| Literature DB >> 32365891 |
Luca Fiorillo1, Gabriele Cervino1, Marco Matarese1, Cesare D'Amico1, Giovanni Surace2,3, Valeria Paduano3, Maria Teresa Fiorillo3, Antonio Moschella4, Alessia La Bruna5, Giovanni Luca Romano6, Riccardo Laudicella7, Sergio Baldari1,7, Marco Cicciù1.
Abstract
Recently, due to the coronavirus pandemic, many guidelines and anti-contagion strategies continue to report unclear information about the persistence of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in the environment. This certainly generates insecurity and fear in people, with an important psychological component that is not to be underestimated at this stage of the pandemic. The purpose of this article is to highlight all the sources currently present in the literature concerning the persistence of the different coronaviruses in the environment as well as in medical and dental settings. As this was a current study, there are still not many sources in the literature, and scientific strategies are moving towards therapy and diagnosis, rather than knowing the characteristics of the virus. Such an article could be an aid to summarize virus features and formulate new guidelines and anti-spread strategies.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; epidemiology; infection risk; surfaces; virus
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32365891 PMCID: PMC7246498 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17093132
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Results of individual studies. Results are organized as described in Section 2.7.
| Virus | Authors and Year | Investigated Material | Time | Note on results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2019-nCoV | Van Doremalen et al. 2020 [ | aerosols | 3 h | Reduction from 103.5 to 102.7 TCID50 per liter of air |
| plastic | 72 h | Reduction from 103.7 to 100.6 TCID50 per millimeter | ||
| stainless steel | 48 h | from 103.7 to 100.6 TCID50 per millimeter | ||
| copper | 4 h | No viable SARS-CoV-2 | ||
| cardboard | 24 h | No viable SARS-CoV-2 | ||
| Other coronaviruses | Van Doremalen et al. 2020 [ | aerosols | 3 h | reduction from 104.3 to 103.5 TCID50 per liter of air |
| plastic | 72 h | from 103.4 to 100.7 TCID50 per millimeter | ||
| stainless steel | 48 h | from 103.6 to 100.6 TCID50 per millimeter | ||
| copper | 8 h | No viable SARS-CoV-1 | ||
| cardboard | 8 h | No viable SARS-CoV-1 | ||
| Kampf et al. 2020 [ | paper | 5 min up to 5 days | 105 TCID50 per millimeter | |
| glass | 4–5 d | 104 TCID50 per millimeter | ||
| plastic | 2–9 d | 106 TCID50 per millimeter | ||
| PVC | 5 d | 103 TCID50 per millimeter | ||
| silicon rubber | 5 d | 103 TCID50 per millimeter | ||
| surgical gloves (latex) | 5 d | 103 TCID50 per millimeter | ||
| disposable gowns | 1–2 d | 105 TCID50 per millimeter | ||
| Warnes et al. 2015 [ | polyfluorotetraethylene (PTFE) | 5 d | 103 TCID50 per millimeter | |
| ceramic | 5 d | 103 TCID50 per millimeter | ||
| glass | 5 d | 103 TCID50 per millimeter | ||
| stainless steel | 5 d | 103 TCID50 per millimeter | ||
| polyvinyl chloride (PVC) | 5 d | 103 TCID50 per millimeter | ||
| silicon rubber | 3 d | 103 TCID50 per millimeter | ||
| brasses containing copper | <40 min | 103 TCID50 per millimeter | ||
| copper nickels | 120 min | 103 TCID50 per millimeter | ||
| zinc | 60 min |
Figure 1PRISMA checklist.