microbiology: controlling microbial growth
refrigeration
0-7 degrees; inhibits metabolism (slows or arrests cell division); preservation of food or laboratory materials (solutions, cultures)
boiling
100 degrees at sea level; denatures proteins and alters membranes; cooking, personal use, preparing certain laboratory media
high-pressure
100-800 MPa; denatures proteins and can cause cell lysis; preservation of food
autoclave
121 degree for 15 min at 15 psi; denatures proteins and alters membranes; sterilization of microbiological media, heat-stable medical and laboratory equipment, and other heat-stable items
dry-heat oven
170 degrees for 2 hours; denatures proteins and alters membranes, dehydration, desiccation; sterilization of heat stable medical and laboratory equipment and glassware
cell membrane, proteins, nucleic acids
3 major targets of microbial control agents
organic material, temperature, pH, type of microbe
4 things that can affect the effectiveness of antimicrobial treatments
Halogens
Iodine, Chlorine, Fluorine; good at killing bacteria, fungi and most endospores, some viruses.
noncritical items
Items that are not required to be sterile because they do not penetrate intact tissues.
zone of inhibition
Region around a chemical saturated disc, where bacteria are unable to grow due to adverse effects of the compound in the disc.
cresols (methylated phenols) o-phenylphenol
active ingredients in Lysol; example of phenolics
reduce water activity
addition of salt or water; inhibits metabolism and can cause lysis; salted meats and fish, honey, jams and jellies
hyberbaric oxygen therapy
air pressure three times higher than normal; inhibits metabolism and growth of anaerobic microbes; treatment of certain infections (e.g., gas gangrene)
Ethylene oxide
alkylating agent that is used for gaseous sterilization; form of cold sterilization
antisepsis
application of antiseptic (antimicrobial chemical safe to use on living skin or tissue)
mercury
bacteriostatic, but toxic to the central nervous system, digestive and renal systems at high concentrations
freezing
below -2degrees; stops metabolism, may kill microbes; long-term storage of food, laboratory cultures, or medical specimens
Betadine
brand of povidone-iodine commonly used as a hand scrub by medical personnel before surgery for topical antisepsis of a patients skin before incision
quats
can kill bacteria, fungi, protozoans and enveloped viruses, but not endospores
sanitization
cleansing of fomites to remove enough microbes to achieve deemed safe for public health
autoclave, incineration, filtration
common forms of sterilization
povidone-iodine
commone iodophor includes wetting agent that releaes iodine relatively slowly
silvadene cream
commonly used to treat topical wounds and is particularly helpful in preventing infection in burn wounds.
iodopor
compound of idodine complexed with an organic molecule, increasing iodines stability and efficiancy
sepsis
condition of contamination
detergents
contain synthetic surfactant molecules with both polar and nonpolar regions that have strong cleansing activity but are more soluble, even in hard water
asepsis
contaminate free state
alcohols
denature proteins and disrupt membranes; can be a disinfectant or antiseptic
Sporicide
destroys endospores
bisphenol hexachlorophene
disinfectant; active ingredient in pHisoHex, a topical cleansing detergent widely used for handwashing in hospitals; effective against gram-positive bacteria such as Staphylococcal and Streptococcal skin infections
semi critical items
do not need sterilization, but a high level of disinfection; may contact mucous membranes or non-intact skin
simple desiccation
drying; inhibits metabolism; dried fruits, jerky
ideal disinfectant characteristics
effective against broad range of microbes, effective at high dilutions and in the presence of organic material, nontoxic, stable, non-offensive odor, soluble, inexpensive, sporicidal
benzalkonium chloride
example of quat that can be found in mouth washes and hand sanitizers
roccal
example of quat that requires 10 minutes to be effective, but kills a variety of microbes, but not Pseudomonas, which can break it down and use it for nutrients
GI endoscopes
example of semi critical items
surgical instruments,catheters, IV fluid
examples of critical items
bed linens, stethoscopes, blood pressure cuffs
examples of noncritical items
sonication
exposure to ultrasonic waves; cavitation (formation of empty space) disrupts cells, lysing them; laboratory research to lyse cells; cleaning jewelry, lenses, and equipment
