Semmelweis and Lister pioneered practices like hand washing with chlorinated lime and aseptic surgery techniques in the mid-1800s, which helped significantly reduce nosocomial infection rates during medical procedures. The document then discusses key terms related to microbial control like sterilization, disinfection, antisepsis and asepsis. It also outlines various physical and chemical methods used for microbial control, highlighting techniques like moist heat sterilization using autoclaving, dry heat sterilization, filtration and radiation.
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6 Microbial Control
Semmelweis and Lister pioneered practices like hand washing with chlorinated lime and aseptic surgery techniques in the mid-1800s, which helped significantly reduce nosocomial infection rates during medical procedures. The document then discusses key terms related to microbial control like sterilization, disinfection, antisepsis and asepsis. It also outlines various physical and chemical methods used for microbial control, highlighting techniques like moist heat sterilization using autoclaving, dry heat sterilization, filtration and radiation.
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Laboratory of Microbiology
Medical Faculty UB 2010
Mid-1800s Ignatz Semmelweis (Hungarian physician) & Joseph Lister (English physician) thought to develop some microbial control practices for medical procedures hand washing with chlorine of lime (CaCl2) and aseptic surgery techniques to prevent microbial contamination of surgical wounds the nosocomial infection be decreased (until that time, 10% death of surgical cases and 25% death of delivering mother) LEARNING OBJ ECTIVES
1. DESCRIBE THE BENEFITS of CONTROL OF THE MICROBIAL GROWTH 2. DEFINE THE KEY TERMS RELATED TO MICROBIAL CONTROL 3. DESCRIBE THE CONDITIONS INFLUENCING THE MICROBIAL CONTROL 4. DESCRIBE THE METHODS OF MICROBIAL CONTROL
Clinical application: to prevent the spread of infection in population or hospital
Microbiology Laboratory: to prevent microbial contamination of appliance and culture medium from the microbe which we do not wish Industrial product: to prevent the decomposition of drugs, foods or to sterilize medical appliance
Why we learn the control of microbial growth ? PRINCIPLES OF MICROBIAL CONTROL The key terms related to microbial control: sterilization, disinfection, antisepsis, asepsis, bacteriostatic, bactericide, germicide, degerming, and sanitation Sterilization: is the destruction of all forms of microbial life, including endospores, which are the most resistant form Heating is the common methods used for sterilization In reality, the heat treatment required to ensure absolute sterility would unnecessarily e.g. canned food is subjected only to enough heat to destroy the endospores of Clostridium botulinum, which can produce a deadly toxin Commercial sterilization The endospores of a number of thermophilic bacteria, capable of causing food spoilage but not human disease, are considerably more resistant to heat than C. botulinum. If present, they will survive, but their survival is usually of no practical consequence; and they will not grow at normal food storage temperatures.
Complete sterilization is often not required ex. a drinking glass or a fork in a restaurant requires only enough microbial control to prevent the transmission possibly pathogenic microbes from one person to another
Disinfection: control directed at destroying harmful microorg as vegetative form (non-endospore forming) - disinfection might use of chemicals, ultraviolet radiation, boiling water - in practice, the term which is most commonly applied for a chemical (a disinfectans) using to treat an inanimate surface or substance - when the treatment is directed at living tissues, it is called antisepsis, and the chemical is then called antiseptic
- the same chemical might be called a disinfectant for one use and an antiseptic for another use - many chemicals suitable for swabbing a table top would be too harsh to use on living tissue Sepsis means decay or putrid indicates bacterial contamination Aseptic techniques are important in surgery to minimize contamination from the instruments, operating personnel, and the patient Degerming (or degermation): the process which mostly results in the mechanical removal of microbes in a limited area Sanitization: the process is intended to lower microbial counts to safe levels (public health) and minimizes of disease transmission from one to another Bacteriostatic: a treatment that only inhibits the growth and multiplication of bacteria. When the agent is removed, growth may be resumed suffix: -static means to stop or to steady -cide means killing THE CONDITIONS INFLUENCING MICROBIAL CONTROL 1. The number of microbes The more microbes there to begin with, it will take the longer time 2. Microbial characteristics - endospores are difficult to kill - vegetative microbes exhibit considerable variation in their susceptibility to physical or chemical controls 3. Environmental influences - the presence of organic matter such as blood, saliva, or feces often inhibits the action of chemical antimicrobials - A suspending medium that contains fats or protein tends to protect bacteria, which will have a higher survival rate - pH: heat is more efficient when the microbes are under acidic conditions 4. Time of exposure - in heat treatments, a lower temperature will compensate for a longer exposure - irradiation effects are very dependent on time - chemical antimicrobials often require extended exposure for more resistant microbes or endospores to be affected
