Publication | Closed Access
Antimicrobial effect of chlorine on <i>Yersinia enterocolitica</i>
14
Citations
9
References
1993
Year
The effects of chlorine at varying pH, culture media and incubation temperatures on one type and two wild type strains of Yersinia enterocolitica were studied. Exposure to 1 and 5 mg 1(-1) did not diminish viability, even after prolonged exposure. A level of 10 mg 1(-1) was required to achieve a 5-log reduction in 120 s for the type strain and 80 s for the wild strains. There was an increase of more than 30% in the rate of disinfection with a 10 degrees C rise, a remarkable increase in antimicrobial activity at pH 5-log reduction in 20 s, as well as marked neutralization of the effect in the presence of 0.1% peptone. Younger cells were more susceptible than older ones, and those from liquid medium more resistant than those from solid medium. Incubation temperature of a 24-h inoculum failed to show any influence. Lastly, there was a noteworthy demand for free chlorine by bacterial biomass, with agreement of the curve depicting the drop in free chlorine in the presence of inoculum with biphasic kinetics of survival curves.
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