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Microwave can 'cook' sponges and
scrubs
Washington:
Researchers have found that 'cooking' your kitchen
sponges and plastic scrubbers, known to be common
carriers of bacteria and viruses that cause food-borne
illnesses, in your microwave sterilizes them. The
University of Florida engineers said this means that
the people with microwaves in their kitchens have
a powerful weapon against E.coli, salmonella and other
bugs at the root of increasing incidents of potentially
deadly food poisoning and other illnesses. "Basically
what we find is that we could knock out most bacteria
in two minutes. People often put their sponges and
scrubbers in the dishwasher, but if they really want
to decontaminate them and not just clean them, they
should use the microwave," said Gabriel Bitton, a
professor of environmental engineering at the University
of Florida. Bitton said the UF researchers soaked
sponges and scrubbing pads in raw wastewater containing
a witch's brew of fecal bacteria, viruses, protozoan
parasites and bacterial spores, including Bacillus
cereus spores.
Like
many other bacterial spores, Bacillus cereus spores
are quite resistant to radiation, heat and toxic chemicals,
and they are notoriously difficult to kill. The UF
researchers used the spores as surrogates for cysts
and oocysts of disease-causing parasitic protozoa
such as Giardia, the infectious stage of the protozoa.
The researchers used bacterial viruses as a substitute
for disease-causing food-borne viruses, such as noroviruses
and hepatitis A virus. The researchers used an off-the-shelf
microwave oven to zap the sponges and scrub pads for
varying lengths of time, wringing them out and determining
the microbial load of the water for each test. They
compared their findings with water from control sponges
and pads not placed in the microwave. The results
were unambiguous: Two minutes of microwaving on full
power mode killed or inactivated more than 99 percent
of all the living pathogens in the sponges and pads,
although the Bacillus cereus spores required four
minutes for total inactivation. Bitton said the heat,
rather than the microwave radiation, likely is what
proves fatal to the pathogens. Because the microwave
works by exciting water molecules, it is better to
microwave wet rather than dry sponges or scrub pads,
he said. "The microwave is a very powerful and an
inexpensive tool for sterilization," Bitton said,
adding that people should microwave their sponges
according to how often they cook, with every other
day being a good rule of thumb. Spurred by the trend
toward home health care, the researchers also examined
the effects of microwaving contaminated syringes.
Bitton said the goal in this research was to come
up with a way to sterilize syringes and other equipment
that, at home, often gets tossed in the household
trash, winding up in standard rather than hazardous
waste landfills.
The
researchers also found that microwaves were effective
in decontaminating syringes, but that it generally
took far longer, up to 12 minutes for Bacillus cereus
spores. The researchers also discovered they could
shorten the time required for sterilization by placing
the syringes in heat-trapping ceramic bowls. Bitton
said preliminary research also shows that microwaves
might be effective against bioterrorism pathogens
such as anthrax, used in the deadly, still-unsolved
2001 postal attacks. Using a dose of Bacillus cereus
dried on an envelope as a substitute for mail contaminated
by anthrax spores, Bitton said he found he could kill
98 percent of the spores in 10 minutes by microwaving
the paper - suggesting, he said, one possible course
of action for people who fear mail might be contaminated.
However, Bitton said that more research was needed
to confirm that this approach works against actual
anthrax spores.
- January 23, 2007
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