2-9 Control
2-9 Control
2-9 Control
Control of Microorganisms
1. To destroy pathogens and prevent
their transmission
2.
To
reduce
or
eliminate
microorganisms responsible for the
contamination of water, food, and
other substances
Define the following key terms related
to microbial control : sterilization,
sterilant, disinfection, disinfectant,
sanitization, antisepsis, antiseptic,
germicide, bactericide, bacteriostatic
The Terminology of
Microbial Control
Sepsis refers to microbial
contamination
Asepsis is the absence of significant
contamination
Aseptic surgery techniques prevent
microbial contamination of wounds
The Terminology of
Microbial Control
Sterilization: Removing all microbial life.
All living cells, viable spores, and viruses
destroyed or removed. When sterilization is
achieved by a chemical agent, the
chemical is called a sterilant.
(Commercial sterilization: Killing C.
botulinum endospores).
Disinfection: Removing pathogens. Killing,
inhibition, or removal of microorganisms
that may cause disease.
The Terminology of
Microbial Control
Sanitization: reduced of microbial
population to levels that are considered
safe by public health standard.
Antisepsis: Removing pathogens from
living tissue with chemical agents.
Biocide/germicide: Kills microbes.
Germicide kills pathogens but not
necessarily endospores.
Bacteriostasis: Inhibiting, not killing
microbes, but prevent growth.
Cellular targets of
control
1. Cell wall
2. Cell membrane
3. Cellular synthetic processes (DNA,
RNA)
4. Proteins
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Methods of Physical
Control
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Heat
Cold temperatures
Desiccation
Radiation
Filtration
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1. Heat
Heat is very effective (fast and cheap).
Thermal death point (TDP): Lowest
temperature at which all cells in a culture are
killed in 10 min.
Thermal death time (TDT): Time to kill all
cells in a culture
Decimal Reduction Time (DRT):
Minutes to kill 90%
of a population at a
given temperature
1. Heat (Cont)
Moist heat use of hot water or steam
Mode of action denaturation of proteins,
destruction of membranes & DNA
Sterilization
Autoclave 15 psi/121oC/10-40min
Disinfection
Pasteurization <100oC: kills Salmonella,
Listeria and overall microbe count
Boiling at 100oC for 30 minutes to destroy nonspore-forming pathogens
Ultra High Temperature (UHT):
140C for < 1 sec.
Technically not pasteurization because it
sterilizes.
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2. Cold temperatures
Microbistatic : slows the growth of
microbes
Refrigeration 0-15oC & freezing <0oC
Used to preserve food, media and
cultures
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3. Desiccation
Gradual removal of water from cells,
leads to metabolic inhibition.
Not effective microbial control
many cells retain ability to grow
when water is reintroduced.
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4. Radiation
1. Ionizing radiation deep penetrating
power, breaks DNA,
gamma rays, X-rays, cathode rays
used to sterilize medical supplies & food
products
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Ionizing Radiation
X-rays, -rays, electron beams
dislodge e- from atoms production
of free radicals and other highly reactive
molecules
Commonly used Cobalt-60 radioisotope
Salmonella and Pseudomonas are
particularly sensitive
Sterilization of heat sensitive materials:
drugs, vitamins, herbs, suture material
Also used as cold pasteurization of food
Consumer fears!?
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5. Filtration
physical removal of microbes by
passing a gas or liquid through filter
used to sterilize heat sensitive liquids
& air in hospital isolation units &
industrial clean rooms
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Filtration
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Filtration
HEPA
removes
microbes
>0.3 m
Membra
ne
filtratio
n
removes
microbes
>0.22
Figure 7.4
Filtration
Use-dilution test
1. Metal rings dipped in test bacteria are dried.
2. Dried cultures of S. choleraesuis, S. aureus,
and P. aeruginosa are placed in disinfectant
for 10 min at 20C.
3. Rings are transferred to culture media to
determine whether bacteria survived
treatment.
