scholarly journals Electrochemical nanoparticle–enzyme sensors for screening bacterial contamination in drinking water

The Analyst ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 140 (15) ◽  
pp. 4991-4996 ◽  
Author(s):  
Juhong Chen ◽  
Ziwen Jiang ◽  
Jonathan D. Ackerman ◽  
Mahdieh Yazdani ◽  
Singyuk Hou ◽  
...  

A simple, sensitive and rapid electrochemical method for bacterial detection in drinking water is developed based on gold nanoparticle–enzyme complexes.

1989 ◽  
Vol 102 (2) ◽  
pp. 309-316 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kåre Mølbak ◽  
Niels Højlyng ◽  
Søren Jepsen ◽  
Knud Gaarslev

SUMMARYThe food and water hygiene in two Liberian communities was studied in a house-to-house diarrhoea survey. The level of contamination with enterobacteria of drinking water stored in the households was significantly higher than at the water sources. Food hygiene standards were low, particularly in the urban slum where storage of cooked food for long periods led to bacterial multiplication at high levels. Infant foods were particularly heavily contaminated. It is concluded that when water supply programmes are planned, the presence of other risk factors for water-related diseases should be investigated. To ensure maximum health benefits, water projects should as a rule be accompanied by other interventions.


1982 ◽  
Vol 88 (1) ◽  
pp. 63-67 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laila El Attar ◽  
Aleya Abdel Gawad ◽  
Amal E. M. Khairy ◽  
Olfat El Sebaie

SUMMARYWhilst the major danger associated with drinking water is that it may be contaminated with sewage or human excreta, the danger of pollution from animals must not be overlooked. Outbreaks of infection from drinking water are frequently reported (Melnick & Gerba, 1979) and high prevalence rates of diarrhoeal diseases have been found in the Nile Delta (Sallamet al. unpublished data). The supply of potable water is a critically urgent national problem and is of especial importance to communities which must rely on poorly designed supply systems and which lack even the minimum quality control services.


2017 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 81-89 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kelly Mills ◽  
James Golden ◽  
Alyssa Bilinski ◽  
Adam L. Beckman ◽  
Katherine McDaniel ◽  
...  

Abstract In northern coastal Ecuador, water is routinely sold in 20 L reusable bottles for household consumption. These bottles are filled at central treatment facilities and distributed by private water companies. Similar bottled water markets are found in countries around the world. Commercially available bottled water offers an alternative source of drinking water in locations where piped infrastructure may be unsafe or non-existent. In this study we found that 73% (n = 94/128) of water sold in reusable containers in the Esmeraldas province of Ecuador was contaminated with coliform bacteria. In comparison, 25% (n = 9/36) of non-reusable bottles and 9% (n = 2/22) of water samples taken directly from the water treatment system contained coliform, suggesting that most observed bacterial contamination occurred due to inadequate cleaning of reusable bottles between use. The coliform contamination may pose a health risk to the Esmeraldas population. The present study may be indicative of similar situations in low- and middle-income countries around the world, given the widespread use of reusable bottles for water.


Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 1454-1454 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joycelyn Sim Pui Yin ◽  
Rock Leung Yuk Yan ◽  
Clarence Lam Chun Kit ◽  
Chiu Tsoi Wai ◽  
Kwong Lee Cheuk ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction : Depending on the conditioning intensity and graft source, mosthematopoietic stem cell transplant(HSCT) patients invariably experience a cytopenic phase of at least 2-3 weeks and require transfusion support until engraftment. All transfused blood components post-transplant need to be gamma irradiated to prevent transfusion associated graft versus host disease (TA-GVHD). Platelet component (PC) manufacturing methodologies differ around the globe. Currently, Hong Kong HSCT patients are supported with individual platelet rich plasma (PRP) PCs without leukocyte filtration (NLF), tested by short-term aerobic cultures for bacterial contamination (STABC), and gamma irradiated. When new PC manufacturing methodologies are considered for adoption, it is important to assess the immediate and longer term effects on transfused patients. Amotosalen+UVA light (A-UVA) pathogen reduction technology (INTERCEPT™ Blood System, Cerus Corporation, Concord, CA) inactivates bacteria, viruses, parasites and leukocytes by efficient covalent adduct modification of DNA and RNA. Treatment with A-UVA prevents TA- GVHD in an animal model, inhibits clonal T cell proliferation, prevents allogeneic antigen stimulation in mixed lymphocyte reactions, and inhibits transcription mediated cytokine production and early activation antigen expression (Corash et al, BMT 2004). The common strategy of prescribing gamma irradiated PC only for suspected "high risk" patients is sub-optimal, as failure to identify recipients at risk for TA-GVHD was responsible for 50% of reported cases (Kopolovic et al. Blood 2016). Treatment of PC with A-UVA addresses two key issues for HSCT patients: bacterial contamination, and universal prevention of TA-GVHD. Here, we compared the clinical support of HSCT patients with conventional PCs (C-PC) vs. an equivalent HSCT group supported with A-UVA PCs (I-PC) using a sequential patient cohort design within a single HSCT clinical center. Methods : I-PCs were prepared from 5 pooled ABO-matched, NLF buffy coat PCs in platelet additive solution and treated with A-UVA replacing gamma irradiation and bacterial detection. C-PCs were prepared from 5 ABO-matched, STABC-negative, NLF PRP PCs, and treated with gamma irradiation. Each patient could receive up to 5 PC transfusions. The primary efficacy endpoint was the 1-hour corrected count increment (CCI) and the primary safety endpoint was the proportion of patients (P) with acute transfusion reactions (ATR). Follow-up data on mortality, hematopoiesis engraftment, and immune status were collected up to 100 days post HSCT. Results: Patient demographics and type of HSCT were similar between patient cohorts. 33 patients received 76 A-UVA PCs and 31 patients received 89 C-PCs. The mean days of platelet support (p=0.618) and mean 1-hour CCIs per patient averaged for all transfusions were comparable (p=0.296) between the I- PC and conventional C-PC cohorts (Table). The proportion of patients with AEs was lower (p=0.021) for the I-PC group (Table), and no related SAEs were observed during the entirety of trial. Survival at 100 days post HSCT and rates of remission were similar between the cohorts (Table). The ATR rate trended lower, although not significantly different (p=0.296), in the I- PC group (Table). Follow-up data showed that the patients had comparable neutrophil and platelet engraftment (Table) with comparable immune system reconstitution by 100 days post HSCT. No cases of TA-GVHD were observed in either cohort. Conclusions: A-UVA-treated PCs prepared without LF, gamma irradiation, and bacterial detection can replace C-PCs for support of HSCT patients resulting in comparable post transfusion CCI responses and short and intermediate term clinical outcomes, while offering additional protection against transfusion transmitted bacteria and emerging or untested pathogens. Table Table. Disclosures Sim Pui Yin: Cerus Corporation: Other: Investigator sponsored trial. Leung Yuk Yan:Cerus Corporation: Other: Investigator sponsored trial. Lam Chun Kit:Cerus Corporation: Other: Investigator sponsored trial. Tsoi Wai:Cerus Corporation: Other: Investigator sponsored trial. Lee Cheuk:Cerus Corporation: Other: Investigator sponsored trial. Lie Kwok Wai:Cerus Corporation: Other: Investigator sponsored trial. Huang:Cerus Corporation: Employment. Rico:Cerus Corporation: Employment. Lin:Cerus corp: Employment. Corash:Cerus Corporation: Employment. Stassinopoulos:Cerus Corporation: Employment.


EDIS ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yilin Zhuang ◽  
Mary Lusk

Private well users are responsible for the management and protection of their wells. This new 4-page EDIS publication is for Florida homeowners who are interested in learning more about their well-water system and understanding how to properly shock, or disinfect, the well if there is evidence of drinking water contamination. Written by Yilin Zhuang and Mary Lusk, and published by the UF/IFAS Department of Soil and Water Sciences.https://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/ss700


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (22) ◽  
pp. 4782
Author(s):  
Berlina ◽  
Komova ◽  
Zherdev ◽  
Gaur ◽  
Dzantiev

A simple and rapid positive–negative colorimetric approach to determine the presence of antimony ions based on the use of gold nanoparticles conjugated with oligonucleotide (poly-A sequence) is developed. Colorimetric measurements reveal that the aggregates of modified gold nanoparticles were afforded after adding antimony ions, thus changing the solution color from pink to blue. The results of aptamer’s interaction on the gold nanoparticle surface with the target analyte can be detected either by photometry or by the naked eye. The realized assay provides rapid (2 min), sensitive (detection limit 10 ng/mL), specific, and precise (variation coefficient less than 3.8%) detection of antimony (III) in drinking water.


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