Control of Microbial Growth - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Control of Microbial Growth

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Control of Microbial Growth Chapter 5 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Control of Microbial Growth


1
Control of Microbial Growth
  • Chapter 5

2
  • Why do we need to control bacteria growth? To
    what degree?
  • How do we control bacteria growth?

3
  • Daily life
  • Hospital
  • Microbiology lab
  • Food facilities
  • Water facilities

4
Approaches to Control
  • Control mechanisms either physical or chemical
    (or both)
  • Physical methods
  • Heat
  • Irradiation
  • Filtration
  • Mechanical removal
  • Chemical methods
  • Use a variety of antimicrobial chemicals
  • Chemical depends on circumstances and degree of
    control required

5
Approaches to Control
  • Degree of control
  • Sterilization
  • Disinfection
  • Pasteurization

6
Selection of Antimicrobial Procedure
  • Choice of procedure depends on numerous factors

Situational considerations Type of microbe Extent
of contamination Number of organisms Environment R
isk of infection Composition of infected item
7
Selection of Antimicrobial Procedure
  • Type of microorganism
  • resistant microbes
  • Endospores
  • Protozoan cysts and oocysts
  • Mycobacterium species
  • Pseudomonas species
  • Naked viruses

8
Selection of Antimicrobial Procedure
  • Number of organisms initially present
  • Time it takes to kill depends on population size
  • decimal reduction time
  • A.k.a D value
  • Washing effect

9
Quiz
  • If the D value is 3 min, how long does it take to
    reduce 10,000 to 1?

10
Selection of Antimicrobial Procedure
  • Environmental conditions
  • Environmental conditions strongly influence
    effectiveness
  • pH, temperature and presence of organic materials
    affect effectiveness

11
Selection of Antimicrobial Procedure
  • Potential risk of infection
  • Medical items categorized according to potential
    risk of disease transmission
  • Critical items
  • Semicritical instruments
  • Non-critical instruments

12
Selection of Antimicrobial Procedure
  • Composition of the item
  • Some sterilization and disinfection methods
    inappropriate for certain items
  • Heat inappropriate for plastics and other heat
    sensitive items

13
Physical control--Heat
  • Heat treatment most useful for microbial control
  • Heat can be used to sterilize or disinfect
  • Methods include
  • Moist heat
  • Dry heat

14
Heat as Control
  • Moist heat
  • mechanism
  • Moist heat includes
  • Boiling
  • Pasteurization
  • Pressurized steam

15
Heat as Control
  • Boiling (100 C)
  • Destroys most microorganisms and viruses
  • Not effective means of sterilization
  • Pasteurization
  • Pasteur developed to avoid spoilage of wine
  • significantly reduces organisms
  • increase shelf life of food
  • Heated to 72C and held for 15 seconds
  • Other protocol UHT
  • Heated to 140C - 150C, held for several seconds
    then rapidly cooled

16
Heat as Control
  • Pressurized steam
  • Autoclave used to sterilize using pressurized
    steam
  • Achieves sterilization at 121C and 15psi in 15
    minutes
  • Prions destroyed at 132C and 15psi for 4.5 hours

17
Heat as Control
  • Dry heat
  • Not as effective as moist heat
  • 200C for 1.5 hours vs. 121C for 15 minutes
  • Incineration method of dry heat sterilization
  • Flaming laboratory inoculation loop incinerates
    organism

18
Control of bacteria growth---physical method
  • Low temperature storage
  • Microbial growth is temperature dependent
  • Freezing means of food preservation
  • Essentially stops microbial growth
  • Irreversibly damages cell

19
Other Physical Methods of Control
  • Heat sensitive materials require other methods of
    microbial control
  • Filtration
  • Irradiation
  • High-pressure treatment

20
Other Physical Methods of Control
  • Filtration
  • Membrane filtration used to remove microbes from
    fluids and air
  • Liquid filtration
  • Heath sensitive
  • Filtration of air
  • High efficiency particulate air (HEPA) filter
    remove nearly all microbes from air

21
Other Physical Methods of Control
  • Radiation
  • Electromagnetic radiation
  • Energy released from waves
  • Range of wavelength is electromagnetic spectrum
  • Radiation can be ionizing or non-ionizing

