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. 2014 Feb 25;5(2):e00013-14. doi: 10.1128/mBio.00013-14

TABLE 1.

Bactericidal effect of increasing exposure times and acid concentrations

Acid and/or conditions Solution characteristicsa
Log10 reduction of viable bacteriab
BSA and RBC concn (%)c pH pH with M. abscessusd Molar concn Exposure time (min) Final concn (%) E. coli DH5α E. coli survivors M. smegmatis M. smegmatis survivors M. tuberculosis mc27000 M. tuberculosis H37Rv MDR
M. tuberculosis
XDR
M. tuberculosis
M. abscessus M. bolletii M. massiliense Rf M. massiliense S.f
Acetic acid 0.34 20 2.5 3 2
0.40 30 3 4 4 3
0.54 20 4 3 4 3 3
2.45 2.62 0.83 20 5 8.5 7 7 7 3 4.5 3 4
0.83 25 5 5
0.83 30 5 7e 5
2.43 2.57 1.00 25 6 9e 5.5 4 2
1.00 30 6 8e 7e 8e 8e 8e 8 5 3 3
2.31 2.42 1.33 30 8 8e 8e 8e 7 4.5 5
2.27 2.40 1.67 30 10 8e 8e 8e 8e 6 6 6
Acetic acid,
dirty conditions
2 20 6 6
3 25 6 7
3.5 25 7 9e
2.5 30 10 8e
Propionic
acid
0.9 20 6.7 8e
1.08 20 8.0 7
1.08 25 8.0 7
1.15 20 8.5 8e
a

High-level disinfectant activity is indicated in bold.

b

The numbers represent the reductions, expressed in log10, in the number of colonies recovered after the acid exposures, compared to that of controls exposed to sterile water alone under the same conditions.

c

BSA, bovine serum albumin; RBCs, human red blood cells.

d

M. abscessus with optical density at 600 nm of 1 was diluted 1:10 in the acetic acid solutions.

e

Limit of detection (no colonies recovered from exposed bacteria).

f

R and S refer to the rough and smooth morphotypes of M. massiliense.