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Showing papers on "Bioaerosol published in 1992"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A study of the relative sampling efficiencies of eight bioaerosol samplers has been completed and it is suggested that the Andersen six-stage viable (microbial) particle sizing sampler (6-STG) and the Ace Glass all-glass impinger-30 (AGI-30) have been suggested as the sampler of choice for the collection of viable microorganisms.
Abstract: The need to quantify airborne microorganisms in the commercial microbiology industry (biotechnology) and during evaluations of indoor air quality, infectious disease outbreaks, and agriculture health investigations has shown there is a major technological void in bioaerosol sampling techniques to measure and identify viable and nonviable aerosols. As commercialization of microbiology increases and diversifies, it is increasingly necessary to assess occupational exposure to bioaerosols. Meaningful exposure estimates, by using area or environmental samplers, can only be ensured by the generation of data that are both precise and accurate. The Andersen six-stage viable (microbial) particle sizing sampler (6-STG) and the Ace Glass all-glass impinger-30 (AGI-30) have been suggested as the samplers of choice for the collection of viable microorganisms by the International Aerobiology Symposium and the American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists. Some researchers consider these samplers inconvenien...

206 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Three bioaerosol sampling methods were investigated and the Andersen microbial sampler method (AMS), the all-glass impinger method (AGI), and the Nuclepore filtration-elution method (NFE) were found to be suitable methods for assessing bacteria in this environment, but the AMS was not.
Abstract: The air in livestock buildings contains bioaerosol levels that are sufficiently high to cause adverse health effects in animals and workers. These bioaerosols are complex mixtures of live and dead microorganisms and their products as well as other aeroallergens. The effectiveness of sampling methods used for quantifying the very high concentrations of microorganisms in these environments has not been well studied. To facilitate an accurate assessment of respiratory hazards from viable organisms in agricultural environments, three bioaerosol sampling methods were investigated: the Andersen microbial sampler method (AMS), the all-glass impinger method (AGI), and the Nuclepore filtration-elution method (NFE). These methods were studied in a parallel fashion in 24 swine confinement buildings. Measurements were taken in two seasons with three types of culture media in duplicate to assess total bacteria, gram-negative enteric bacteria, and total fungi. Methods were analyzed for the proportion of samples yielding data within the limits of detection, intraclass reliability, and correlation between methods. For sampling viable bacteria, the AMS had a poor data yield because of overloading and demonstrated weak correlation with the AGI. Conversely, the AGI and NFE gave sufficient numbers of valid data points (90%), yielded high intraclass reliabilities (alpha greater than or equal to 0.92), and were highly correlated with each other (r = 0.86). The AGI and the NFE were suitable methods for assessing bacteria in this environment, but the AMS was not. The AMS was the only method that consistently recovered enteric bacteria (73% data yield). For sampling fungi, the AGI and AMS both yielded sufficient data and all three methods demonstrated high intraclass reliability.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

184 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the performance of various bioaerosol samplers has been compared in different field settings and the results are contradictory because of the arbitrarily chosen sampler, detection methods and sampling environments.

155 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a two-stage Andersen viable impactor was used to determine the number concentrations, species and respirable fraction of fungi indoors and outdoors in six residences on May and June.

21 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the inlet sampling efficiencies of several commercial bioaerosol samplers have been calculated by use of available and newly-developed equations, and under certain sampling conditions, they were found to be significantly over- or underestimated.

15 citations