by Playfuls Staff |
24th January 2007

Microwave ovens may be good for more than just zapping the
leftovers; they may also help protect your family.
University of Florida
engineering researchers have found that microwaving kitchen sponges and
[more] plastic scrubbers — known to be common
carriers of the bacteria and viruses that cause food-borne illnesses –
sterilizes them rapidly and effectively.
That means that the estimated 90-plus percent of Americans
with microwaves in their kitchens have a powerful weapon against E. coli,
salmonella and other bugs at the root of increasing incidents of potentially
deadly food poisoning and other illnesses.
“Basically what we find is that we could knock out most
bacteria in two minutes,” said Gabriel Bitton, a UF professor of environmental
engineering. “People often put their sponges and scrubbers in the dishwasher,
but if they really want to decontaminate them and not just clean them, they
should use the microwave.”
Bitton, an expert on wastewater microbiology, co-authored a
paper about the research that appears in the December issue of the Journal of
Environmental Health, the most recent issue. The other authors are Richard
Melker, a UF professor of anesthesiology, and Dong Kyoo Park, a UF biomedical engineering
doctoral student.
Food-borne illnesses afflict at least 6 million Americans
annually, causing at least 9,000 deaths and $4 billion to $6 billion in medical
costs and other expenses. Home kitchens are a common source of contamination,
as pathogens from uncooked eggs, meat and vegetables find their way onto
countertops, utensils and cleaning tools. Previous studies have shown that
sponges and dishcloths are common carriers of the pathogens, in part because
they often remain damp, which helps the bugs survive, according to the UF
paper.
Bitton said the UF researchers soaked sponges and scrubbing
pads in raw wastewater containing a witch’s brew of fecal bacteria, viruses,
protozoan parasites and bacterial spores, including Bacillus cereus spores.
Like many other bacterial spores, Bacillus cereus spores are
quite resistant to radiation, heat and toxic chemicals, and they are
notoriously difficult to kill. The UF researchers used the spores as surrogates
for cysts and oocysts of disease-causing parasitic protozoa such as Giardia,
the infectious stage of the protozoa. The researchers used bacterial viruses as
a substitute for disease-causing food-borne viruses, such as noroviruses and
hepatitis A virus.
The researchers used an off-the-shelf microwave oven to zap
the sponges and scrub pads for varying lengths of time, wringing them out and
determining the microbial load of the water for each test. They compared their
findings with water from control sponges and pads not placed in the microwave.
The results were unambiguous: Two minutes of microwaving on
full power mode killed or inactivated more than 99 percent of all the living
pathogens in the sponges and pads, although the Bacillus cereus spores required
four minutes for total inactivation.
Bitton said the heat, rather than the microwave radiation,
likely is what proves fatal to the pathogens. Because the microwave works by
exciting water molecules, it is better to microwave wet rather than dry sponges
or scrub pads, he said.
“The microwave is a very powerful and an inexpensive tool
for sterilization,” Bitton said, adding that people should microwave their
sponges according to how often they cook, with every other day being a good
rule of thumb.
Spurred by the trend toward home health care, the
researchers also examined the effects of microwaving contaminated syringes.
Bitton said the goal in this research was to come up with a way to sterilize
syringes and other equipment that, at home, often gets tossed in the household
trash, winding up in standard rather than hazardous waste landfills.
The researchers also found that microwaves were effective in
decontaminating syringes, but that it generally took far longer, up to 12
minutes for Bacillus cereus spores. The researchers also discovered they could
shorten the time required for sterilization by placing the syringes in
heat-trapping ceramic bowls.
Bitton said preliminary research also shows that microwaves
might be effective against bioterrorism pathogens such as anthrax, used in the
deadly, still-unsolved 2001 postal attacks.
Using a dose of Bacillus cereus dried on an envelope as a
substitute for mail contaminated by anthrax spores, Bitton said he found he
could kill 98 percent of the spores in 10 minutes by microwaving the paper –
suggesting, he said, one possible course of action for people who fear mail
might be contaminated. However, more research is needed to confirm that this
approach works against actual anthrax spores, he said.