Legionella in Puerto Rico cooling towers
Author(s) -
A. Negron-Alviro,
I. Perez-Suarez,
Terry C. Hazen
Publication year - 1988
Publication title -
osti oai (u.s. department of energy office of scientific and technical information)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
ISSN - 0099-2240
DOI - 10.2172/353374
Subject(s) - cooling tower , legionella pneumophila , biocide , legionella , water cooling , microbiology and biotechnology , tap water , environmental science , water quality , biology , veterinary medicine , environmental engineering , bacteria , ecology , chemistry , medicine , physics , genetics , organic chemistry , thermodynamics
Water samples from air conditioning cooling towers receiving different treatment protocols on five large municipal buildings in San Juan, Puerto Rico were assayed for various species and serogroups of Legionella spp. using direct immunofluorescence. Several water quality parameters were also measured with each sample. Guinea pigs were inoculated with water samples to confirm pathogenicity and recover viable organisms. Legionella pneumophila (1-6), L. bozemanii, L. micdadei, L. dumoffii, and L. gormanii were observed in at least one of the cooling towers. L. pneumophila was the most abundant species, reaching 10{sup 5} cells/ml, within the range that is considered potentially pathogenic to humans. A significantly higher density of L. pneumophila was observed in the cooling tower water that was not being treated with biocides. Percent respiration (INT) and total cell activity (AODC), were inversely correlated with bacterial density. This study demonstrates that Legionella spp. are present in tropical air-conditioning cooling systems, and without continuous biocide treatment may reach densities that present a health risk
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