Unbound MEDLINE

INACTIVATION OF GIARDIA LAMBLIA CYSTS BY COBALT-60 IRRADIATION. The Journal of parasitology [J Parasitol] Journal article

 
TitleINACTIVATION OF GIARDIA LAMBLIA CYSTS BY COBALT-60 IRRADIATION.
Author(s)Sundermann CA, Estridge BH 
SourceJ Parasitol 2009 Nov 5.:1.
AbstractCysts of Giardia lamblia can be a contaminant of water and food that can infect humans and cause the zoonotic disease, giardiasis. Irradiation by a cobalt-60 source was investigated for ability to inactivate cysts such that they would not be infective to gerbils. Cysts that received doses of radiation ranging from 0.25 to 2.0 kGy, with a recovery period of 6 hr or less, did not infect gerbils. Cysts that were irradiated at 0.25 kGy and allowed to recover at room temperature for 24 hr or longer were infective. Temperature had an effect on the ability of cysts to regain infectivity in that cysts which were allowed to recover at 4 C after irradiation were not infective. Therefore, recovery time and temperature are important parameters for determination of the doses that are necessary for inactivation of pathogens. The ability of staining with propidium iodide to predict infectivity of cysts was tested. Cysts that were damaged by higher doses of radiation and were not infective to gerbils stained similarly to viable cysts that were infective. Thus, propidium iodide is not a reliable indicator of viablity and infectivity of cysts that have been treated with gamma radiation.
LanguageENG
Pub Type(s)JOURNAL ARTICLE
PubMed ID19891511
  
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