1994
DOI: 10.1128/aem.60.5.1690-1692.1994
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Comparison of respiratory activity and culturability during monochloramine disinfection of binary population biofilms

Abstract: Biofilm bacteria challenged with monochloramine retained significant respiratory activity, even though they could not be cultured on agar plates. Microbial colony counts on agar media declined by approximately 99.9% after 1 h of disinfection, whereas the number of bacteria stained by a fluorescent redox dye experienced a 93% reduction. Integrated measures of biofilm respiratory activity, including net oxygen and glucose utilization rates, showed only a 10 to 15% reduction. In this biofilm system, measures of m… Show more

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Cited by 59 publications
(35 citation statements)
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“…Bacteria growing in biofilms can remain in DWDS because they are resistant to the levels of disinfectant residuals present in the water (LeChevallier et al 1988;Stewart et al 1994). We used the Kadouri drip-fed reactor (Merritt et al 2005) in order to study the effect of chloramine on the resident cells in our DWDS biofilms, not to study biofilm-specific resistance to chloramine.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Bacteria growing in biofilms can remain in DWDS because they are resistant to the levels of disinfectant residuals present in the water (LeChevallier et al 1988;Stewart et al 1994). We used the Kadouri drip-fed reactor (Merritt et al 2005) in order to study the effect of chloramine on the resident cells in our DWDS biofilms, not to study biofilm-specific resistance to chloramine.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It also leaves a disinfectant residual in the distribution system while keeping the water relatively free from the taste and odour often associated with chlorination. While the disinfectant residual in DWDS may not kill the bacteria in biofilms (LeChevallier et al 1988;Stewart et al 1994), it can stress them chemically.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the case of E. coli with peracetic acid, this represented a 20-fold reduction in susceptibility. PHMB and peracetic acid are chemically more reactive than the other agents and are therefore most likely to be subject to reactiondiffusion limitation within the bacterial glycocalyx (Stewart et al 1994). Changes in susceptibility, however, may be related to both attachment and biofilm formation.…”
Section: Formation Of Biofilm In the Presence Of Antimicrobial Agentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The mechanisms associated with such resistance are complex. These mechanisms involve not only the reaction-diffusion limitation of biocide-access to the underlying cells (Stewart 1994;Stewart et al 1994;Huang et al 1995), but also the expression of spatially heterogenous, less susceptible phenotypes, caused either by growth as a bio®lm per se (Brown et al 1988;Gilbert et al 1990a) or through the expression of high cell density (Davies et al 1998), or starvation, phenotypes (Foley et al 1999). Whilst there have been many publications that support the assertion of bio®lm recalcitrance, there have been few studies made which generate kinetic data that is capable of systematic evaluation of the relative extent of this phenomenon across a range of chemical biocides.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%