| Literature DB >> 22569892 |
Michael G Schmidt1, Hubert H Attaway, Silva Terzieva, Anna Marshall, Lisa L Steed, Deborah Salzberg, Hameed A Hamoodi, Jamil A Khan, Charles E Feigley, Harold T Michels.
Abstract
Microbial growth in heating ventilation and air-conditioning (HVAC) systems with the subsequent contamination of indoor air is of increasing concern. Microbes and the subsequent biofilms grow easily within heat exchangers. A comparative study where heat exchangers fabricated from antimicrobial copper were evaluated for their ability to limit microbial growth was conducted using a full-scale HVAC system under conditions of normal flow rates using single-pass outside air. Resident bacterial and fungal populations were quantitatively assessed by removing triplicate sets of coupons from each exchanger commencing the fourth week after their installation for the next 30 weeks. The intrinsic biofilm associated with each coupon was extracted and characterized using selective and differential media. The predominant organisms isolated from aluminum exchangers were species of Methylobacterium of which at least three colony morphologies and 11 distinct PFGE patterns we found; of the few bacteria isolated from the copper exchangers, the majority were species of Bacillus. The concentrations and type of bacteria recovered from the control, aluminum, exchangers were found to be dependent on the type of plating media used and were 11,411-47,257 CFU cm(-2) per coupon surface. The concentration of fungi was found to average 378 CFU cm(-2). Significantly lower concentrations of bacteria, 3 CFU cm(-2), and fungi, 1 CFU cm(-2), were recovered from copper exchangers regardless of the plating media used. Commonly used aluminum heat exchangers developed stable, mixed, bacterial/fungal biofilms in excess of 47,000 organisms per cm(2) within 4 weeks of operation, whereas the antimicrobial properties of metallic copper were able to limit the microbial load affiliated with the copper heat exchangers to levels 99.97 % lower during the same time period.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22569892 PMCID: PMC3378845 DOI: 10.1007/s00284-012-0137-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Microbiol ISSN: 0343-8651 Impact factor: 2.188
Fig. 1Schematic representation of full-scale HVAC test system used in this study. a General illustration of the test system; b Photographic representation of typical aluminum (control) heat exchanger (30.5 × 3.5 × 6.6 cm3 fin area dimensions) used in the full-scale HVAC test system; c orientation of copper and aluminum heat exchangers within the test system visualized from the perspective of the inflow side of the exchangers. E and W designations represent the east or west side of system; d schematic representation of the L-shaped coupons placed within each of the heat exchangers and retrieved weekly throughout the study. Coupons were manufactured from the same aluminum or copper alloy as the corresponding heat exchanger, were placed accordingly, and retrieved at selected time-points by grasping the top portion with sterile forceps. The coupons were deposited into sterile processing vials by cutting the upper L-portion of the coupon off with sterile scissors. The resident biofilm on each coupon was determined as described in the “Methods”
Fig. 2Intrinsic concentration of bacteria (a) or fungi (b) resident on copper (white columns) or aluminum coupons (solid gray columns) retrieved from their respective heat exchangers over a 30-week test period. Bacterial CFU cm−2 of coupon surface were determined from direct plate counts as assessed by growth on TSA + CE plates. Fungal CFU cm−2 of coupon surface were determined from direct plate counts as assessed by growth on SB + CL plates. The HVAC test system was initiated on week 1 and test coupons were inserted on week 3 with sampling beginning on week 4. The bacterial concentrations reported for week 4 exceeded levels that could reliably be determined using the dilutions used and were reported as >136 CFU cm−2
Fig. 3Comparison of the bacteria and fungi found on aluminum heat exchangers based on vertical location within the heat exchanger. Bacterial (CFU cm−2, solid gray columns) were determined from direct plate counts as assessed by growth on TSA + CE plates. Fungal (CFU cm−2) were determined from direct plate counts as assessed by growth on SB + CL plates (white columns)
Fig. 4Recovery of viable bacteria from coupons is more efficient when using R2A + CE agar. The average concentration of bacteria (CFU cm−2) recovered from a subset of aluminum coupons was determined by plating each sample onto either TSA + CE agar (solid gray columns) or R2A + CE plates (white columns)
Fig. 5Representation of the population distribution of Methylobacterium spp. recovered from the selected aluminum coupons taken from the W1 and E3 heat exchangers during weeks 12–34. Bacterial CFU cm−2 of coupon surface were determined from direct plate counts as assessed by growth on R2A + CE plates. Solid gray columns represent the percentage of Methylobacterium spp. recovered from the total population of microbes isolated from the coupons recovered from E3 heat exchanger while the white columns represent the percentage of Methylobacterium spp. resident within the population of microbes isolated from the coupons recovered from the W1 heat exchanger. The average distribution is plotted as the open circles