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J Infect Dis. 1982 May;145(5):683-7.
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Effect of chemicals,
heat, and histopathologic processing on
high-infectivity hamster-adapted scrapie virus.
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Brown P,
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Rohwer RG,
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Green EM,
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Gajdusek DC.
High-titered
(greater than 10(10) LD50 [50% lethal dose[/g)
preparations of scrapie virus-infected hamster
brain were subjected to inactivation by various
chemicals, autoclaving, and histopathologic
processing. Sodium hypochlorite, which reduced
infectivity by approximately 4 log LD50/g of
brain (99.99%), was somewhat superior to sodium
metaperiodate and clearly superior to chlorine
dioxide, Lysol (National Laboratories, Montvale,
N.J.), iodine, potassium permanganate, and
hydrogen peroxide. Most inactivation occurred
within 15-30 min of exposure to a chemical, and
little if any additional inactivation occurred
after 1 hr. Brains processed for histopathologic
examination (formalin fixation followed by
dehydration in methanol, clearing in chloroform,
and embedding in paraffin) retained greater than
or equal to 6.8 log LD50/g of the infectivity
present in unprocessed control tissues (9.6 log
LD50/g). One hour in an autoclave at 121 C
reduced the titer of scrapie virus by
approximately 7.5 log LD50/g of brain but left
2.5 log LD50/g of residual infectivity. A
combination of exposure to chemicals and
autoclaving may be necessary to sterilize
high-titered scrapie virus-infected tissue.
PMID: 6804575
[PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]