nonionizing radiation
exposure to ultraviolet light; introduces thymine dimers, leading to mutations; surface sterilization of laboratory materials, water purification
ionizing radiation
exposure to x-rays or gamma rays; alters molecular structures, introduces double-strand breaks into DNA; sterilization of spices and heat-sensitive laboratory and medical items; used for food sterilization in Europe but not widely accepted in US
Triclosan
found in antibacterial soaps, Colgate and many plastics
zinc chloride
found in mouthwash
zinc oxide
found in topical antiseptic creams such as calamine lotion, diaper ointments, baby powder, and dandruff shampoo
Cryptosporidium
fungus that has a protective outer shell that makes it resistant to chlorinated disinfectants
surfactants
group of chemical compounds that lower the surface tension of water, major ingredients in soaps and detergents
Fluorine
has antimicrobial properties that contribute tot he prevention of dental caries
oligodynamic activity
highly effective at super low concentrations
Viricide
inactivates viruses
disinfection
inactivation of microbes on a surface of a fomite
fomites
inanimate objects that can carry and transmit disease
cationic detergents
include quaternary ammonium salts (quats) which can cause cytolysis
Bacteriostatic
inhibits bacterial growth
tincture
iodine solution in aqueous alcohol
heavy metals
kill microbes by binding to proteins, causing them to denature, and inhibiting enzyme activity
Algicide
kills algae
Bactericide
kills bacteria
Fungicide
kills fungi
antimicrobial agent
kills or inhibits microbial growth
-STATIC
means inhibits the growth
-CIDE
means it kills
ethyl and isopropanol
most commonly used alcohol, effecive against baceria, fungi and eveloped viruses
critical items
must be sterile because they will be used inside the body, penetrating tissues or the blood stream
hydrogen peroxide
not a good antiseptic because of the presence of catalase
silver
often combined with antibiotics, making antibiotics thousands of times more effective and can be incorporated into catheters and bandages
Semmelweis
one of first surgeons to implement handwashing
mycobacterium spp
organisms that are hard to kill because of its very effective mycolic acid barrier; phenolics are effective against
Iodine
oxidizing cellular components, including sulfur-containing amino acids, nucleotides, fatty acids and destabilizing the macromolecules that contain these.
Clostridium botuinum
produces a neurotoxin that causes botulism
lyophylization
rapid freezing under vacuum; inhibits metabolism; preservation of food, laboratory cultures, or reagents
degerming
removing microbes from a limited area
soaps
salts of long chain fatty acids with polar and nonpolar regions; main degerming action is to mechanically carry away the microbes
Filtration
size selection
argyria
skin turns irreversibly blue grey
phenolics
stable, persistent on surfaces, less toxic than phenol, inhibit microbial growth by denaturing proteins and disrupting membranes
peroxide
strong oxidizing agents that can be used as disinfectants or antiseptics, widely used is hydrogen peroxide
aseptic techniques
techniques or methods that maintain the sterile condition of products
Lister
treated wounds with carbolic acid...led to lower infection rates
Alcohol and hydrogen peroxid
two commonly used antiseptics
sterilization, disinfection, antisepsis, sanitization
types of degerming
HEPA filtration
use of high-efficiency particulate air filter with .3 um pore size; physically removes microbes from air; laboratory biological safety cabinets, operation rooms, isolation units, heating and air conditioning systems, vacuum cleaners
Membrane filtration
use of membrane filter with .2um or small pore size; physically removes microbes from liquid solutions; removal of bacteria form heat-sensitive solutions like vitamins, antibiotics, and a media with heat-sensitivie components
copper sulfate
used as an algicide in swimming poos and fish tanks
disinfectant
uses chemical or physical means of removing microbes from nonliving objects; should be fast acting, stable, easy to prepare, inexpensive, easy to use
autoclave
uses heat and pressure to sterilize items (denatures proteins)
Incineration
very high temperatures to destroy all microorganisms
chlorine
when mixed with water, produces strong oxidant called hypchlorous acid, which destroys all types of molecules by breaking bonds