stool is not contaminated with urine) or from a
small-diameter glass tube inserted into the baby's rectum while the baby is
held on an adult's lap.
Sometimes a stool sample is collected
using a rectal swab that contains a preservative. The swab is inserted into the
rectum, rotated gently, and then withdrawn. It is placed in a clean, dry
container and sent to the lab right away.