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Methods for Control of Microbial Growth
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Methods for Control of Microbial Growth. Controlling Microorganisms Physical, chemical, and mechanical methods can be used to destroy or reduce undesirable.

Dec 18, 2015

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Ella Murphy
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Page 1: Methods for Control of Microbial Growth. Controlling Microorganisms Physical, chemical, and mechanical methods can be used to destroy or reduce undesirable.

Methods for Control of Microbial Growth

Page 2: Methods for Control of Microbial Growth. Controlling Microorganisms Physical, chemical, and mechanical methods can be used to destroy or reduce undesirable.

Controlling Microorganisms

• Physical, chemical, and mechanical methods can be used to destroy or reduce undesirable microbes in a given area

• Primary targets are microorganisms capable of causing infection or spoilage:– vegetative bacterial cells and endospores– fungal hyphae and spores, yeasts– protozoan trophozoites and cysts– worms– viruses

Page 3: Methods for Control of Microbial Growth. Controlling Microorganisms Physical, chemical, and mechanical methods can be used to destroy or reduce undesirable.

Hierarchy of Resistance

• Most resistant = bacterial endospores

• Moderately resistant = cysts, fungal zygospores, naked viruses

• Least resistant = vegetative bacterial cells

Page 4: Methods for Control of Microbial Growth. Controlling Microorganisms Physical, chemical, and mechanical methods can be used to destroy or reduce undesirable.

Types of Control

• Sterilization – a process that destroys all viable microbes, including viruses and endospores; microbiocidal

• Disinfection – a process to destroy vegetative pathogens, not endospores; for inanimate objects

• Antisepsis – disinfectants applied directly to exposed body surfaces

• Sanitization – any cleansing technique that mechanically removes microbes

• Degermation – reduces the number of microbes

Page 5: Methods for Control of Microbial Growth. Controlling Microorganisms Physical, chemical, and mechanical methods can be used to destroy or reduce undesirable.

A Number of Factors Influence the Effectiveness of Control Agents

• Number of microbes

• Nature of microbes in the population

• Temperature and pH of environment

• Concentration or dosage of agent

• Mode of action of the agent

• Presence of solvents, organic matter, or inhibitors

Page 6: Methods for Control of Microbial Growth. Controlling Microorganisms Physical, chemical, and mechanical methods can be used to destroy or reduce undesirable.

Microbiocidals Cause Microbial Death

Page 7: Methods for Control of Microbial Growth. Controlling Microorganisms Physical, chemical, and mechanical methods can be used to destroy or reduce undesirable.

Stasis Agents Slow or Retard Growth, but Do Not Kill Microbes

Page 8: Methods for Control of Microbial Growth. Controlling Microorganisms Physical, chemical, and mechanical methods can be used to destroy or reduce undesirable.

Microbial Death

The Permanent Loss of Reproductive Capability Under

Optimal Growth Conditions

Page 9: Methods for Control of Microbial Growth. Controlling Microorganisms Physical, chemical, and mechanical methods can be used to destroy or reduce undesirable.

Cellular Targets of Control

1. Cell wall

2. Cell membrane

3. Nucleic Acids (DNA, RNA)

4. Proteins

Page 10: Methods for Control of Microbial Growth. Controlling Microorganisms Physical, chemical, and mechanical methods can be used to destroy or reduce undesirable.

Physical Control Practices

Page 11: Methods for Control of Microbial Growth. Controlling Microorganisms Physical, chemical, and mechanical methods can be used to destroy or reduce undesirable.

Heat-Based Microbial Control Processes

• Incineration/ baking achieve sterility• Autoclaving: sterilization with live

steam and pressure, very widely used• Pasteurization: flash heat treatment

(63°C - 66°C for 30 minutes) that reduces the bio-burden of food materials (kills Salmonella and Listeria)

• Boiling disinfection – does not achieve sterility

Page 12: Methods for Control of Microbial Growth. Controlling Microorganisms Physical, chemical, and mechanical methods can be used to destroy or reduce undesirable.