Notes: - Many disinfectans and antiseptics tend to have a greater effect on Gram-positive than Gram-negative bacteria ex. Pseudomonads, which are common in the environment, are unusually resistant to chemical activity and will even grow actively in some disinfectans and antiseptics pseudomonads are very troublesome in hospital setting - Because disinfectans activity is due to temperature-dependent chemical reactions, disinfectans tend to work somewhat better in warm solutions METHODS OF MICROBIAL CONTROL When selecting methods of microbial control, consideration must be given to effects on things other than the microbes ex. certain vitamins or antibiotics in a solution might be inactivated by heat Many laboratory or hospital materials, such as rubber and latex tubing, are damaged by repeated heating Economic considerations: it may be less expensive to use presterilized/ disposible plasticware than to repeatedly reuse and resterilize glassware I. PHYSICAL METHODS 1. Moist heat Death of the microorganisms primarily caused by coagulation of their proteins, which is caused by breakage of the hydrogen bonds that hold the proteins in their three dimentional structure Boiling (100 o C) - kills vegetative forms of bacterial pathogens, almost all virus and fungi and their spores about 10 minutes - hepatitis vi can survive up to 30 minutes, and bacterial endospores have resisted to boiling for more than 20 hours boiling is therefore not a reliable sterilization procedure is the preferred methods of sterilization, unless the material to be sterilized can be damaged by heat or moisture to sterilize: culture media, instrument, dressing, solutions, syringes, intravenous equipment, glassware, and numerous other items that can withstand high temp and pressure unlike sterilizing aqueous solutions, in order to sterilize the surface of a solid, steam must actually contact it aluminium foil is impervious to steam! products that do not permit penetration by moisture, such as mineral oil or petroleum jelly do not sterilized by this method Autoclaving (121 o C for 15 minutes) Pasteurization (63 o C for 30 minutes) come from Louis Pasteur that found a practical method to prevent the spoilage of beer and wine is mild heating, which is sufficient to kill the organisms that caused the particular spoilage problem without seriously damaging the taste of the product milk was first pasteurized to eliminate the tuberculosis bacterium. Many relatively heat-resistant (thermophilic) bacteria survive to pasteurization, but these are unlikely to cause disease almost all pathogenic viruses are inactivated HTST (high temperature short-time) pasteurization (72 o C for 15 seconds): lower total bacterial counts, so the milk keeps well under refrigeration UHT (ultra high temperature) treatments (140 o C for less than one second): milk can be sterilized, so that it can be stored without refrigeration Tyndalization (63 o C for 30 minutes) during 3 days successively to give opportunity of endospores become vegetative (germination) kills both vegetatives and spores 2. Dry Heat Sterilization - microorganism kills by oxidation effects 1. Flaming - overcoming appliance above fire (bunsen) - scalpel, pinset, washbasin 2. Red heat (heating to a red glow) - inoculating loops (ose) in microbiology laboratory
Incineration: an effective method to sterilize and dispose of contaminated paper cups, bags, and dressing 3. Hot air sterilization (170 o C for 2 hours) - items which will be sterilized are placed in an oven - to sterilize: glassware, oily solution, fat, powder, metal equip
Alert: sharp pointed metal appliance will be blunt, soldering will be released, textile or cotton will be burnt
3. Filtration is the passage of a liquid or gas through a screenlike material with pores small enough to retain microorganism to sterilize: culture media, enzymes, vaccine, antibiotic solutions (heat-sensitive materials) HEPA (High Efficiency Particulate Air) filters: in rooms occupied by burned patients lower the numbers of airborne microbes (retain almost all microorganisms larger than about 0.3 m in diameter)
4. Radiation radiation has various effects on cells, depending on its wavelength, intensity, and duration two types of sterilizing radiation: ionizing and non-ionizing Ionizing radiation - such as gamma rays, X rays - has a shorter wavelength (less than about 1 nm) carries much more energy and high penetrating effect - the principal effect: ionization of water, which forms highly reactive hydroxyl radicals react with DNA - to sterilize: pharmaceutical equipments, disposable dental and medical supplies, such as plastic syringes, surgical gloves, suturing materials, and catheters Non-ionizing radiation
