CDC logo
Safer Healthier People
CDC Home CDC Search CDC Health Topics A-Z
NIOSH - National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health

Skip navigation links Search NIOSH  |  NIOSH Home  |  NIOSH Topics  |  Site Index  |  Databases and Information Resources  |  NIOSH Products  |  Contact Us

Search for NIOSH Publications: NIOSHTIC-2

NIOSHTIC-2 Search Results

      Advanced Search  |  Help  |  About  |  Feedback 
Terms: 20027860
1 - 1 of 1 Bibliographic entries
All record(s) shown.
Save All   |   Save Page
View Saved    |    Download
Select check boxes to automatically save entries, or use 'save all' or 'save page' links above.
Back to Results
Respirator filter reuse test using the laboratory simulant Mycobacterium tuberculosis (H37RA strain).
Authors
Johnson-B; Winters-DR; Shreeve-TR; Coffey-CC
Source
Appl Biosafety 1998 Jul-Sep; 3(3):105-116
Link
http://www.absa.org/abj/abj/980303Johnson.pdf 
NIOSHTIC No.
20027860 
Abstract
All respirators, certified under Title 42, Code of Federal Regulations, Part 84, can be used by health-care workers for protection against Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb). Questions have been raised regarding the possibility of the respirator becoming contaminated with Mtb or other organisms due to reuse, handling, and storage in plastic bags. This study was conducted to: (1) determine whether, and for how long, avirulent Mtb (strain H37Ra) survives on respirator material, and (2) measure levels of contamination (assess contamination by environmental bacteria and fungi due to storage in airtight bags) potentially spread to the respirator's interior surface due to normal mechanical handling (removal and re-insertion of the respirator into air-tight bag). Six models of filtering facepiece respirators were challenged with a concentration of 10^5 to 10^6 colony forming units (CFUs) H37Ra per liter of air in a steady flow system. Respirator interior and exterior surfaces were swab sampled on day -1 (prior to exposure), 0 (day of exposure), 1, 3, 7, 10, 14, 21, and 28. Between samplings, each respirator was sotred at room temperature in a Zip-lock bag. Seven days after exposure the number of viable organisms decreased from a mean range of 27 to 131 colony forming units per square centimeter (CFU/cm2) to zero CFU/cm2 on the exterior of the different respirator models. While several respirators had interior contamination immediately following challenge, no transfer of exterior H37Ra was observed. Some colony growth was recoverable from day 14 to 28 indicating there was some incidental contamination with environmental bacteria to the interior of the respirator after repeated handling and storage.
Keywords
Respirators; Respiratory-protective-equipment; Filters; Health-care-personnel; Models; Sampling; Environmental-contamination; Bacteria; Fungi; Exposure-assessment
Publication Date
19980101
Document Type
Journal Article
Fiscal Year
1998
NTIS Accession No.
NTIS Price
Issue of Publication
3
ISSN
1535-6760
NIOSH Division
DRDS
Source Name
Applied Biosafety: Journal of the American Biological Safety Association
State
WV
Page 1 of 1
All record(s) shown.

File Formats Help:

Adobe PDF file
How do I view different file formats (PDF, DOC, PPT, MPEG) on this site?double arrows.