Literature DB >> 14482390

Factors affecting the activity of phenolic disinfectants.

L F ORTENZIO, C D OPALSKY, L S STUART.   

Abstract

Low challenge phenol coefficient and high challenge use-dilution tests were made on a neutral cocoanut oil soap emulsion of o-phenylphenol and aqueous solutions of sodium o-phenylphenate prepared in the laboratory from the phenol using a stoichiometric amount of NaOH as well as with increasing amounts of excess NaOH. The phenol had considerably greater activity in both test methods when emulsified with the neutral soap than when converted to the phenate and dissolved in water. Use dilution test results against Salmonella choleraesuis with both the phenol and the phenate were within the range which would have been predicted from the Salmonella typhosa coefficient results employing the conventional conversion multiple of 20 to determine the maximal number of parts of water to which one part of germicide could be added. With the emulsified phenol this was also true where Staphylococcus aureus was employed in both procedures. With the aqueous solution of the phenate the maximal safe use-dilution by the phenol coefficient found for S. aureus and the same conventional conversion procedure was roughly five times higher than the maximal safe use-dilution found by the use-dilution method. Results with aqueous solutions of the phenate to which increasing amounts of excess NaOH were added showed no significant differences in the phenol coefficient method with either S. typhosa or S. aureus. In the use-dilution method, significant decreases in activity were found as the excess NaOH was increased to 4% with both S. choleraesuis and S. aureus. Although the pH values of aqueous solutions of the phenate were raised as the amount of free NaOH was increased, the decreases in pH observed as the dilution with water was increased were such that only small differences existed at the high critical killing dilutions found in the low challenge phenol coefficient method, whereas rather large differences existed at the lower critical killing dilutions in the high challenge use-dilution method.

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Keywords:  ANTISEPTICS/pharmacology

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Substances:

Year:  1961        PMID: 14482390      PMCID: PMC1057788          DOI: 10.1128/am.9.6.562-566.1961

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Appl Microbiol        ISSN: 0003-6919


  1 in total

1.  Studies on the Action of Wetting Agents on Microörganisms: I. The Effect of pH and Wetting Agents on the Germicidal Action of Phenolic Compounds.

Authors:  E J Ordal; J L Wilson; A F Borg
Journal:  J Bacteriol       Date:  1941-07       Impact factor: 3.490

  1 in total
  2 in total

1.  Effect of excess alkali on the tuberculocidal activity of phenates.

Authors:  C H Shaffer; L Stuart; L F Ortenzio
Journal:  Appl Microbiol       Date:  1966-01

2.  Development of pumping emulsification device with glass membrane to form ideal lipiodol emulsion in transarterial chemoembolization.

Authors:  Toshihiro Tanaka; Tetsuya Masada; Hideyuki Nishiofuku; Yasushi Fukuoka; Takeshi Sato; Shota Tatsumoto; Nagaaki Marugami; Shushi Higashi; Kimihiko Kichikawa
Journal:  Eur Radiol       Date:  2017-12-15       Impact factor: 5.315

  2 in total

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