e.g. ultra violet (UV) radiation has a wavelength longer (> 1 nm) UV light damages the DNA of exposed cells by causing bonds to form between adjacent thymine in DNA chains (thymine dimers) inhibit correct replication of the DNA during reproduction of the cell the UV wavelengths most effective for killing microorg are about 260 nm specifically absorbed by cellular DNA iused to control microbes in the air, to disinfect vaccines and other medical products Disadvantages: 1. UV light is not very penetrating, so the miccroorganism must be directly exposed to the rays. Microorg protected by solids, and such coverings as paper, glass, and textiles are not affected. 2. UV light can damage human eyes, and prolonged exposure can cause burns and skin cancer in humans
5. Low Temperature the effect on microorganisms depends on the particular microbe and the intensity of the application ex. at temperatures of ordinary refrigerators (0-7 o C), the metabolic rate of most microbes (pathogenic bacteria) is so reduced that they cannot reproduce toxin (bacterio- static effect) Alert: psychotroph grow slowly at refrigerator temp and will alter the appearance and taste of foods
6. Dessication - a condition that is absence of water - microorg cannot grow but can remain viable for years - Lyophilization: dessicating and freezing methods to preserve microorganism (in laboratory) - the resistance of vegetative cells to dessication varies with species and environment ex. Go bacterium can withstand dryness for only about an hour, but the tuberculosis bacterium can remain viable for month. Bacterium much more resistant if it is embedded in mucus, pus, or feces. Alert: dust, clothing, bedding, and dressings might contain infectious microbes in dried mucus, urine, pus and feces (in hospital setting) 6. Osmotic Pressure - high concentrations of salts and sugars have a preserve effect create a hypertonic environment (osmotic pressure) that causes water to leave the microbial cell make the plasma membrane shrink away from the cell wall (plasmolysis) - is used in preservation of foods (ex. cure meats, preserved fruits) Alert: molds and yeasts are much more capable of growing in materials with high osmotic pressures
II. CHEMICAL METHODS o are used to control the growth of microbes on both living tissue and inanimate objects o most of chemical agents merely reduce microbial populations to save levels or remove vegetative forms o we can learn a great deal about a disinfectans properties by reading the label.
By reading the label of disinfectant, learn about : what groups of microorganisms will be affected the concentration of a disinfectans affects its action, so it should always be diluted exactly as specified by the manufacturer pH of the medium often has a great effect on activity an area might need to be scrubbed and rinsed before the disinfectant is applied to be effective, might need to be left on a surface for several hours
1. Chemicals which can damage plasma membrane - Phenolics : CRESOL, HEXACHLOROPHEN - Biguanides : CHLORHEXIDINE - Alcohols : ETHANOL (60-90%), ISOPROPANOL - Surface active agents : QUATERNARY AMMONIUM - Alkylating agent : ETHYLEN OXIDE, PROPYLEN OXIDE - Aldehyde : FORMALDEHYD, GLUTARALDEHYDE 2. Chemicals which can damage enzyme - Oxidators : IODINE, CHLORINE, HYDROGEN PEROXIDE - Heavy metal: MERCURI CHLORIDE, SILVER, ZINC 3. Chemicals which react with the functional protein Types of Disinfectans 1. You need some sterilized clothes. Which method do you choose to sterilize the clothes? Why? 2. If pasteurization does not achieve sterile condition, why milk is treated by pasteurization? Discuss about these questions Phenolics Biguanides Halogens Alcohols Heavy metal compounds Surface active agents (Quaternary ammonium) Aldehyde Gaseous chemosterilizers Peroxygens (Oxidizing Agents)
Types of Disinfectans Phenolic compounds - derivatives of phenol - antimicrobial activity by injuring plasma membranes, inactivating enzymes, and denaturating proteins - remain active in the presence of organic compound, stable, they persist for long periods after application suitable agents for disinfecting pus, saliva, and feces - ex. Cresol a good surface disinfectans Hexachlorophen: to control staphylococcal & streptococcal in hospital nurseries (excessive use can lead to neurological damage)
Halogen - particularly Iodine and Chlorine, both alone and as ionorganic or anorganic compounds - Iodine (I 2 ): one of the oldest and most effective antiseptics effective against all kind of bacteria, endospores, various fungi and some viruses mechanism of activity: - combines with amino acid Tyrosine - oxidizes the sulfhydryl (-SH) groups a common component of many enzyme and protein available as a tincture (alcohol solution), and iodophor (combination of Iodine + organic molecule povidone). Iodophor do not stain and less irritative
- Chlorine (Cl 2 ): its germicidal action is caused by the hypochlorous acid (HOCl) that forms when chlorine is added to water: Cl 2 + H 2 O H + + Cl - + HOCl chlorine water hydrogen chloride hypochlorous ion ion acid
HOCl is a strong oxidizing agent, and diffuses as rapidly as water through the cell because of neutral in electrical charge a liquid form of compressed chlorine gas is used for disinfecting drinking water, swimming pools, and sewage
- is a member of biguanide group - used to microbial control on skin and mucous membranes - has low toxicity, however contact with eyes cause damage - effective against most vegetative bacteria and fungi, certain enveloped viruses but is not sporocidal - its killing effect is related to plasma membrane damage Chlorhexidine Alcohols - effective to kill bacteria, fungi, but not endopsores and non-enveloped viruses