Sterilization
Sterilization
ON
“STERILIZATION”
SUBMITTED BY:
NITIN RANA
Definition:
Sterilization: Killing or removing all forms of microbial life (including endospores) in
a material or an object. Heating is the most commonly used method of sterilization.
A microbial population is not killed instantly when exposed to a lethal agent. Population
death, like population growth, is generally exponential or logarithmic—that is, the
population will be reduced by the same fraction at constant intervals. If the logarithm of
the population number remaining is plotted against the time of exposure of the
microorganism to the agent, a straight line plot will result. When the population has been
greatly reduced, the rate of killing may slow due to the survival of a more resistant strain
of the microorganism.
Conditions Influencing the Effectiveness of Antimicrobial Agent
Activity:
1. Population size. Because an equal fraction of a microbial population is killed during
each interval, a larger population requires a longer time to die than a smaller one.
2. Population composition: The effectiveness of an agent varies greatly with the nature
of the organisms being treated because microorganisms differ markedly in
susceptibility. Bacterial Endospores are much more resistant to most antimicrobial
agents than are vegetative forms, and younger cells are usually more readily
destroyed than mature organisms.
(b) Autoclave: Chamber which is filled with hot steam under pressure. Preferred
Method of sterilization, unless material is damaged by heat, moisture, or high pressure.
◆ Temperature of steam reaches 121oC at twice atmospheric pressure.
◆ Most effective when organisms contact steam directly or are contained in
a small volume of liquid.
◆ All organisms and endospores are killed within 15 minutes.
◆ Require more time to reach center of solid or large volumes of liquid.
[2] Low Temperature: The most convenient control technique to inhibit microbial
growth and reproduction by the use of either freezing or refrigeration. This approach is
particularly important in food microbiology. Freezing items at _20°C or lower stops
microbial growth because of the low temperature and the absence of liquid water. Some
microorganisms will be killed by ice crystal disruption of cell membranes, but freezing
does not destroy contaminating microbes.
(a) Refrigeration: Temperatures from 0 to 7oC. Reduces metabolic rate of most
microbes, so they cannot reproduce or produce toxins.
(b) Freezing: Temperatures below 0oC. Used in preservation of milk product, ice cream,
and many aqueous foods.
(c) Flash Freezing: Does not kill most microbes.
(d) Slow Freezing: More harmful because ice crystals disrupt cell structure. Over a third
of vegetative bacteria may survive 1 year. Most parasites are killed by a few days of
freezing.
[3] Filtration: Removal of microbes by passage of a liquid or gas through a screen like
material with small pores. It is an excellent way to reduce the microbial population in
solutions of heat-sensitive material, and sometimes it can be used to sterilize solutions.
Rather than directly destroying contaminating microorganisms, the filter simply removes
them.
This is mainly used in food industry for the removal of contamination of liquid food
material such as fruit juice and edible oil.
Disadvantages: Damages skin, eyes. Do not penetrate paper, glass, and cloth.
[5] Dessication: In the absence of water, microbes cannot grow or reproduce, but some
may remain viable for years. After water becomes available, they start growing again.
Susceptibility to dessication varies widely:
◆ Neisseria gonnorrhea: Only survives about one hour.
◆ Mycobacterium tuberculosis: May survive several months.
◆ Viruses are fairly resistant to dessication.
◆ Clostridium sp. and Bacillus sp.: May survive decades.
[6] Osmotic Pressure: The use of high concentrations of salts and sugars in foods is used
to increase the osmotic pressure and create a hypertonic environment.
[7] Plasmolysis: As water leaves the cell, plasma membrane shrinks away from cell wall.
Cell may not die, but usually stops growing.
◆ Yeasts and molds: More resistant to high osmotic pressures.
◆ Staphylococci sp. that lives on skin is fairly resistant to high osmotic
pressure.