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Efficacy of eight commercial disinfectants against M icrosporum canis and T richophyton spp. infective spores on an experimentally contaminated textile surface
Author(s) -
Moriello Karen A.,
Kunder Darcie,
Hondzo Hanna
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
veterinary dermatology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.744
H-Index - 60
eISSN - 1365-3164
pISSN - 0959-4493
DOI - 10.1111/vde.12074
Subject(s) - disinfectant , sodium hypochlorite , spore , microbiology and biotechnology , fungicide , human decontamination , contamination , hypochlorite , chlorine , chemistry , hand sanitizer , antiseptic , trichophyton , pulp and paper industry , food science , toxicology , biology , medicine , botany , organic chemistry , antifungal , ecology , pathology , engineering
Background An important part of treatment of dermatophytosis is the removal of infective material and decontamination of the environment. It is recognized that the role of disinfectants is to kill infective material not removed during the mechanical removal of debris and gross cleaning steps. A widely used disinfectant in the home is a dilute solution of sodium hypochlorite. Hypothesis/Objectives To determine whether over‐the‐counter products, particularly ready‐to‐use formulations, with label claim as fungicidal are effective against M icrosporum or T richophyton spores isolated from cat hair. Methods Eight commercial disinfectants were tested in vitro for fungicidal efficacy using three different trials and a 10 min contact time, as follows: a standard 1:10 spore dilution suspension test; 1 and 5 mL of disinfectant solution applied to contaminated gauze fabric; and, to simulate home use, one and five sprays of disinfectant applied to contaminated gauze. Good efficacy was defined as a product that completely inhibited growth. Results All products completely inhibited growth in the suspension test. Four of eight products showed complete inhibition of growth of both pathogens on the textile test after 1 mL or one spray; however, all eight products showed complete inhibition of pathogen growth after 5 mL or five sprays. Conclusions and clinical importance Aggressive removal of contaminated material followed by thorough application of commercial ready‐to‐use disinfectants labelled as fungicidal against Trichophyton   mentagrophytes are alternatives to dilute sodium hypochlorite.

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