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Learning Objectives. At the end of this lecture, the student should be able toDefine disinfection and sterilisationDescribe the common substances and processes used to achieve these outcomesEvaluate issues influencing choice of method. Definitions. Cleaningprocess which physically removes contamination but does not necessarily destroy micro-organismsprerequisite before decontamination by disinfection or sterilisation of instrumentsorganic material prevents contact with microbes, inactivate30156
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1. Disinfection & Sterilization Professor Mark Pallen
2. Learning Objectives At the end of this lecture, the student should be able to
Define disinfection and sterilisation
Describe the common substances and processes used to achieve these outcomes
Evaluate issues influencing choice of method
3. Definitions Cleaning
process which physically removes contamination but does not necessarily destroy micro-organisms
prerequisite before decontamination by disinfection or sterilisation of instruments
organic material prevents contact with microbes, inactivates disinfectants
Disinfection
using an agent that destroys germs or other harmful microbes or inactivates them, usually referred to chemicals that kill the growing forms (vegetative forms) but not the resistant spores of bacteria
4. Definitions Antisepsis
destruction of pathogenic microorganisms existing in their vegetative state on living tissue
Sterilization
any process, physical or chemical, that will destroy all forms of life, including bacterial, fungi, spores, and viruses
5. Methods Physical
Heat
Filtration
Irradiation
Quarantine
Chemical Choice of method depends on practical issues such as ease of use or material compatibility
Proctoscope need not be as free of contamination as an artificial heart valve
Cleaning of objects needed before attempt at sterilization
6. Factors influencing ability to kill microbes Strength of the killing agent
Time that the agent has to act
Temperature of environment
rate of microbe death doubles with every 10°C rise in temp.
Type of microbe
Environment around the area to be decontaminated
Number of microbes to be killed
7. Physical Methods: Heat Advantages
Non-toxic
Quick
Cheap
Disadvantages
Can only be used on heat-resistant materials
No use for many plastics, electronics, tarnishes some metals
8. Physical Methods: Heat Pasteurisation
First used with milk: 72°C for 20 seconds
Heating to 80°C for 1 minute will kill most vegetative organisms
Examples: bed-pan washer, proctoscope
Dry heat (hot air oven)
used on waxes, oils (wet heat usually preferred) Incineration
the ultimate sterilization
used for disposal of hospital waste
Wet heat
Boiling
limited use as spores may be resistant, boilers may be misused
Low temperature steam disinfection (75°C for 30 mins)
Used for e.g. ventilator tubing
Autoclaving
High-tempoerature steam plus pressure (same principle as pressure cooker)
9. Autoclaving Requires steam penetration
Cannot work on sealed containers (which can explode!)
Risks of a pressure vessel
Steam condenses on contact, releasing latent heat of evaporation
Condensation leads to vaccum, draws in more steam
10. Autoclaving Best results if air excluded
Downward displacement autoclaves
Usually for lab use: steam displaces air through outlet
Steam heated jacked used to help drying
High pre-vacuum autoclaves
Air excluded before steam enters
11. Autoclaving Need to establish correct cycle and hold times
Typical settings: 121°C @ 15 psi for 15 min. or 121°C @ 30 psi for 3 min
Need to maintain autoclaves and monitor effectiveness
Temperature & pressure charts
Chemical indicators (Browne’s tubes, Bowie-Dick test)
Spore tests
12. Physical Methods Filtration
Used on labile fluids and on air supplies
Gamma-Irradiation
Used on disposable plastics, e.g. in sealed packs
Only in specialised centres
13. Chemicals Use depends on spectrum of antimicrobial activity and compatibility with materials
Also limited by dangers of chemicals themselves Examples
Halogens
Alcohols
Alkylating agents
Ethylene oxide
Phenolics
cetrimide (QAC)
chlorhexidine (diguanide)
14. Halogens Hypochlorites (household bleach) & chlorine
Advantages
active against viruses, spores, fungi
Disadvantages
inactivated by organic matter, freshness & pH critical (go off if diluted), corrosive to metals Practical Uses
0.1% hypochlorite used as general disinfectant
Strong hypochlorite (0.25%) used in lab & on wounds
Extra strong (1%) used on HBV blood spills
Chlorine used to treat drinking water and control Legionella
15. Halogens Iodophors & iodine
Advantages
Some activity against viruses, spores, fungi
Disadvantages
inactivated by organic matter, can stain skin, irritant, expensive
Practical Uses
Pre-op skin disinfection
Povidone iodine used as surgical scrub, as powder on ulcers
16. Alcohols Isopropanol & ethanol
Advantages
kill vegetative bacteria on clean surfaces in 30 seconds
Disadvantages
inactive against spores, fungi
Inflammable
Need to be at correct %age with water (65-80%)
Practical uses
Skin antisepsis before venepuncture
Hand rubs
Disinfection of e.g. trolley tops
17. Alkylating agents Glutaraldehyde and Formaldehyde
Advantages
Good activity against spores, virues, fungi
Disdvantages
Glutaraldehyde only moderately active against TB
Need long exposure time for full effect (3 hours)
freshness & pH critical
TOXIC!
Practical uses
Disinfection of endoscopes
Blood spills
Fumigation
19. Ethylene oxide Highly toxic flammable gas, kills spores!
Used for bulky items such as heart lung machines
Can be used on glutaraldehyde-labile endoscopes
Use limited by safety issues
20. Phenolics & QACs Clear soluble phenolics (e.g. Hycolin) used as disinfectant on soiled surfaces, relatively inactive against spores and viruses
Hexachlorophane used as surgical scrub
Quaternary ammonium compounds, e.g. cetrimide usually only used in combination with other agents; good detergent properties.
21. Chlorhexidine (a diguanide) Used as general purpose antiseptic for skin and mucous membranes in many formulations, e.g. Hibiscrub, Hibisol, Savlon
Advantages: relatively non-toxic and good against S. aureus
Disadvantages: can support growth of e.g. P. aeruginosa
22. Factors determining usefulness of chemical disinfection Spectrum of antimicrobial activity
is it the right agent for the job?
Used at correct concentration
concept of 'in use concentration’
diluted down from high concentration
stored for <24 hours
no topping up of old solutions
23. Factors determining usefulness of chemical disinfection Time of exposure
You cannot disinfect an endoscope in 5 minutes glutaraldehyde!
Correct pH?
Inactivating materials
Pus, blood vomit, cork, soaps etc
Is disinfectant sterile?
Many cases of Gram-negatives living in disinfectants!
Microbiological “in-use” testing
25. The Problem of CJD and TSEs Creutzfeld-Jakob syndrome and other transmissible spongiform encephalopathies caused by highly resistant proteinaceous particles, prions
can survive 3 years of environmental exposure and are unusually resistant to conventional decontamination methods
Iatrogenic CJD documented in three circumstances
use of contaminated medical equipment (2 cases)
use of extracted pituitary hormones (> 130 cases)
implantation of contaminated grafts from humans (cornea, 3 cases; dura mater, > 110 cases)
27. Summary Definitions
Physical methods
heat (wet heat with pressure=autoclaving), filtration, irradiation
Chemical methods
Halogens, alkylating agents, EtOxide, alcohols, etc.
Problem of CJD