Chapter 7 - Control of Microbial Growth - Modified
Chapter 7 - Control of Microbial Growth - Modified
Chapter 7 - Control of Microbial Growth - Modified
❖ It is necessary to inhibit the growth of microbes (in hospitals, nursing home, restaurants,
kitchens, bathrooms, etc.), to avoid transmission of infectious diseases among people.
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Contaminated culture media
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2. Disinfection: The elimination of most or all pathogens (except bacterial
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Physical Methods of Microbial Control
Heat: is the most common type of sterilization for non-living objects could to withstand high temperature.
* “Susceptibility of microorganisms to heat is variable”
* “The higher the temperature the shorter the time required to kill microorganisms”.
• Heat is a practical, efficient, and inexpensive method of sterilization of inanimate objects; can tolerate
high temperatures.
• Two factors: temperature and time determine effectiveness of the sterilization.
A) Dry Heat:
1. Flaming loops and needles.
2. Incineration (Burning): to destroy contaminated disposable materials (dressings, and biological waste).
3. Hot Air (Oven) Sterilization: effective sterilization for metals, glassware, oil, wax requires 1 hours at 170
oC for sterilization.
B) Moist Heat: In general, moist heat is much more effective than dry heat.
Boiling: Heat to 100 oC at sea level. Kills vegetative forms of bacterial pathogens,
almost all viruses, and fungi and their spores within 10 minutes or less. Endospores and
some viruses are not destroyed this quickly.
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Autoclave: large metal pressure cooker with temperature 121 oC and
pressure 15 psi for 20 minutes. (preferred method of sterilization)
All organisms killed within 15 minutes even bacterial endospores
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Aseptic techniques and hospital precautions
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Pasteurization: is a method of disinfecting liquids (by heat) to eliminate pathogens from
milk and other beverages.
It is a preservation methods. Not sterilization procedure.
Types of pasteurization methods:
1. Ionizing Radiation:
* Gamma rays, X rays, electron beams, or higher energy rays.
* Cause mutations in DNA and produce peroxides.
* Used to sterilize pharmaceuticals and disposable medical supplies. Food
industry is interested in using ionizing radiation.
** Disadvantages: Penetrates human tissues. May cause genetic mutations in
humans.
3. Microwave Radiation:
* Heat is absorbed by water molecules. May kill vegetative cells in moist
foods.
* Bacterial endospores, which do not contain water, are not damaged by
microwave
radiation. Solid foods are unevenly penetrated by microwaves.
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UV sterilizers
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Chemical Methods of Microbial Control
Some Types of Disinfectants
1. Phenols Rarely used today because it is a skin irritant and has strong odor.
❖Used in some throat sprays and lozenges.
3. Alcohols
5. Chlorhexidine: is a disinfectant and antiseptic that is used for skin disinfection before
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surgery and to sterilize surgical instruments.
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6. Aldehydes: Include some of the most effective antimicrobials.
A. Formaldehyde gas: Excellent disinfectant.
Commonly used as formalin, a 37% aqueous solution.
Formalin was used extensively to preserve biological specimens and inactivate viruses and
bacteria in vaccines. Also used in mortuaries for embalming.
B. Glutaraldehyde:
One of the few chemical disinfectants that is a sterilizing agent (liquid).
Commonly used to disinfect hospital instruments.
Also used in mortuaries for embalming.