Controlling Microbial Growth - WOU Homepageguralnl/gural/318microbialcontrolI.pdf · Controlling...

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Controlling Microbial Growth Basic principles Selection of methods Physical control methods Chemical control methods Problems

Transcript of Controlling Microbial Growth - WOU Homepageguralnl/gural/318microbialcontrolI.pdf · Controlling...

Page 1: Controlling Microbial Growth - WOU Homepageguralnl/gural/318microbialcontrolI.pdf · Controlling Microbial Growth • Basic principles • Selection of methods ... Damage to proteins

Controlling Microbial Growth

• Basic principles• Selection of methods• Physical control

methods• Chemical control

methods• Problems

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Hospital Control

Famous DoctorsSemmelweis (1800)

and Lister (early 1900)

Aseptic methods for surgery, boiled instruments

Disinfectants for hands/wounds

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Nightingale (1800-1900)Sanitary procedures and trainingProcedures for reducing hospital overcrowding

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ContaminationMicrobes present - may or may not be growingInanimate objects - fabrics, food, water…Living objects - hands, animals, bugs…

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Why Control Microbes?Prevent/control diseasesPreserve food and increase shelf-lifeQuality control during production, research

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Modes of Action

Alteration of cell membranes or wallsDamage to proteins or nucleic acids

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Selection of methods• Inexpensive• Fast acting• Stable during storage• Site to be treated• Relative susceptibility:

Factors That Influence Growth

Nutrient and oxygen availabilityTemperature, pH, and pressureMoisture content and salt/sugar

solute levels

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General Strategies to Control GrowthKill or inhibit microbes using chemicals or drugsBlock entry for microbes or carriersPromote people’s natural defenses

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Physical MethodsHeat1. Dry heat or flaming/

burning - many tools, glass2. Boil/steam 5 min kills most

- NOT spores3. Only autoclave - 121°C 20

min - kills ALL4. Pasteurize (60°C, 30 min.)

does NOT = sterilize. 5. Ultrahigh temperatures =

flash heating 140oC for 1-3 seconds

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Miscellaneous Physical MethodsCold/Freezing: slows growth - does not always

killSound waves dislodges - does not kill well

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RadiationUV sterilizes surfaces; X-rays penetrateDestroy DNAIncreasingly applied to mail and foods

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FiltrationFilters made of nylon, porcelain, gauze, sandPlaced in air vents, water valves, masks, etc…Pores/holes 0.45 microns trap most bacteriaPores of 0.20 microns trap most viruses

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Methods

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Osmotic pressure

• Drying & Dessication• Salting/brining• pH

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Chemical Antimicrobials

Ideal ChemicalsEffect happens in a reasonable timeNon-toxic or non-corrosive to materialsWater-soluble, easy to prepare, stable

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Antiseptics for Human Tissues

Detergents disrupt cell membranes—PhenolicsAlcohols, hydrogen peroxide, iodine – disrupt proteins

Antibacterial soaps

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Disinfectants for Non-Living ThingsFormalin destroys DNAPhenol, bleach - proteins

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Gaseous agents

• Ozone• Ethylene oxide

• Use in a chamber: when you cannot use heat or water soluble chemicals

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Arguments Against…Antimicrobial resistanceLoss of “good bacteria” that are protectiveLow immune stimulation, chronic diseases

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Hospital-Acquired Infections

Nosocomial infections on the rise!

2 million patients per 40 million per year

Number of deaths = 75,000-100,000

Added cost = $4.5 billion; stay = 2-4 weeks

Community-acquired –present at admission

Nosocomial – acquired in the hospital setting

Iatrogenic – acquired from health care provide

Reservoirs – people, objects, food/water

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Why?

Indiscriminate use of antimicrobialsDiminished practice of aseptic

proceduresLonger stays - aging, premature

infants, AIDSPatient overcrowding and staff

shortagesPoorly-trained, low-end, temporary

staffGreater use of immune-

suppressantsIndwelling catheters, respirators,

dialysis

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Major Kinds of InfectionsGram Positives – blood, boilsGram Negatives – bladderVarious/both - pneumonia70% agents drug-resistant

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Health Care Workers Also At RiskBlood/fluid – e.g. Hepatitis, AIDSAerosolized respiratory agents - e.g. InfluenzaContact contagious like Staphylococcus30-70% carry resistant Staphylococcus

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Health Care Infection Control Procedures

Medical Asepsis - Clean TechniqueGoals– exclude pathogens, prevent transferHandwashing, handwashing, handwashingProper handling of instruments, fomites, waste

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Standard PrecautionsGoal - reduce transmission of via body fluidsApplied to ALL patients, regardless of statusIncludes medical asepsis plus gloves, masks

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Surgical Asepsis - Sterile TechniqueGoal One – to exclude ALL microorganismsGoal Two - to keep objects and areas sterileEmploys only sterile tools and techniquesUsed during invasive procedures and in all labs

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Hospital Infection Control Committee (ICC)Surveillance, produce reports, educate staffSet policy and take drastic actionCommunicate with local public health Work with hospital clinical microbiology lab