Publication | Open Access
Ozone inactivation of Cryptosporidium parvum in demand-free phosphate buffer determined by in vitro excystation and animal infectivity
138
Citations
27
References
1993
Year
Advanced Oxidation ProcessEngineeringAnimal InfectivityCryptosporidium ParvumInactivation LevelWastewater TreatmentEnvironmental ChemistryInactivation KineticsBioremediationWater TreatmentToxicologyVitro ExcystationOzone Layer DepletionDisinfectantOzoneCryptosporidium Parvum OocystsEnvironmental EngineeringMicrobiologyEnvironmental ToxicologyUv-c IrradiationMedicine
Inactivation of Cryptosporidium parvum oocysts by ozone was performed in ozone demand-free 0.05 M phosphate buffer (pH 6.9) in bench-scale batch reactors at 7 and 22 degrees C. Ozone was added to each trial from a concentrated stock solution for contact times ranging from 5 to 15 min. The viability of the control and treated oocysts was determined by using in vitro excystation and infection in neonatal CD-1 mice. It was found that excystation consistently underestimated inactivation when compared with animal infectivity (P < or = 0.05). As inactivations increased, the difference between excystation and infectivity also increased. The inactivation kinetics of C. parvum by ozone deviated from the simple first-order Chick-Watson model and was better described by a nonlinear Hom model. The use of the Hom model for predicting inactivation resulted in a family of unique concentration and time values for each inactivation level rather than the simple CT product of the Chick-Watson model.
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