Micro Bio – Microbiology Flashcard Answers
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Unlock answersChemical Anti-Microbial Agents
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· Types o Phenols and phenolics o Biguanides o Alcohols o Halogens o Oxidizing agents o Surfactants o Heavy Metals o Food and cosmetic preservatives o Aldehydes o Gaseous agents · Kill microbes by damaging cytoplasmic membrane, proteins, DNA, or cell wall · Effectiveness depends on o Type of agent o Temp o Length of exposure o Amount of organic matter o pH o Concentration o Age of antimicrobial solution More effective against lipid enveloped viruses and the vegetative cells of bacteria protozoa and fungi than endospores, naked viruses, and protozoan cysts |
Antimicrobics
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o Are antibiotics, semi-synthetic antibiotics, or synthetic chemicals used to control microbial growth in body of a host o Some used outside body
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Ideal chemical anti-Microbial |
· Should be o Inexpensive o Fast acting o Stable during storage o Not affected by presence of organic material o Compatible with soaps, detergents and other chemicals o Able to control all microbial growth while being harmless to humans, animals, and objects · None exists Have advantages and disadvantages |
Principles of Effective Chemical Disinfection
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· Few chemical antimicrobials achieve sterility o Kill vegetative pathogens and reduce microbes to safe levels · No one chemical agent can be used safely in all situations to kill all microbes · Differ in o Mechanism o Types of microbes it kills o Time and conditions of killing o Objects it can be used on · Selection: Need to know o Properties of chemical agent o Types of microbes to kill o How long it takes to kill o If agent can be used on material · Organic matter matters in agent and method · Manufacturers directions give concentration, temp, application time, and how long diluted can be stored Must be followed to ensure disinfection |
Methods for Evaluating Disinfectants/Antiseptics
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· 4 Methods o Phenol coefficient o Use-dilution tests o Filter paper disk diffusion methods o In-use tests · Phenol was standard of comparison o Doesn’t account for bacteriostatic or residual effects · Current standard by American Official Analytical Chemists is use-dilution method · Both phenol coefficient and use-dilution tests performed in many ways. o 3 test microbes used § Staphylococcus aureus § Salmonella choleraesuis Pseudomonas aeruginosa (gram negative microbe notorious for resistance to chemical antimicrobial agents) |
Phenol coefficient
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· Microbes in broth cultures exposed to various concentrations of phenol for specific time · Microbes plated · Test disinfectant measured compared to phenol · Ratio called phenol coefficient Disinfectant more effective than phenol à coefficient will be greater than one |
Use-dilution Tests |
· He said remember name not details metal rings adsorbed live bacteria · Rings removed and dried · Rings placed in various dilutions of test disinfectant for 10 mins · Rings removed and incubated at 37 C Acceptable use dilution kills test microbes 95% of time |
Filter paper Disk Diffusion Methods |
· Dip filter paper into antimicrobial agent and place onto inoculated medium · Effective agents will have a ring of no growth (clear zone) around paper Unreliable for agents volatile or inactivated by organic compounds |
In-use tests
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· Sample surface before and after use and inoculate agar medium · Count numbers of colonies Expensive and time consuming but accurate |
EPA has three efficacy levels
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o High – Sterilization. Kills or inactivates all life forms o Intermediate – Kills all life forms except endospores o Low – kills vegetative gram-positive bacteria, vegetative gram-negative bacteria, lipid enveloped viruses, but not mycobacteria, endospores, non-lipid viruses, and some fungi |
CDC uses different scheme
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· Hospital Level – low level EPA disinfectant · Hospital level with tuberculocidal activity – intermediate EPA
