Pandemic predictions and preparations prior to COVID-19 were pandemic predictions made and preparations carried out in the early twenty-first century prior to the 2019–20 COVID-19 pandemic. The World Health Organization (WHO) and the World Bank warned about the risk of pandemics throughout the 2000s and the 2010s, especially after the 2002–2004 SARS outbreak with the Global Preparedness Monitoring Board releasing its first report in late 2019. The WHO coined the term, Disease X in 2018 so the preparations for the next, at-the-time unknown pandemic could be undertaken. In 2005–2006, prior to the 2009 swine flu pandemic and during the decade following the pandemic, the governments in the United States and France prepared stocks of pandemic equipment and depleted their stocks.
During the COVID-19 pandemic itself, several reports underlined
the inability of national governments to learn from the previous disease
outbreaks, epidemics and pandemics. According to Richard Horton, editor-in-chief of The Lancet, the United Kingdom
"failed to act upon the lessons" of the SARS outbreak. Horton described
the "global response to SARS-CoV-2 [as] the greatest science policy
failure in a generation".
International
Several public (World Health Organization, the World Bank, the Global Preparedness Monitoring Board) and private
initiatives raised awareness about pandemic threats and needs for
better preparedness. International divisions and lack of suitable
collaboration limited preparedness. WHO's pandemic influenza preparedness project had a US$39 million two-year budget, out of WHO's 2020–2021 budget of US$4.8 billion.
While WHO gives recommendations, there is no sustained mechanism to
review countries' preparedness for epidemics and their rapid response
abilities. According to international economist Roland Rajah, while there are guidelines, local action depends on local governance. In 2018, the WHO coined the term, Disease X
in 2018, defined as "the knowledge that a serious international
epidemic could be caused by a pathogen currently unknown to cause human
disease" in order to focus research and development on likely candidates
for the next, at-the-time unknown, pandemic.
Since the late Cold War, Russia
has led misinformation campaigns to raise mistrust in American
institutions, sciences and health campaigns, weakening public health and
scientific authorities. Russia-linked media has insistently echoed debunked messages such as the AIDS pandemic, the 2009 swine flu pandemic, the Ebola outbreaks and COVID-19 pandemic being American-created bio-weapons; and has supported debunked anti-vaccine and radio wave scares. Such debunked messaging has been pursued and echoed on modern social web platforms. Russia's explicit goal has been to raise mistrust of American citizens and global audiences toward the federal government of the United States and American officials, and to damage American science, a foundation of the US's national prosperity.
The studies showed that a portion of Americans refrained from medical
treatments and distrusted the health authorities on the basis of such
messages. Within Russia, Putin is a strong advocate of public health and vaccines.
These Russian campaigns have been linked to lower the support for
public health programs. The illnesses have spread and weakened the
pandemic preparedness prior to the 2020 pandemic.
In the years leading up to the pandemic, several governments ran demonstration exercises (including Crimson Contagion) which proved that most countries would be underprepared.
National authorities
Following warnings and increased preparedness in the 2000s, the 2009 swine flu pandemic led to rapid anti-pandemic reactions among the Western countries. The H1N1/09 virus strain
with mild symptoms and low lethality eventually led to a backlash over
public sector over-reactiveness, spending and the high cost of the 2009 flu vaccine. In the following years, national strategic stockpiles of medical equipment were not systematically renewed. In France, a €382 million purchase of masks, vaccines and others for H1N1 under the responsibility of the Minister of Health Roselyne Bachelot was widely criticized.
The French health authorities decided in 2011 to not replete
their stocks in order to reduce acquisitions and storage costs and rely
more on supplies from China and just-in-time logistics and distribute the responsibility to private companies on an optional basis.
The French strategic stockpile dropped in this period from one billion
surgical masks and 600 million FFP2 masks in 2010 to 150 million and
zero, respectively in early 2020. The same approach was taken in the United States; the Strategic National Stockpile's stock of masks used against the 2009 flu pandemic was not replenished by the Obama administration or by the Trump administration.
