New technologies and sterilization agents for heat-sensitive materials are under intense investigation. Plasma sterilization, an atoxic low-temperature substitute for conventional sterilization, uses various gases that are activated by an electrical discharge, generating reactive species that promote lethality
in microorganisms. Here, assays were performed using pure O2
and O2
+ H2O2 mixture gas plasmas
against a standard load of Bacillus atrophaeus spores inoculated on glass carriers inside PVC catheters.
The sterilization efficiency was studied as a function of plasma system (reactive ion etching or inductively
coupled plasma), biological monitor lumen diameter, gas, radio frequency power, and sub-lethal exposition time. After sterilization, the biological monitors were disassembled and the surviving bacteria were
grown in trypticase soy broth using the most probable number technique. Plasma antimicrobial activity
depended on the catheter’s internal diameter and radio frequency powers. The O2
+ H2O2 mixture exhibited higher microbial efficacy than pure O2
in both plasma systems.