Hospital level disinfectant with HIV, Hep B, Hep C activity will kill those viruses but not necessarily mycobacteria
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Phenol and Phenolics
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· Phenol (carbolic acid) first chemical to disinfect surgical wounds · Rarely used now o Unpleasant odor o Irritating to skin and mucous membranes o Toxic · Phenolics intermediate to low level disinfectant o Chemical derivatives of phenol o O-phenylphenol – Lysol o Orthocresol o Amylphenol – Amphyl · Intermediate to low level disinfectants o Less irritating and toxic to humans o Effective in killing mycobacteria but not always naked viruses o Kill cells by damaging plasma membrane and denaturing proteins · Usually dissolved in detergent solution to enhance ability to wet surfaces o Remain active in presence of organic compounds o Stable to dilutions and remain active on surfaces long after application · One of four general types of disinfectant recommended by EPA for med/dental facilities o Common in healthcare, labs, home (Lysol, triclosan) · Disadvantages o Odor o Irritate skin o Can accumulate to toxic levels o Require 10 minutes contact time · Bisphenols o Phenol derivatives with two phenolic groups § Intermediate to low level o Common bisphenols § Hexachlorophene (pHisoHex) effective in killing staphylococci and streptococci · Surgical scrub and on skin · Prescription only due to possible neurological damage if overuse § Triclosan Antibacterial soaps, toothpastes, cutting boards, pillows |
Biguanides
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· Low level disinfectants · Disinfect skin and mucous membranes · Related to phenolics or bisphenols · Chlorhexidine is best known o Kills vegetative microbes by disrupting plasma membrane o Effective against staphylococci and streptococci o Prescription only in US o Common surgical scrub o Mouthwash – Peridex Antiplaque agent to treat caries and perio disease |
Halogens
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o Reactive non metallic iodine, chlorine, fluorine, and bromine o Intermediate level in pure elemental and in compound state § Iodine and chlorine compounds common disinfectants or antiseptics § Bromine and fluorine rarely used · More toxic · Expensive o Iodine o Chlorine o Bromine
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Iodine
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· Iodine (I2) long used as antiseptic for skin and wounds · Kills microbes by combining with tyrosine groups and denaturing protein · Used in tincture or iodophor o Tincture – dissolved in 70% alcohol § Irritating to skin and stain objects o Iodophor – organic moecule-iodine complex that releases I2 slowly § No staining and less irritating § Preferred · Betadine and Isodine o Iodophores commonly used for skin disinfection o Iodine binding organic molecule povidine also surface wetting agent · Wescodyne, IodoFive, and Biocide o Iodophors to disinfect hard surfaces o EPA- intermediate level o One of four recommended types for surface disinfection in med/dental settings · Disadvantages o Diluted iodophors lose iodine at slow, constant rate and half – shelf life 1-2 weeks o Inactivated by too much organic matter o Pseudomonas and protozoan cysts resistant
10 minute contact time
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Chlorine
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· Highly effective intermediate level disinfectants · Cl2 – gas that combines with water to form HOCl – Hypochlorous acid · HOCl enters cells and oxidizes o Destroys proteins, lipids, nucleic acids and kills cell · Cl2 disinfects drinking water o Disadvantages § Protozoan cysts resistant · Natural surface water often contaminated and needs filtered § Combines with organic matter à carcinogens · Small enough risk to be worth it § Cl2 toxic and corrosive · 5% Sodium Hypochlorite NaOCl – bleach o Common, inexpensive, effective household disinfectant for laundry and floors o 1/10 dilution recommended by EPA for hard surfaces in med/dental settings o 1/10 bleach not affected by organic material o Intermediate level – 5 minutes contact o Disadvantages § Corrosive for fabrics, aluminum, and other metals § Irritating to mucous membranes § Must be removed from sensitive materials with water · Calcium hypochlorite – solid form of chlorine that forms HOCl when mixed with water à lime water o Commonly disinfects equipment and floors in agriculture · Sodium dichloroisocyanurate o Stable solid organic compound that slowly releases chlorine o Used with NaBr in swimming pools and hot tubs o Hospital disinfectant under name MicroStat § Disinfects in 5 mins § Tuberculocidal § Diluted solutions stable for 1 week · Chlorine Dioxide ClO2 o Highly reactive gaseous form of chlorine o Disinfects large objects in sealed chambers o Safely inactivated by pumping through sodium bisulfite · Chloramines o Stable ammonia and chlorine compounds that release chlorine slowly o Disinfect more slowly than other forms Hospital disinfectants and drinking water |
Bromine |
§ Disinfect hot tubs because evaporates slower than chlorine § Used with chlorine in swimming pools |
Alcohols
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· Ethanol and isopropanol considered intermediate level in 50-95% solutions with water o Kills vegetative microbes but not naked viruses and fungal spores · Denatures proteins, dissolve lipids, and disrupts membranes · Pure alcohol ineffective and needs water to denature protein and disrupt cell membranes · Used on hard surface and skin but not on wounds because they denature proteins in wound healing · No residue · Non toxic · Disadvantages o Evaporates quickly in thin film which may not be enough contact time o Odor · Enhances efficacy of other disinfectants o Used in combo with iodine or quarternary ammonium compound Alcohol-antimicrobial solutions called tinctures |
Heavy Metals
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· Ions denature proteins in low concentrations – oligodynamic action o Mercury o Silver o Zinc o Lead o Copper · Long used as antiseptics and antimicrobials o 1% silver nitrate in eyes of newborns prevents opthalmia neonatorum caused by Neisseria gonorrhoeae o Mercuric chloride and mercurochrome used as topical for years, no more o Thimersol w/mercury used as preservatives in vaccines. Supposed link to autism o Copper sulfate algicide in pools, fish tanks, paints o Zinc chloride in mouthwashes o Zinc oxide antifungal agent in body powders and creams and paints o Lead used in paints and gas but no longer · Heavy metal ions kill cells by combining with SH groups in proteins and denaturing · Killing efficacy reduced by organic material Clutathione protects cells from heavy metals |
Surfactants – surface-active agents
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· Soaps, anionic detergents, cationic detergents · Decrease surface tension of water · Allow water to wet solid surfaces fully · Dissolve dirt, fats, grease · Soaps – sodium salts of fatty acids o Not effective antiseptics or disinfectants because they don’t kill most microbes o Yet hand washing is one of most effective ways to prevent cross infections in hospitals · Scrubbing hands with soap followed by mechanical rinse removes surface microbes by emulsifying microbes, skin cells, and skin oils in micelles o Normal flora stay attached deeper o Abnormal bacteria more readily removed o Alcohol gels good substitute for handwashing and reduce infections by 50% because they are used more often than washing · Hospital infections o 12.2 per 1000 o Mortality 12.9% compared to 2.3% o Average charges for infections 185K rather than 31K >2 billion in extra charges |
Anionic detergents
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§ Stronger surfactants than soaps due to sulfonic acid at end of hydrocarbon chain rather than carboxyl § Good surfactants and sanitizers, but not disinfectants · Don’t work against many gram negative · Anionic agents disrupt plasma membrane and denature proteins of some gram positive |
Cationic detergents
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· Called quats or Quaternary Ammonium Compounds · Cepacol and Zephiran most commonly used quats · Good sanitizers and good surfactants o Odorless o Tasteless o Non-toxic o Common in toothpastes, body powders, and other products · Quats poor disinfectants by themselves · Zephiran ineffective against E. coli · Pseodomonas can grow in quat solutions · Zephiran tinctures kill E. coli · Quat tinctures – Intermedate level o EPA recommended for hard surfaces in med/dental setting but don’t work against naked viruses o Disinfect in 5 mins, non toxic, good wet ability, and no need to wipe up · Kill by disrupting cell membrane and denaturing proteins · Disadvantages o Organic matter, soaps, detergents interfere Ineffective against Pseodomonas, many other gram-negative bacteria, and naked viruses |
