Possible Overestimation of Surface Disinfection Efficiency by Assessment Methods Based on Liquid Sampling Procedures as Demonstrated by In Situ Quantification of Spore Viability

Archive ouverte

Grand, Isabelle, I. | Bellon-Fontaine, Marie Noelle, M. N. | Herry, Jean-Marie, J.-M. | Hilaire, D., D. | Moriconi, F-X, F.-X. | Naitali, Murielle, M.

Edité par CCSD ; American Society for Microbiology -

The standard test methods used to assess the efficiency of a disinfectant applied to surfaces are often based on counting the microbial survivors sampled in a liquid, but total cell removal from surfaces is seldom achieved. One might therefore wonder whether evaluations of microbial survivors in liquid-sampled cells are representative of the levels of survivors in whole populations. The present study was thus designed to determine the "damaged/undamaged" status induced by a peracetic acid disinfection for Bacillus atrophaeus spores deposited on glass coupons directly on this substrate and to compare it to the status of spores collected in liquid by a sampling procedure. The method utilized to assess the viability of both surface-associated and liquid-sampled spores included fluorescence labeling with a combination of Syto 61 and Chemchrome V6 dyes and quantifications by analyzing the images acquired by confocal laser scanning microscopy. The principal result of the study was that the viability of spores sampled in the liquid was found to be poorer than that of surface-associated spores. For example, after 2 min of peracetic acid disinfection, less than 17% +/- 5% of viable cells were detected among liquid-sampled cells compared to 79% +/- 5% or 47% +/- 4%, respectively, when the viability was evaluated on the surface after or without the sampling procedure. Moreover, assessments of the survivors collected in the liquid phase, evaluated using the microscopic method and standard plate counts, were well correlated. Evaluations based on the determination of survivors among the liquid-sampled cells can thus overestimate the efficiency of surface disinfection procedures.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Non-Invasive Vibrational SFG Spectroscopy Reveals That Bacterial Adhesion Can Alter the Conformation of Grafted "Brush" Chains on SAM

Archive ouverte | Bulard, Emilie, E. | CCSD

Understanding bacterial adhesion on a surface is a crucial step to design new materials with improved properties or to control biofilm formation and eradication. Sum Frequency Generation (SFG) vibrational spectroscopy has been emp...

Radical polymerization and preliminary microbiological investigation of new polymer derived from myrtenol

Archive ouverte | Lepoittevin, Benedicte, B. | CCSD

A new methacrylic monomer derived from myrtenol, an essential oil possessing biocidal properties extracted from Myrtus communis L., was prepared in one step and named myrtenyl methacrylate. Conventional radical polymerization was ...

Competition of Bovine Serum Albumin Adsorption and Bacterial Adhesion onto Surface-Grafted ODT: In Situ Study by Vibrational SFG and Fluorescence Confocal Microscopy

Archive ouverte | Bulard, Emilie, E. | CCSD

The interaction of hydrophilic and hydrophobic ovococcoid bacteria and bovine serum albumin (BSA) proteins with a well ordered surface of octadecanethiol (ODT) self assembled monolayer (SAM) has been studied in different situation...

Chargement des enrichissements...