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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., 02 1996, 545-551, Vol 62, No. 2
JL Sagripanti and A Bonifacino
We compared the effectiveness of glutaraldehyde, formaldehyde, hydrogen
peroxide, peracetic acid, cupric ascorbate (plus a sublethal amount of
hydrogen peroxide), sodium hypochlorite, and phenol to inactivate Bacillus
subtilis spores under various conditions. Each chemical agent was
distinctly affected by pH, storage time after activation, dilution, and
temperature. Only three of the preparations (hypochlorite, peracetic acid,
and cupric ascorbate) studied here inactivated more than 99.9% of the spore
load after a 30-min incubation at 20 degrees C at concentrations generally
used to decontaminate medical devices. Under similar conditions,
glutaraldehyde inactivated approximately 90%, and hydrogen peroxide,
formaldehyde, and phenol produced little killing of spores in suspension.
By kinetic analysis at different temperatures, we calculated the rate of
spore inactivation (k) and the activation energy of spore killing (delta E)
for each chemical agent. Rates of spore inactivation had a similar delta E
value of approximately 20 kcal/mol (ca.83.68 kJ/mol) for every substance
tested. The variation among k values allowed a quantitative comparison of
liquid germicidal agents.
Comparative sporicidal effects of liquid chemical agents
Molecular Biology Branch, Food and Drug Administration, Rockville, Maryland 20857, USA.
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