Abstract

Murine norovirus (MNV) was used as a surrogate for human viral pathogens (e.g., norovirus) to determine if toilet flushing resulted in the aerosolization of virus. A flushometer type toilet was seeded with a viral solution of 105 and 106 PFU mL-1 of MNV and then flushed. Upon flushing, two bioaerosol samplers were activated to collect aerosolized MNV. Prior to the experiment, two optical particle counters monitored particle size and number distribution of aerosol produced from flushing a toilet across height, position, and side. The location with the highest mean particle concentration, was behind the toilet and 0.15 m above the toilet bowl rim, which is where bioaerosol sampling occurred. Bioaerosol and toilet water samples were collected, extracted and then quantified using RT-ddPCR. The concentration of MNV collected after seeding the toilet water ranged from 2.18 × 105 to 9.65 × 106 total copies of MNV. Positive samples of airborne MNV were detected with collected concentrations ranging from 383 to 684 RNA copies/m3 of air. This study provides evidence that viral pathogens may be aerosolized when a toilet is flushed. Furthermore, the MNV used in this study is a model organism for human norovirus and may be generalizable to other viral pathogens (e.g., coronavirus). This study suggests that virus is aerosolized from toilet flushing and may contribute to human exposure to viral pathogens.

Highlights

  • Murine norovirus (MNV) was used as a surrogate for human viral pathogens to determine if toilet flushing resulted in the aerosolization of virus

  • Aerosolized murine norovirus (MNV) generated from flushing a FOM type toilet was detected

  • This is the first study to determine an indoor aerosolization source for MNV, a surrogate for NV and may be representative of other viral pathogens aerosols generated during toilet flushing

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Murine norovirus (MNV) was used as a surrogate for human viral pathogens (e.g., norovirus) to determine if toilet flushing resulted in the aerosolization of virus. This study provides evidence that viral pathogens may be aerosolized when a toilet is flushed. This study suggests that virus is aerosolized from toilet flushing and may contribute to human exposure to viral pathogens. The role of fecal–oral route of human exposure to viral pathogens is well k­ nown[1], little is known about the impact of fecal aerosols generated from toilets during the flushing of human waste on the transmission of pathogens. Characterizing and controlling exposure to these aerosols may have significant implications for reducing transmission of viral pathogens such as human norovirus, rotavirus, and Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)[2]. There is recent evidence that demonstrates that NV can be aerosolized; that evidence is limited, and an aerosolization source has yet to be determined

Objectives
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call