Corporate profits versus pandemic preparations
The
tax systems in the early twenty-first century by favoring the largest
corporations with anti-competitive practices and lower investment rates
into innovation and productions, favored corporate actors and corporate
profits, increasing the risk of shortages and weakening the society
ability to respond to a pandemic. Andy Xie, writing in the South China Morning Post,
argued that ruling elites, obsessed with economic metrics failed to
prepare their communities against well-known pandemic risks. Richard Horton, editor-in-chief of The Lancet, suggested that economic austerity policies played a role in the United Kingdom (UK) "failing to act upon the lessons" of the 2002–2004 SARS outbreak and of the UK being "poorly prepared" for the COVID-19 pandemic.
COVID-19 pandemic
Early outbreaks in Hubei, Italy and Spain showed that several wealthy countries' health care systems were overwhelmed. In developing countries with weaker medical infrastructure, equipment for intensive care beds and other medical needs, shortages were expected to occur earlier.
Suspensions of gold nanoparticles of various sizes. The size difference causes the difference in colors.
Colloidal gold is a sol or colloidal suspension of nanoparticles of gold in a fluid, usually water. The colloid is usually either an intense red colour (for spherical particles less than 100 nm) or blue/purple (for larger spherical particles or nanorods).
Due to their optical,
electronic, and molecular-recognition properties, gold nanoparticles
are the subject of substantial research, with many potential or promised
applications in a wide variety of areas, including electron microscopy, electronics, nanotechnology, materials science, and biomedicine.
The properties of colloidal gold nanoparticles, and thus their
potential applications, depend strongly upon their size and shape. For example, rodlike particles have both transverse and longitudinal absorption peak, and anisotropy of the shape affects their self-assembly.
History
This cranberry glass bowl was made by adding a gold salt (probably gold chloride) to molten glass.
Used since ancient times as a method of staining glass colloidal gold was used in the 4th-century Lycurgus Cup, which changes color depending on the location of light source.
During the Middle Ages, soluble gold, a solution containing gold salt, had a reputation for its curative property for various diseases. In 1618, Francis Anthony, a philosopher and member of the medical profession, published a book called Panacea Aurea, sive tractatus duo de ipsius Auro Potabili (Latin: gold potion, or two treatments of potable
gold). The book introduces information on the formation of colloidal
gold and its medical uses. About half a century later, English botanist Nicholas Culpepper published book in 1656, Treatise of Aurum Potabile, solely discussing the medical uses of colloidal gold.
In 1676, Johann Kunckel, a German chemist, published a book on the manufacture of stained glass. In his book Valuable Observations or Remarks About the Fixed and Volatile Salts-Auro and Argento Potabile, Spiritu Mundi and the Like,
Kunckel assumed that the pink color of Aurum Potabile came from small
particles of metallic gold, not visible to human eyes. In 1842, John Herschel
invented a photographic process called chrysotype (from the Greek
χρῡσός meaning "gold") that used colloidal gold to record images on
paper.
Modern scientific evaluation of colloidal gold did not begin until Michael Faraday's work in the 1850s. In 1856, in a basement laboratory of Royal Institution, Faraday accidentally created a ruby red solution while mounting pieces of gold leaf onto microscope slides.
Since he was already interested in the properties of light and matter,
Faraday further investigated the optical properties of the colloidal
gold. He prepared the first pure sample of colloidal gold, which he
called 'activated gold', in 1857. He used phosphorus to reduce
a solution of gold chloride. The colloidal gold Faraday made 150 years
ago is still optically active. For a long time, the composition of the
'ruby' gold was unclear. Several chemists suspected it to be a gold tin compound, due to its preparation. Faraday recognized that the color was actually due to the miniature size of the gold particles. He noted the light scattering properties of suspended gold microparticles, which is now called Faraday-Tyndall effect.
With advances in various analytical technologies in the 20th
century, studies on gold nanoparticles has accelerated. Advanced
microscopy methods, such as atomic force microscopy and electron microscopy,
have contributed the most to nanoparticle research. Due to their
comparably easy synthesis and high stability, various gold particles
have been studied for their practical uses. Different types of gold
nanoparticle are already used in many industries, such as medicine and
electronics. For example, several FDA-approved nanoparticles are currently used in drug delivery.
