Introduction
Table of Contents
Sabouraud Dextrose Agar (SDA) is a commonly used culture medium in clinical mycology laboratories for the isolation of fungi, particularly yeasts and molds. Due to its acidic pH and high dextrose concentration, SDA favors fungal growth; however, bacteria and yeasts may also grow, especially when antibiotics are not incorporated or when resistant bacteria are present. The wet mount technique provides a rapid, inexpensive, and preliminary method to differentiate bacterial colonies from yeast colonies directly from SDA cultures before proceeding to definitive identification.
Principle
The wet mount technique is based on direct microscopic observation of microbial morphology in a liquid medium. A small portion of the colony is emulsified in sterile saline or distilled water and examined under a light microscope.

- Yeasts appear as larger, oval to round cells, often showing budding or pseudohyphae.
- Bacteria appear as much smaller cocci or bacilli, without budding structures.

This immediate visualization allows preliminary differentiation between bacterial contamination and true yeast growth on SDA.
Procedure (Wet Mount from SDA Colony)

- Place a drop of sterile normal saline or distilled water on a clean glass slide.
- Using a sterile loop or needle, gently pick a small portion of the isolated colony from the SDA plate.
- Emulsify the colony in the saline drop to make a thin suspension.
- Cover with a clean coverslip, avoiding air bubbles.
- Examine microscopically under a 10× objective for scanning and a 40× objective for detailed morphology.
Microscopic Findings
Yeast Cells

- Oval or round cells (3–6 µm)
- Budding yeast cells are commonly observed
- May show pseudohyphae in some species
- Uniform cell size and clear cell walls
Bacterial Cells

- Very small cocci or bacilli
- No budding or hyphal structures
- Seen singly, in chains, clusters, or rods
- Motility may be observed in saline mounts for some bacteria.
Interpretation
- Budding oval cells → Suggestive of yeast (e.g., Candida species)
- Tiny non-budding cocci or rods → Indicates bacterial contamination
- Presence of both morphologies → Mixed growth on SDA
- Wet mount findings should always be considered presumptive and correlated with culture characteristics and further tests.
Further Confirmatory Tests
For Yeasts:
- Gram stain (Gram-positive budding yeasts)
- Germ tube test
- CHROMagar Candida
- Cornmeal agar morphology
- Sugar assimilation/fermentation tests
- MALDI-TOF MS or molecular methods (PCR, sequencing)
For Bacteria:
- Gram stain
- Subculture on Blood agar or MacConkey agar
- Biochemical identification tests
Applications
- Rapid screening of SDA cultures
- Early detection of bacterial contamination in fungal cultures
- Preliminary differentiation between yeasts and bacteria
- Useful in resource-limited laboratories
- Guides the appropriate selection of confirmatory tests
Keynotes
- SDA primarily supports fungal growth, but may allow bacteria.
- Wet mount is a simple, rapid, and cost-effective technique.
- Budding is the key microscopic feature of yeasts.
- Results are preliminary and presumptive.
- Always confirm findings with staining and culture-based methods.