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Class B Alkaline Stabilization to Achieve Pathogen Inactivation

Liming is a cost-effective treatment currently employed in many Class B biosolids production plants in the United States. A bench scale model of lime stabilization was designed to evaluate the persistence of viral, bacterial and parasitic pathogens. The survival of fecal coliforms, Salmonella, adeno...

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Autores principales: Bean, Christine L., Hansen, Jacqueline J., Margolin, Aaron B., Balkin, Helene, Batzer, Glenda, Widmer, Giovanni
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Molecular Diversity Preservation International (MDPI) 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3719960/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17431316
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author Bean, Christine L.
Hansen, Jacqueline J.
Margolin, Aaron B.
Balkin, Helene
Batzer, Glenda
Widmer, Giovanni
author_facet Bean, Christine L.
Hansen, Jacqueline J.
Margolin, Aaron B.
Balkin, Helene
Batzer, Glenda
Widmer, Giovanni
author_sort Bean, Christine L.
collection PubMed
description Liming is a cost-effective treatment currently employed in many Class B biosolids production plants in the United States. A bench scale model of lime stabilization was designed to evaluate the persistence of viral, bacterial and parasitic pathogens. The survival of fecal coliforms, Salmonella, adenovirus type 5, rotavirus Wa, bacteriophage MS-2, Cryptosporidium parvum oocysts, Giardia lamblia cysts, and Ascaris lumbricoides ova was evaluated under lime stabilization conditions in a water matrix. Fecal coliforms and Salmonella were undetectable following 2 hours of lime stabilization, demonstrating a 7-log reduction. Adenovirus, MS-2 and rotavirus were below detectable levels following 2 h of liming, demonstrating a 4-log reduction. G. lamblia cysts were also inactivated. A. lumbricoides ova remained viable following 72 hours of liming as did C. parvum oocysts. While this study confirmed that Ascaris ova are resistant to liming, their scarcity in sludge and low recovery efficiencies limit their use as indicator. The persistence of C. parvum oocysts after exposure to lime, suggests that this parasite would be a better choice as indicator for evaluating biosolids intended for land application. The studies done with adenovirus Type 5, rotavirus Wa and male specific bacteriophage provided preliminary data demonstrating similar inactivation rates. Monitoring anthropogenic viruses is a time consuming, labor intensive and expensive process. If further studies could demonstrate that phage could be used as an indicator of other enteric viruses, enhanced monitoring could result in greater acceptance of land application of biosolids while demonstrating no increased public health threat.
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spelling pubmed-37199602013-07-23 Class B Alkaline Stabilization to Achieve Pathogen Inactivation Bean, Christine L. Hansen, Jacqueline J. Margolin, Aaron B. Balkin, Helene Batzer, Glenda Widmer, Giovanni Int J Environ Res Public Health Articles Liming is a cost-effective treatment currently employed in many Class B biosolids production plants in the United States. A bench scale model of lime stabilization was designed to evaluate the persistence of viral, bacterial and parasitic pathogens. The survival of fecal coliforms, Salmonella, adenovirus type 5, rotavirus Wa, bacteriophage MS-2, Cryptosporidium parvum oocysts, Giardia lamblia cysts, and Ascaris lumbricoides ova was evaluated under lime stabilization conditions in a water matrix. Fecal coliforms and Salmonella were undetectable following 2 hours of lime stabilization, demonstrating a 7-log reduction. Adenovirus, MS-2 and rotavirus were below detectable levels following 2 h of liming, demonstrating a 4-log reduction. G. lamblia cysts were also inactivated. A. lumbricoides ova remained viable following 72 hours of liming as did C. parvum oocysts. While this study confirmed that Ascaris ova are resistant to liming, their scarcity in sludge and low recovery efficiencies limit their use as indicator. The persistence of C. parvum oocysts after exposure to lime, suggests that this parasite would be a better choice as indicator for evaluating biosolids intended for land application. The studies done with adenovirus Type 5, rotavirus Wa and male specific bacteriophage provided preliminary data demonstrating similar inactivation rates. Monitoring anthropogenic viruses is a time consuming, labor intensive and expensive process. If further studies could demonstrate that phage could be used as an indicator of other enteric viruses, enhanced monitoring could result in greater acceptance of land application of biosolids while demonstrating no increased public health threat. Molecular Diversity Preservation International (MDPI) 2007-01 2007-03-31 /pmc/articles/PMC3719960/ /pubmed/17431316 Text en © 2007 MDPI All rights reserved.
spellingShingle Articles
Bean, Christine L.
Hansen, Jacqueline J.
Margolin, Aaron B.
Balkin, Helene
Batzer, Glenda
Widmer, Giovanni
Class B Alkaline Stabilization to Achieve Pathogen Inactivation
title Class B Alkaline Stabilization to Achieve Pathogen Inactivation
title_full Class B Alkaline Stabilization to Achieve Pathogen Inactivation
title_fullStr Class B Alkaline Stabilization to Achieve Pathogen Inactivation
title_full_unstemmed Class B Alkaline Stabilization to Achieve Pathogen Inactivation
title_short Class B Alkaline Stabilization to Achieve Pathogen Inactivation
title_sort class b alkaline stabilization to achieve pathogen inactivation
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3719960/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17431316
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