Physical properties
Optical
The variation of scattering cross section of 100 nm-radius gold nanoparticle vs. the wavelength
Colloidal gold has been used by artists for centuries because of the
nanoparticle’s interactions with visible light. Gold nanoparticles
absorb and scatter light
resulting in colours ranging from vibrant reds to blues to black and
finally to clear and colorless, depending on particle size, shape, local
refractive index, and aggregation state. These colors occur because of a
phenomenon called localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR), in which conduction electrons on the surface of the nanoparticle oscillate in resonance with incident light.
Effect of size
As a general rule, the wavelength of light absorbed increases as a function of increasing nano particle size. For example, pseudo-spherical gold nanoparticles with diameters ~ 30 nm have a peak LSPR absorption at ~530 nm.
Effect of local refractive index
Changes
in the apparent color of a gold nanoparticle solution can also be
caused by the environment in which the colloidal gold is suspended
The optical properties of gold nanoparticles depends on the refractive
index near the nanoparticle surface, therefore both the molecules
directly attached to the nanoparticle surface (i.e. nanoparticle
ligands) and/or the nanoparticle solvent both may influence observed optical features. As the refractive index near the gold surface increases, the NP LSPR will shift to longer wavelengths In addition to solvent environment, the extinction peak can be tuned by coating the nanoparticles with non-conducting shells such as silica, bio molecules, or aluminium oxide.
Effect of aggregation
When
gold nano particles aggregate, the optical properties of the particle
change, because the effective particle size, shape, and dielectric environment all change.
Medical research
Electron microscopy
Colloidal gold and various derivatives have long been among the most widely used labels for antigens in biological electron microscopy. Colloidal gold particles can be attached to many traditional biological probes such as antibodies, lectins, superantigens, glycans, nucleic acids,
and receptors. Particles of different sizes are easily distinguishable
in electron micrographs, allowing simultaneous multiple-labelling
experiments.
In addition to biological probes, gold nanoparticles can be
transferred to various mineral substrates, such as mica, single crystal
silicon, and atomically flat gold(III), to be observed under atomic
force microscopy (AFM).
Drug delivery system
Gold
nanoparticles can be used to optimize the biodistribution of drugs to
diseased organs, tissues or cells, in order to improve and target drug
delivery.
Nanoparticle-mediated drug delivery is feasible only if the drug
distribution is otherwise inadequate. These cases include drug targeting
of unstable (proteins, siRNA, DNA),
delivery to the difficult sites (brain, retina, tumors, intracellular
organelles) and drugs with serious side effects (e.g. anti-cancer
agents). The performance of the nanoparticles depends on the size and
surface functionalities in the particles. Also, the drug release and
particle disintegration can vary depending on the system (e.g.
biodegradable polymers sensitive to pH). An optimal nanodrug delivery
system ensures that the active drug is available at the site of action
for the correct time and duration, and their concentration should be
above the minimal effective concentration (MEC) and below the minimal
toxic concentration (MTC).
Gold nanoparticles are being investigated as carriers for drugs such as Paclitaxel. The administration of hydrophobic drugs require molecular encapsulation and it is found that nanosized particles are particularly efficient in evading the reticuloendothelial system.
Tumor detection
In cancer research, colloidal gold can be used to target tumors and provide detection using SERS (surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy) in vivo.
These gold nanoparticles are surrounded with Raman reporters, which
provide light emission that is over 200 times brighter than quantum dots. It was found that the Raman reporters were stabilized when the nanoparticles were encapsulated with a thiol-modified polyethylene glycol coat. This allows for compatibility and circulation in vivo. To specifically target tumor cells, the polyethylenegylated gold particles are conjugated with an antibody (or an antibody fragment such as scFv), against, e.g. epidermal growth factor receptor,
which is sometimes overexpressed in cells of certain cancer types.
Using SERS, these pegylated gold nanoparticles can then detect the
location of the tumor.
Gold nanoparticles accumulate in tumors, due to the leakiness of
tumor vasculature, and can be used as contrast agents for enhanced
imaging in a time-resolved optical tomography system using short-pulse
lasers for skin cancer detection in mouse model. It is found that
intravenously administrated spherical gold nanoparticles broadened the
temporal profile of reflected optical signals and enhanced the contrast
between surrounding normal tissue and tumors.
