Abstract
Fourteen bacterial isolates, predominantly Pseudomonas sp., from two water systems disinfected by iodinated anion-exchange resins were studied and compared with an isolate of Pseudomonas aeruginosa from a povidone-iodine solution and four other isolates. Pseudomonas cepacia and P. aeruginosa grown in brain heart infusion were 3 to 5 logs less sensitive to 1 mg/L I2 (pH 7.2, 1 min) when compared with cultures grown in phosphate buffer. Another P. cepacia isolate was the least sensitive culture when grown in brain heart infusion (1 log decrease) but was more sensitive after cultivation in phosphate buffer (5 logs). Isolates from an iodinated potable water system, including P. cepacia, Staphyloccus warneri, and a Bacillus sp., were all less sensitive to iodine than a "resistant" P. aeruginosa and three other isolates when grown in brain heart infusion. A clinical isolate of P. aeruginosa exhibited intermediate sensitivity. The sensitivity of bacteria to iodine is thus highly variable, depending on the organism as well as the growth conditions.
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