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Technical Paper

Effects of Refrigerating Preinoculated Vitek Cards on Microbial Physiology and Antibiotic Susceptibility

1992-07-01
921214
Reference cultures of 16 microorganisms obtained from the American Type Culture Collection and four clinical isolates were used in standardized solutions to inoculate 60 cards for each test strain. A set of three ID and three susceptibility cards was processed in the Vitek AutoMicrobic System (AMS) immediately after inoculation. The remaining cards were refrigerated at 4°C, and sets of six cards were removed and processed periodically for up to 17 days. The preinoculated AMS cards were evaluated for microorganism identification, percent probability of correct identification, length of time required for final result, individual substrate reactions, and antibiotic minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) values. Results indicate that 11 of the 20 microbes tested withstood refrigerated storage up to 17 days without detectable changes in delineating characteristics. MIC results appear variable, but certain antibiotics proved to be more stable than others.
Technical Paper

Microbiology Operations and Facilities Aboard Restructured Space Station Freedom

1992-07-01
921213
With the restructure and funding changes for Space Station Freedom, the Environmental Health System (EHS)/Microbiology Subsystem revised its scheduling and operational requirements for component hardware. The function of the Microbiology Subsystem is to monitor the environmental quality of air, water, and internal surfaces and, in part, crew health on board Space Station. Its critical role shall be the identification of microbial contaminants in the environment that may cause system degradation, produce unsanitary or pathogenic conditions, or reduce crew and mission effectiveness. EHS/Microbiology operations and equipment shall be introduced in concert with a phased assembly sequence, from Man Tended Capability (MTC) through Permanently Manned Capability (PMC). Effective Microbiology operations and subsystem components will assure a safe, habitable, and useful spacecraft environment for life sciences research and long-term manned exploration.
Technical Paper

Disinfectants for Spacecraft Applications: An Overview

1991-07-01
911516
In-flight contamination control has been an important concern of NASA since the first manned missions. Previous experience has shown that uncontrolled growth of bacteria and fungi can have a detrimental effect on both the health of the crew and the proper operation of flight hardware. It is therefore imperative to develop a safe, effective method of microbial control. Spacecraft application dictates a more stringent set of requirements for biocide selection than is usually necessary for terrestrial situations. Toxicity of the biocide is the driving factor for disinfectant choice in spacecraft. This concern greatly reduces the number and types of chemical agents that can be used as disinfectants. Currently, four biocide candidates (hydrogen peroxide, quaternary ammonium compounds, iodine, glutaraldehyde) are being evaluated as potential surface disinfectants for Space Station Freedom.
Technical Paper

Microbial Growth and Physiology in Space: A Review

1991-07-01
911512
Weightlessness, cosmic radiation and other space flight related conditions may adversely impact the physiology and immune status of the crew. Since microorganisms will surely be present in space habitats, the effects of space on microbial metabolic and physiologic functions will depend upon environmental conditions, types of organisms, and the duration of the flight. Because humans will conduct long-duration space missions, space microbiology must address the effect of alterations in microbial function during space flight. Even innocuous microorganisms and endogenous flora may become etiologic agents for disease during long missions. The microbial population in the closed environments of spacecraft may also become a source of toxic metabolites or the biodegradation of materials. This paper reviews studies concerning microbial behavior in closed environments, simulated microgravity, and actual space flight.
Technical Paper

Inflight Microbial Analysis Technology

1987-07-01
871493
This paper provides an assessment of functional characteristics needed in the microbial water analysis system being developed for Space Station. Available technology is reviewed with respect to performing microbial monitoring, isolation, or identification functions. An integrated system composed of three different technologies is presented.
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