Microbiology: The control of microbial growth Flashcards

Which of the following is the best method to sterilize heat-labile solutions

membrane filtration

which of the following best describes the pattern of microbial death

the cells in a population die at a constant rate

which of the following substances is used for surgical hand scrubs

chlorhexidine

which of the following pairs of terms is mismatched

bateriostatic -- kills vegetative bacterial cells

the antimicrobial activity of chlorine is due to which of the following

the formation of hypochlorous acid

which of the following regarding antimicrobial control agents is false

alcohols effectively inactivate nonenveloped viruses by attacking lipids

which of the following does not achieve sterilization

pasteurization

which of the following is a limitation of the autoclave

it cannot be used with heat-labile materials

an agent used to reduce the number of bacteria on a toilet would most
accurately be called

disinfectant

application of heat to living cells can result in all of the
following except

decreased thermal death time

which of the following disinfectant acts by disrupting the plasma membrane

bisphenols

all of the following substances are effective against nonenveloped
viruses except

alcohol

which of the following methods is used to preserve food by slowing
the metabolic processes of foodborne microbes

freezing

which concentration of ethanol is the most effective bactericide

70%

all of the following factors contribute to hospital-acquired
infections except

all of these factors may contribute to hospital-acquired infection
some bacteria metabolize disinfectants
gram-negative bacteria are often resistant to disinfectant
invasive procedures can provide a portal of entry for bacteria
bacterial may be present in commercial products such as mouthwash `w

which of the following treatments is the most effective for
controlling microbial growth

they are equivalent treatments

which of the following could be used to sterilize plastic petri
plates in a plastic wrapper

gamma radiation

In figure 7.1 what is the thermal death time

60 minutes

In figure 7.1 the thermal death point for this culture is

answer cannot be determined

in figure 7.1 the decimal reduction time (D value) for the culture,
which is defined as the time to reduce a population by one log, is approximately

10 minutes

which of the following results in lethal damage to nucleic acids

heat, radiation, and some chemicals

in table 7.1 which compound was the most effective against staphylococcus

C

in table 7.1 which compound was bactericidal

answer cannot be determined

all of the following substances are used to preserve foods except

biguanides

all of the following are effective for destroying prions except

boiling

all of the following are methods of food preservation except

microwaves

which of the following is most resistant to chemical biocides

gram-negative bacteria

the thermal death time is the time needed to kill all the bacteria in
a particular culture at a certain temperature

TRUE

pseudomonas has been found growing in quarternary ammonium compounds

TRUE

moist heat destroys organisms by denaturing proteins

TRUE

some antimicrobial chemicals are considered to be disinfectants and antiseptics

TRUE

the pH of the medium has no effect on the activity of the
disinfectant being applied

FALSE

autoclaving is the most effective method of moist heat sterilization

TRUE

microorganism placed in high concentrations of salts and sugars
undergo lysis

FALSE

sterilization

removal or destruction of all microorganism

sterilant

sterilizing agent

commercial sterilization

limited heat treatment

disinfectant

control directed at destroying harmful microorganisms

antisepsis

when treatment is directed at living tissue

degerming

when the skin is swabbed with alcohol before vaccination

sanitization

intended to lower microbial counts

biocide/gemicide

kills microorganisms

sepsis

bacterial contamination

what is the rate of microbial death

the number of microbes
environmental influences
time of exposure
microbial characterisitics

What is thermal death point

the lowest temperature at which all the microorganisms in a
particular liquid suspension will be killed in 10 minutes

What is thermal death time

the minimal length of time for all bacteria in a particular liquid
culture to be killed at a given temperature

what is decimal reduction time

time in which 90% of a population of bacteria at a given temperature
will be killed

how does moist heat kill microorganisms

by coagulating proteins

what is an autoclave

preferred method of sterilization in health care environments

what are retorts

large industrial autoclaves

pressure and temperature in an autoclave

higher the temperature (121oC), the higher the pressure (150lbs/psi)

pasteurization

elimination of pathogenic microbes

thermoduric

heat-resistant bacteria

high temperature short-time pasteurization

most milk pasteurization uses temperature of 72oC but for
only 15 secs
also lower bacterial counts

utlra-high-temperature treatments

method of treating foods with high temperature for short times

equivalent treatments

as temperature rises, less time is needed to kill same number of microbes

hot air sterilization

items are placed in an oven for longer period, higher temperature is required

filtration

passage of a liquid/gas through a screenlike material with pores
small enough to retain microorganisms

high-effeciency particulate are filters

remove almost all microorganisms larger than about 0.3um in diameter

phenol

phenol was used to control surgical infections in the operation room.

phenolics

derivative of phenol, contains a molecule of phenol that is
chemically altered to reduce its irritation qualities and increase
antibacterial activity

cresols

most frequently used phenolics

bisphenol

contain 2 phenolic groups, hexachlorophenes and triclosan

hexachlorophenes

is an ingredient of a prescription lotion, pHisoHex, used for
surgical and hospital microbial control procedure

triclosan

is an antibacterial soap

what forms when chlorine is combined with water

hypochlorous acid
Cl2 + H2O <-> H+ +
Cl- + HOCl

quaternary ammonium compounds

most used surface active agents

what is sodium hypochlorite used as

a household disinfectant and bleach

what is potassium sorbate and benzoate used for

to prevent molds from growing on acidic foods

what is calcium propionate used for

it is an effective fungistat used in bread

evaluation of disinfectants by the disk-dilution method