Center for Biofilm Engineering
Abstract:
"A Laboratory Hot Tub Model for Disinfectant Efficacy Evaluation"
07-003
This paper describes a novel laboratory hot tub (LHT) apparatus and
associated standard operating procedure (SOP) designed to reproduce the key
biological, chemical, and engineering parameters associated with recreational
and therapeutic hot tubs. Efficacy, as measured quantitatively by log reduction
values, was determined against both biofilm and planktonic bacteria. When the
LHT was run according to the SOP, with no antimicrobial treatment, a consistent
level of bacterial contamination occurred. The means of log10 viable
cell densities (± the repeatability standard deviation of log densities) were
7.2 (± 0.31) for the bulk water (density in units of cfu ml− 1), 5.3
(± 0.56) for the coupons (density in units of cfu cm− 2), and 6.6 (±
0.50) for the filters (density in units of cfu cm− 2). When control
and chlorine treated LHTs were run in parallel, the log reduction increased
significantly with chlorine concentration for samples of planktonic bacteria in
the bulk water (p = 0.016), biofilm bacteria on the coupons (p =
0.09) and biofilm bacteria on the filter (p = 0.005), indicating that the
method was sensitive to chlorine concentration. The method also displayed
sensitivity by differentiating between chlorine and bromine treatments; in every
case, chlorine produced a greater log reduction than did the same concentration
of bromine. The model and SOP were shown to be rugged with respect to slight
changes in fluid mixing intensity, water chemistry (saturation index), inoculum
size, and organic loading. The LHT and associated SOP provide a reliable second
tier in a three-tiered testing process, in which the first tier is a suspension
test and the final tier is a field test.
Goeres DM, Loetterle LR, Hamilton MA, "A Laboratory Hot Tub Model for
Disinfectant Efficacy Evaluation," J Microbiol Meth 2007; 68:184-192
Abstract 07-003
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