UV Disinfection of Giardia lamblia Cysts in Water

Karl G. Linden,* Gwy-Am Shin, Gaetan Faubert,§ William Cairns, and Mark D. Sobsey
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27708, Department of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599-7400, Institute of Parasitology, McGill University, Ste. Anne-de-Bellevue, Quebec, Canada H9X 3V9, and Trojan Technologies Inc., London, Ontario, Canada
Environ. Sci. Technol., 2002, 36 (11), pp 2519–2522
DOI: 10.1021/es0113403
Publication Date (Web): April 27, 2002
Copyright © 2002 American Chemical Society
*

 Corresponding author phone:  (919) 660-5196; fax:  (919) 660-5219; e-mail:  kglinden@duke.edu.

,

 Duke University.

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 University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

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§

 McGill University.

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 Trojan Technologies Inc.

Abstract

The human and animal pathogen Giardia lamblia is a waterborne risk to public health because the cysts are ubiquitous and persistent in water and wastewater, not completely removed by physical-chemical treatment processes, and relatively resistant to chemical disinfection. Given the recently recognized efficacy of UV irradiation against Cryptosporidium parvum oocysts, the inactivation of G. lamblia cysts in buffered saline water at pH 7.3 and room temperature by near monochromatic (254 nm) UV irradiation from low-pressure mercury vapor lamps was determined using a “collimated beam” exposure system. Reduction of G. lamblia infectivity for gerbils was very rapid and extensive, reaching a detection limit of >4 log within a dose of 10 JM-2. The ability of UV-irradiated G. lamblia cysts to repair UV-induced damage following typical drinking water and wastewater doses of 160 and 400 JM-2 was also investigated using experimental protocols typical for bacterial and eucaryotic DNA repair under both light and dark conditions. The infectivity reduction of G. lamblia cysts at these UV doses remained unchanged after exposure to repair conditions. Therefore, no phenotypic evidence of either light or dark repair of DNA damage caused by LP UV irradiation of cysts was observed at the UV doses tested. We conclude that UV disinfection at practical doses achieves appreciable (much greater than 4 log) inactivation of G. lamblia cysts in water with no evidence of DNA repair leading to infectivity reactivation.

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History

  • Published In Issue June 01, 2002
  • Received for review October 4, 2001
    Revised manuscript received March 25, 2002
    Accepted March 26, 2002

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