sterilization
the removal or destruction of ALL living microbes and endospores.
most common method is heating.
sterilant
sterilizing agent
disinfectant
chemical used to treat inert/non-living surfaces.
disinfection
control directed at destroying harmful microbes, only vegetative (actively diving) cells, NO ENDOSPORES.
antisepsis
same treatment as a disinfectant, aimed directed at destroying harmful microbes, but for LIVING tissue.
antiseptic
chemical used to treat living tissue.
degerming
mechanical removal most microbes on a limited area.
handwashing and alcohol swab.
sanitization
lowers microbial counts, not to zero, but enough to be at safe public health levels and minimize the chances of disease transmission.
method: using high-temperature washing.
biocide
kills microbes
other types: fungicide, virucide.
bacteriostasis
inhibits the growth and replication of bacteria + keeps it STEADY.
once removed, growth may resume.
sepsis
bacterial contamination.
asepsis
the absence of significant contamination.
aseptic
indications an object or area is free of pathogens.
the rate of microbial death:
microbial growth agents can:
what are the 2 physical methods of microbial control?
thermal death point
the lowest temperature at which all microbes in a fluid culture will be killed in 10 minutes.
thermal death time
the minimal time required to kill all the bacteria in a liquid culture at a given temperature.
decimal reduction time
the length in time at which 90% of a bacterial population will be killed at a given temperature.
moist heat sterilization includes:
dry heat sterilization includes:
radiation includes:
chemical methods of microbial control:
principles of effective disinfection: