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Sterilization of bacterial spores by using supercritical carbon dioxide and hydrogen peroxide

✍ Scribed by Jason D. Hemmer; Michael J. Drews; Martine LaBerge; Michael A. Matthews


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2007
Tongue
English
Weight
216 KB
Volume
80B
Category
Article
ISSN
1552-4973

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

It was hypothesized that supercritical carbon dioxide (SC‐CO~2~) treatment could serve as an alternative sterilization method at various temperatures (40–105Β°C), CO~2~ pressures (200–680 atm), and treatment times (25 min to 6 h), and with or without the use of a passive additive (distilled water, dH~2~O) or an active additive (hydrogen peroxide, H~2~O~2~). While previous researchers have shown that SC‐CO~2~ possesses antimicrobial properties, sterilization effectiveness has not been shown at sufficiently low treatment temperatures and cycle times, using resistant bacterial spores. Experiments were conducted using Geobacillus stearothermophilus and Bacillus atrophaeus spores. Spore strips were exposed to SC‐CO~2~ in commercially available supercritical fluid extraction and reaction systems, at varying temperatures, pressures, treatment times, and with or without the use of a passive additive, such as dH~2~O, or an active additive, such as H~2~O~2~. Treatment parameters were varied from 40 to 105Β°C, 200–680 atm, and from 25 min to 6 h. At 105Β°C without H~2~O~2~, both spore types were completely deactivated at 300 atm in 25 min, a shorter treatment cycle than is obtained with methods in use today. On the other hand, with added H~2~O~2~ (<100 ppm), 6 log populations of both spore types were completely deactivated using SC‐CO~2~ in 1 h at 40Β°C. It was concluded from the data that large populations of resistant bacterial spores can be deactivated with SC‐CO~2~ with added H~2~O~2~at lower temperatures and potentially shorter treatment cycles than in most sterilization methods in use today. Β© 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biomed Mater Res Part B: Appl Biomater, 2007


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