Publication | Open Access
Killing of S. mutans Bacteria Using a Plasma Needle at Atmospheric Pressure
196
Citations
25
References
2006
Year
Cold Atmospheric PlasmaS. Mutans BacteriaMedicineNonthermal PlasmaAtmospheric PressureSpatial DistributionOral MicrobiologyMicrobiologyInfection ControlBiomedical EngineeringPlasma NeedlePlasma TreatmentClinical MicrobiologyS. Mutans
Streptococcus mutans (S. mutans) bacteria were killed using a low-power millimeter-size atmospheric-pressure glow-discharge plasma or plasma needle. The plasma was applied to a culture of S. mutans that was plated onto the surface of an agar nutrient in a Petri dish. S. mutans is the most important microorganism for causing dental caries. A spatially resolved biological diagnostic of the plasma is introduced, where the spatial pattern of bacterial colonies in the sample was imaged after plasma treatment and incubation. For low-power conditions that would be attractive for dentistry, images from this biological diagnostic reveal that S. mutans was killed within a solid circle with a 5-mm diameter, demonstrating that site-specific treatment is possible. For other conditions, which are of interest for understanding plasma transport, images show that bacteria were killed with a ring-shaped spatial pattern. This ring pattern coincides with a similar ring in the spatial distribution of energetic electrons, as revealed by Abel-inverted images of the glow. The presence of the radicals OH and O was verified using optical-emission spectroscopy
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