Title of article :
Evaluation of Neutralizing Efficacy and Possible Microbial Cell Toxicity of a Universal Neutralizer Proposed by the CTPA
Author/Authors :
Mehrgan, Hadi Department of Pharmaceutics - School of Pharmacy - Shaheed Beheshti University of Medical Sciences, Tehran , Elmi, Ferial Department of Drug and Food Control - School of Pharmacy - Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran , Fazeli, Mohammad Reza Department of Drug and Food Control - School of Pharmacy - Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran , Shahverdi, Ahmad Reza Department of Biotechnology - School of Pharmacy -Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran , Samadi, Nasrin Department of Drug and Food Control - School of Pharmacy - Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran
Pages :
6
From page :
173
To page :
178
Abstract :
The purpose of this research was to study the neutralization efficacy of a universal neutralizer proposed by the CTPA on a range of antimicrobial agents and its potential toxicity for microorganisms that are used for antimicrobial preservation testing. Several types of antimicrobial agents including a mixture of methylisothiazolinone and its 5-chloro derivative, dimethylol dimethyl hydantoin, Quaternium-15®, Bronopol®, benzalkonium chloride, phenoxyethanol, methyl and propyl paraben, chlorhexidine, imidazolidinyl urea, triclosan and thiomersal built-in pharmaceutical, cosmetic or health care products, as well as 6 types of these antimicrobials, i.e. a combination of methyl paraben (0.18% w/v) and propyl paraben (0.02%), imidazolidinyl urea (0.3%), chlorhexidine (0.01%), benzalkonium chloride (0.02%), Bronopol® (0.1%) and thiomersal (0.02%) in their pure and soluble form were tested. Validation of microbial recovery was carried out according to the US Pharmacopeia 27 guidelines. The universal neutralizer could inactivate all the studied antimicrobial agents against different strains tested except Staphylococcus aureus. With regards to this microorganism, only seven preservative chemicals consisting of parabens, dimethylol dimethyl hydantoin, Quaternium-15®, Bronopol®, benzalkonium chloride, Phenonip® and imidazolidinyl urea were effectively inactivated. In addition, a pure solution of 0.02% thiomersal retained its antimicrobial properties against all studied microorganisms. The neutralizer solution showed no toxicity on any of the test organisms. In conclusion, CTPA proposed neutralizing solution is not an inclusive neutralizer. Moreover, each organism to be used in the test must be included in the validation study.
Keywords :
Preservative , Antimicrobial agent , Neutralization , Validation of microbial recovery
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics
Serial Year :
2006
Record number :
2481231
Link To Document :
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