Radiation Sterilization

• Ionizing radiation (X-rays, gamma particles) penetrates and damages DNA and other vital cell components

• Non-ionizing radiation (UV light) causes adjacent T-T pairs in DNA to fuse

• UV has limited penetration; use for surfaces and films of liquids

Page 13: Methods for Control of Microbial Growth. Controlling Microorganisms Physical, chemical, and mechanical methods can be used to destroy or reduce undesirable.
Page 14: Methods for Control of Microbial Growth. Controlling Microorganisms Physical, chemical, and mechanical methods can be used to destroy or reduce undesirable.
Page 15: Methods for Control of Microbial Growth. Controlling Microorganisms Physical, chemical, and mechanical methods can be used to destroy or reduce undesirable.

Ultra-filtration

• Mechanically excludes organisms from a liquid

• Membranes have a specific pore size; any particle larger cannot pass through

• Achieves sterilization

Page 16: Methods for Control of Microbial Growth. Controlling Microorganisms Physical, chemical, and mechanical methods can be used to destroy or reduce undesirable.

Filtration

Page 17: Methods for Control of Microbial Growth. Controlling Microorganisms Physical, chemical, and mechanical methods can be used to destroy or reduce undesirable.

Targets of Chemical Agents

• Cell Membrane - detergents

• Key Proteins – denaturing and cross-linking agents

• Nucleic Acids – alkylating and cross-linking agents

Page 18: Methods for Control of Microbial Growth. Controlling Microorganisms Physical, chemical, and mechanical methods can be used to destroy or reduce undesirable.

Halogen Antimicrobials - Denature Proteins

• Chlorine compounds (gaseous Cl, bleach, chloramine); can be sporicidal

• Iodine (tincture, Betadine)

• Halogens can react with any organic matter – a surface should be clean before applying them!

Page 19: Methods for Control of Microbial Growth. Controlling Microorganisms Physical, chemical, and mechanical methods can be used to destroy or reduce undesirable.

Phenolics- Disrupt Cell Membranes & Precipitate Proteins

• Phenol

• Lysol

• PhisoHex (not any more)

• Benzalkonium chloride

• Triclosan

Page 20: Methods for Control of Microbial Growth. Controlling Microorganisms Physical, chemical, and mechanical methods can be used to destroy or reduce undesirable.

Alcohols: Dissolve Membranes and Coagulate Proteins

• Ethanol (70%)

• Isopropanol

• Act as surfactants dissolving membrane lipids and coagulating proteins of vegetative bacterial cells and fungi

• Cannot destroy spores at room temperature

Page 21: Methods for Control of Microbial Growth. Controlling Microorganisms Physical, chemical, and mechanical methods can be used to destroy or reduce undesirable.

Hydrogen Peroxide – Attacks DNA and Proteins

3% solution is effective as wound antiseptic, but is

potentially damaging to tissues

Page 22: Methods for Control of Microbial Growth. Controlling Microorganisms Physical, chemical, and mechanical methods can be used to destroy or reduce undesirable.

Heavy Metals

Mercury, Silver Salts Kill Vegetative Cells Present in low Numbers by

Inactivating Proteins

Page 23: Methods for Control of Microbial Growth. Controlling Microorganisms Physical, chemical, and mechanical methods can be used to destroy or reduce undesirable.

Aldehydes – Cross-link DNA and Proteins

• Formaldehyde – formalin

• Glutaraldehyde - Cidex

• A soak of dental or surgical instruments in glutaraldehyde Does Not guarantee sterility!

Page 24: Methods for Control of Microbial Growth. Controlling Microorganisms Physical, chemical, and mechanical methods can be used to destroy or reduce undesirable.

Gases and Aerosols

• Ethylene oxide, propylene oxide

• Strong alkylating agents

• High level

• Sterilize and disinfect plastics and prepackaged devices, foods