Title: Control of Bacterial Growth
1Control of Bacterial Growth
- Definitions
- Sterilization - Processes that kills living
organisms including spores - Disinfection - Destruction of vegetative
pathogens (not spores) on inanimate surfaces - Antisepsis A chemical method of disinfection
from skin and mucus membranes - Degerming - Removal of microbes from a limited
area (alcohol swab prior to injection) - Sanitization The removal of microbes from
eating utensils and food preparation areas
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3Control of Bacterial Growth
- Factors that influence effectiveness of
antimicrobial treatment - Number
- Environmental Influences
- Time of exposure
- Inherent characteristics
4Control of Bacterial Growth
- Physical Methods of Control
- Temperature Effects (Hot Cold)
- Filtration
- Desiccation
- Osmotic Pressure High Pressure
- Radiation
- See chart page 197
5Control of Bacterial Growth
- Effects of Temperature
- Moist Heat
- Dry Heat
- Pasteurization
- Refrigeration
6Control of Bacterial Growth
- Thermal Death Point (TDP) lowest temperature at
which all microbes in liquid suspension will be
killed with 10 min of exposure - Thermal Death Time (TDT) minimal length of time
for all bacteria in liquid culture to be killed
at a given temperature - Decimal Reduction Time (DRT) Time in which 90 of
a population at a given temperature will be
killed
7Control of Bacterial Growth
- Temperature - Moist Heat
- Autoclave 120-130C (15-20 lbs/in2)
- Effect on instruments
- Foil or cloth wrap solid materials
- Must use on liquids
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10Control of Bacterial Growth
- Temperature - Dry Heat
- Glassware and instruments
- 160-170C for at least 90 min
- Usually foil wrap
- Incineration (loops needles)
11Control of Bacterial Growth
- Temperature - Pasteurization
- Milk 63C for 30 min (old)
- Milk 72C for 15 sec (new)
- Juices
12Control of Bacterial Growth
- Temperature - Refrigeration
- Does not usually kill
- Slows metabolism although psychrophillic
organisms can still grow - Best between 0 and 7 C
- Freeze thaw cycles can kill some organisms
- Used for culture preservation
- Lyophilization or freeze-drying long term storage
effective in preserving foods
13Control of Bacterial Growth
- Filtration
- Used for heat sensitive liquids like serum or
urea containing media - 0.45µ or 0.22µ pores in membrane
- Often used commercially with beer, wine and fruit
juices
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15Control of Bacterial Growth
- Desiccation
- Inhibits growth more than kills
- Dried meats and vegetables
- Freeze dry processes in foods
16Control of Bacterial Growth
- Osmotic Pressure
- High concentrations of salts or sugars inhibit
growth of bacteria examples includes jams and
jellies, sugar and salt cured meats - High Pressure
- High pressure is transferred evenly throughout
culture suspension can denature proteins
glycoproteins
17Radiation Control of Microorganisms
18Control of Bacterial Growth
- Radiation
- Short wave (X-rays, gamma rays) high penetration
power breaks DNA - Non-ionizing (UV) longer wave no penetrating
power forms thymine dimers - Organisms contain multiple repair systems