22
Other Physical Methods of Control
  • Ionizing radiation
  • Radiation able to strip electrons from atoms
  • Three sources
  • Gamma radiation
  • X-rays
  • Electron accelerators
  • mechanism
  • Used to sterilize heat resistant materials
  • Medical equipment, surgical supplies, medications
  • Some endospores can be resistant

23
Other Physical Methods of Control
  • Ultraviolet radiation
  • Non-ionizing radiation
  • Damages DNA
  • Used to destroy microbes in air, drinking water
    and surfaces
  • Limitation
  • Poor penetrating power

24
Chemicals as Control
  • Chemicals can be used to disinfect and sterilize
  • Called germicidal chemicals
  • Reacts with vital cell sites
  • Proteins
  • DNA
  • Cell membrane

25
Chemicals as Control
  • Potency of chemicals
  • Formulations generally contain more than one
    antimicrobial agent
  • Regulated by
  • FDA
  • Antiseptics
  • EPA
  • Disinfectants
  • Germicidal agents grouped according to potency
  • Sterilants
  • Destroy all microorganisms
  • High-level disinfectants
  • Destroys viruses and vegetative cells,
  • Not endospores
  • Intermediate-level disinfectants
  • Kills vegetative cells fungi, most viruses,
  • Not endospores
  • Low-level disinfectants
  • Removes fungi, vegetative bacteria and enveloped
    viruses
  • Not mycobacteria, naked viruses or endospores

26
Chemicals as Control
  • Selecting appropriate chemical
  • Points to consider
  • Toxicity
  • Benefits must be weighed against risk of use
  • Activity in presence of organic material
  • Compatibility with material being treated
  • Residue
  • Cost and availability
  • Storage and stability
  • Environmental risk

27
Chemicals as Control
  • Classes of chemicals
  • Germicides represent a number or chemical
    families
  • Alcohols
  • Aldehydes
  • Biguanides
  • Ethylene oxide
  • Halogens
  • Metals
  • Ozone
  • Peroxides
  • Phenolics
  • Quaternary ammonium compounds

28
Chemicals as Control
  • Alcohols
  • Solutions of 60 - 80 isopropyl or ethyl alcohol
    kill vegetative bacteria and fungi
  • Not effective against endospores and some naked
    viruses
  • Mechanism
  • Coagulation of proteins and essential enzymes
  • Damage to lipid membranes
  • Commonly used as antiseptic and disinfectant
  • Limitations
  • Evaporates quickly limiting contact time
  • May damage material such as rubber and some
    plastics

29
Chemicals as Control
  • Aldehydes
  • Mechanism
  • 2 glutaraldehyde solution most widely used
    liquid sterilant
  • Formalin used to kill bacteria and inactivate
    viruses
  • A solution made from formaldehyde

30
Chemicals as Control
  • Hydrogen peroxide
  • Powerful oxidizing agents
  • biodegradable
  • Less toxic
  • Effectiveness depends on surface being treated
  • More effective on inanimate object
  • Useful as disinfectant
  • Leaves no residue
  • Doesnt damage most materials
  • Hot solutions used in food industry
  • Vapor-phase can be used as sterilant material

31
Chemicals as Control
  • Chemical preservatives
  • Weak organic acids often used as food
    preservatives
  • Benzoic, ascorbic and propionic acids
  • Mode of action
  • Alter cell membrane function
  • Interfere with energy transformation
  • Nitrates and nitrites used in processed meats
  • Inhibits germination of endospores and growth of
    vegetative cells
  • Have been shown to be potent carcinogen

32
Control of bacteria growth--chemical
  • Reducing water availability
  • Salting
  • drying

33
Review
  • Important concepts
  • Sterilization, pasteurization, D value etc.
  • Methods to control bacteria growth
  • Physical
  • chemical

34
Review
  • Considering factors when choose control methods.
  • Moister heat.
  • Radiation (ionizing, nonionizing).
  • The difference between different levels of
    disinfectants.

35
Review
  • Chemicals
  • Ethanol
  • Aldehyde
  • Ethylene oxide
  • Hydrogen Peroxides
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