Organic acids and their salts
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· Commonly used as preservatives in food, cosmetics, soft drinks o Sorbic acid and potassium sorbate inhibit molds in acidic foods o Benzoic acid and sodium benzoate inhibit molds in soft drinks and acidic foods o Para-aminobenzoic acids (parabens) inhibits mold in cosmetics and shampoos § People allergic to parabens often allergic to local anesthetic procaine because of structurally similarity Calcium propionate inhibits molds in bread |
Bisulfite, Nitrate, and Nitrate
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o Sodium bisulfite forms sulfur dioxide when dissolved § Disinfects bottles and equipment for making wine § Kills wild yeasts in fresh grape juice o Sodium nitrate and nitrite commonly preserve meats – hot dogs, sausage, and lunch meats § Nitrite inhibits Clostridum botulinum § Nitrite forms nitrous acid (mutagen). Also reacts with amines to form nitrosamines (carcinogens). § Botulism risk greater than cancer risk |
Aldehydes
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· Organic compounds with carbonyl end group · Highly reactive · High level disinfection · React with aldehyde, amino, hydroxyl, sulfhydryl, and carboxyl groups on other molecules · Formaldehyde and gluteraldehyde (Cidex) commonly used o Alkylate amino, hydroxyl, sulfhydryl, and/or carboxyl groups on proteins and nucleic acids, inactivating molecules and causing cell death o Gluteraldehyde has two aldehyde groups and can crosslink proteins or nucleic acids · Formaldehyde o Water soluble and sold in 37% solution (Formalin) o Preserves specimins and cadavers o Volatile, irritating to mucous membranes, allergenic, and carcinogenic o Needs ventilation and handling care · Gluteraldehyde (allergen and carcinogen) o Less volatile and irritating o Skin contact to be avoided o Used to disinfect med/dental instruments before sterilization o Cold sterilize non-autoclavable instruments (respiratory or dialysis equip) o 2% solution § bacteriocidal in 10 mins § sporicidal in 10 hours o Disadvantages § Long contact time needed § Must be rinsed off Allergenic and carcinogenic to skin |
Gaseous Chemosterilizers
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· Gases that sterilize in closed chambers o Ethylene oxide o Popylene oxide o B-propiolactone o Chlorine dioxide · Ethylene oxide, B-propiolactone, and propylene oxide are akylating agents with reactive 3 or 4 member rings with oxygen o Ring reacts with amino, hydroxyl, or sulfhydral groups in proteins and nucleic acids, alkylating and inactivating, and causing cell death · Highly penetrating but slow to sterilize o 18 hours to sterilize then 24 hours of ventilation o Fumes highly irritating, allergenic, poisonous, carcinogenic Sterilize heat and water sensitive items |
Oxidizing Agents
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· Peroxides, Ozone, and Peracetic acid – strong oxidizing agents · Intermediate to high level · Kill by denaturing proteins, destroying lipids, and breaking DNA molecules · Ozone highly reactive and formed by O2 from electrical charges or UV lights o Some countries use to disinfect water o Doesn’t form carcinogens o More expensive and lasts shorter · H2O2 kills bacterial cells and disinfects/sterilizes inanimate objects or surfaces o Some books say inactivated by catalase from microbes o 3% solution contains enough of excess o Heated and sterilizes containers for ultra-high temp sterilized products · Benzoyl peroxide in OTC acne meds · Paracetic acid – high level disinfectant used for med equipment o Corrosive o Irritating to skin/mucous membrane · Oxidizing agents effect against obligate anaerobes Irrigate deep wounds to prevent clostridia and obligate anaerobes from causing gas gangrene |
ADA approved methods |
o Steam o Formalin-alcohol vapor o Dry Heat o Ethylene Oxide o Gluteraldehyde |
EPA recommended disinfectants |
Phenols(intermediate to low) Iodophors (intermediate) Quat tinctures (intermediate) Sodium Hypochlorite NaOCl- bleach at 1/10 solution (intermediate) |