Microbicidal efficacy of superheated steam. II. Studies involving E. faecium and spores of B. xerothermodurans and B. coagulans
Authors: Spicher G.; Peters J.; Nürnberg M.; Schwebke I.
Source: International Journal of Hygiene and Environmental Health, Volume 204, Numbers 5-6, February 2002 , pp. 309-316(8)
Publisher: Urban & Fischer
Abstract:
The authors' studies on the heat resistance of microorganisms and the superheating of steam (Spicher et al., Zbl. Hyg. Umweltmed. 201, 541 553, 1999) have been continued, using the vegetative bacterium, Enterococcus faecium, and spores of B. xerothermodurans and B. coagulans. The temperature of the saturated steam was 68 °C (E. faecium), 105 °C (B. xerothermodurans) and 110 °C (B. coagulans), respectively. The steam was superheated by 30 40 K, as a maximum. The test organisms had been fixed to fibre glass fleece. The time of exposure to saturated or superheated steam after which 50% of the bioindicators yielded no viable germs was used as a measure of resistance of the organisms. In the discussion, reference has also been made to the findings for B. subtilis and B. stearothermophilus spores obtained in the preceding study. E. faecium exhibited a maximum resistance when superheating the steam by 5 K. The superheated steam required a 74-fold exposure time compared to saturated steam of 68 °C. Resistance became gradually reduced as superheating was further increased. Even superheating by 30 K required a 11-fold exposure time. The bacterial spores exhibited maxima of resistance on superheating by 23 30 K. In these cases necessary exposure times were 119 (B. subtilis), 30 (B. xerothermodurans), and 4 times (B. coagulans, B. stearothermophilus) longer than those required in saturated steam. In the superheating range below 10 K, behaviour patterns varied. Thus, heat resistance may initially become reduced with increasing superheating (B. coagulans), remain on almost the same level as under exposure to saturated steam (B. stearothermophilus), reach a stage of weakly enhanced resistance (B. xerothermodurans), or approach a maximum of resistance in an almost linear mode (B. subtilis). It appears that there are differences between strains of one and the same bacterial species.
Keywords: Saturated steam; superheating; spores; resistance
Language: English
Document Type: Original article
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1078/1438-4639-00121
Affiliations: 1: Robert Koch Institute, Berlin, Germany
Publication date: 2002-02-01
- In this: publication
- By this: publisher
- In this Subject: Microbiology , Ecology , Public Health , Toxicology
- By this author: Spicher G. ; Peters J. ; Nürnberg M. ; Schwebke I.

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