Disk-diffusion Method
Chemical control
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
Halogens
Phenolics
Chlorhexidine
Alcohols
Hydrogen peroxide
Detergents & soaps
Heavy metals
Aldehydes
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Types of Disinfectants
Phenol = carbolic
acid (historic
importance)
Phenolics: Cresols
(Lysol) - disinfectant
Bisphenols
Hexachlorophene
(pHisoHex,
prescription), hospitals,
surgeries, nurseries
Fig 7.7
Triclosan (toothpaste,
antibacerial soaps, etc.)
1. Halogens
Chlorine Cl2, hypochlorites (chlorine
bleach), chloramines
Denaturation of proteins by disrupting disulfide
bonds
Can be sporicidal
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Halogens
Chlorine
Oxidizing agent
Widely used as disinfectant
Forms bleach (hypochlorous acid) when added to water.
Broad spectrum, not sporicidal (pools, drinking water)
Iodine
More reactive, more germicidal. Alters protein
synthesis and membranes.
Tincture of iodine (solution with alcohol) wound
antiseptic
Iodophors combined with an organic molecule
iodine detergent complex (e.g. Betadine ).
Occasional skin sensitivity, partially inactivated by
organic debris, poor sporicidal activity.
2. Phenolics
Disrupt cell membranes &
precipitating proteins; bactericidal,
fungicidal, virucidal, not sporicidal
Lysol
triclosan- antibacterial additive to soaps
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3. Chlorhexidine
Hibiclens, Hibitane
A surfactant & protein denaturant
with broad microbicidal properties
Not sporicidal
Used as skin degerming agents for
preoperative scrubs, skin cleaning &
burns
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4. Alcohols
Ethyl, isopropyl in solutions of 5090%
Act as surfactants dissolving
membrane lipids and coagulating
proteins of vegetative bacterial cells
and fungi
Not sporicidal
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Alcohols
Table 7.6
5. Hydrogen peroxide
Weak (3%) to strong (25%)
Produce highly reactive hydroxyl-free
radicals that damage protein & DNA
while also decomposing to O2 gas
toxic to anaerobes
Strong solutions are sporicidal
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Inactivated by catalase
Not good for open wounds
Good for inanimate objects;
packaging for food industry
(containers etc.)
3% solution (higher conc. available)
Esp. effective against anaerobic
bacteria (e.g.:
Effervescent action, may be
useful for wound cleansing
through removal of tissue
debris
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Strongly bactericidal,
denature proteins, disrupt
plasma membrane
7. Heavy metals
Solutions of silver & mercury kill
vegetative cells in low concentrations
by inactivating proteins
Oligodynamic action
Not sporicidal
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Heavy Metals
Oligodynamic action: toxic effect due to
metal ions combining with sulfhydryl (SH)
and other groups proteins are denatured.
Mercury (HgCl2, Greeks & Romans
for skin lesions); Thimerosal
Copper against chlorophyll containing
organisms Algicides
Silver (AgNO3): Antiseptic for eyes of
newborns
Zinc (ZnCl2) in mouthwashes, ZnO in
antifungal in paint
8. Aldehydes
Glutaraldehyde & formaldehyde kill
by alkylating protein & DNA
glutaraldehyde in 2% solution (Cidex)
used as sterilant for heat sensitive
instruments
formaldehyde - disinfectant,
preservative, toxicity limits use
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Chemical Food
Preservatives
Sulfur dioxide
wine
Organic acids
Inhibit metabolism
Sorbic acid, benzoic acid, and calcium
propionate
Control molds and bacteria in foods and cosmetics
Sodium nitrate and nitrite prevents endospore
germination. In meats. Conversion to nitrosamine
(carcinogenic)
Plasma
Luminous gas with free radicals that
destroy microbes
Use: Tubular instruments, hands, etc.
Microbial
Characteristics and
Microbial Control
Fig 7.11
the end
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