Tumor
targeting via multifunctional nanocarriers. Cancer cells reduce
adhesion to neighboring cells and migrate into the vasculature-rich
stroma. Once at the vasculature, cells can freely enter the bloodstream.
Once the tumor is directly connected to the main blood circulation
system, multifunctional nanocarriers can interact directly with cancer
cells and effectively target tumors.
Gene therapy
Gold
nanoparticles have shown potential as intracellular delivery vehicles
for siRNA oligonucleotides with maximal therapeutic impact.
Multifunctional
siRNA-gold nanoparticles with several biomolecules: PEG, cell
penetration and cell adhesion peptides and siRNA. Two different
approaches were employed to conjugate the siRNA to the gold
nanoparticle: (1) Covalent approach: use of thiolated siRNA for gold-thiol binding to the nanoparticle; (2) Ionic approach: interaction of the negatively charged siRNA to the modified surface of the AuNP through ionic interactions.
Gold nanoparticles show potential as intracellular delivery vehicles for antisense oligonucleotides (ssDNA,dsDNA) by providing protection against intracellular nucleases and ease of functionalization for selective targeting.
Photothermal agents
Gold nanorods are being investigated as photothermal agents for in-vivo applications. Gold nanorods
are rod-shaped gold nanoparticles whose aspect ratios tune the surface
plasmon resonance (SPR) band from the visible to near-infrared
wavelength. The total extinction of light at the SPR is made up of both
absorption and scattering. For the smaller axial diameter nanorods
(~10 nm), absorption dominates, whereas for the larger axial diameter
nanorods (>35 nm) scattering can dominate. As a consequence, for
in-vivo studies, small diameter gold nanorods are being used as
photothermal converters of near-infrared light due to their high
absorption cross-sections.
Since near-infrared light transmits readily through human skin and
tissue, these nanorods can be used as ablation components for cancer,
and other targets. When coated with polymers, gold nanorods have been
observed to circulate in-vivo with half-lives longer than 6 hours,
bodily residence times around 72 hours, and little to no uptake in any
internal organs except the liver.
Despite the unquestionable success of gold nanorods as photothermal agents in preclinical research, they have yet to obtain the approval for clinical use because the size is above the renal excretion threshold. In 2019, the first NIR-absorbing plasmonic ultrasmall-in-nano architecture has been reported, and jointly combine: (i) a suitable photothermal conversion for hyperthermia treatments, (ii) the possibility of multiple photothermal treatments and (iii) renal excretion of the building blocks after the therapeutic action.
Radiotherapy dose enhancer
Considerable
interest has been shown in the use of gold and other
heavy-atom-containing nanoparticles to enhance the dose delivered to
tumors.
Since the gold nanoparticles are taken up by the tumors more than the
nearby healthy tissue, the dose is selectively enhanced. The biological
effectiveness of this type of therapy seems to be due to the local
deposition of the radiation dose near the nanoparticles. This mechanism is the same as occurs in heavy ion therapy.
Detection of toxic gas
Researchers have developed simple inexpensive methods for on-site detection of hydrogen sulfideH 2S present in air based on the antiaggregation of gold nanoparticles (AuNPs). Dissolving H 2S into a weak alkaline
buffer solution leads to the formation of HS-, which can stabilize
AuNPs and ensure they maintain their red color allowing for visual
detection of toxic levels of H 2S.
Gold nanoparticle based biosensor
Gold nanoparticles are incorporated into biosensors to enhance its stability, sensitivity, and selectivity.
Nanoparticle properties such as small size, high surface-to-volume
ratio, and high surface energy allow immobilization of large range of
biomolecules. Gold nanoparticle, in particular, could also act as
"electron wire" to transport electrons and its amplification effect on
electromagnetic light allows it to function as signal amplifiers. Main types of gold nanoparticle based biosensors are optical and electrochemical biosensor.
Optical biosensor
Gold nanoparticle-based (Au-NP) biosensor for Glutathione (GSH). The AuNPs are functionalised
with a chemical group that binds to GSH and makes the NPs partially
collapse, and thus change colour. The exact amount of GSH can be derived
via UV-vis spectroscopy through a calibration curve.
Gold nanoparticles improve the sensitivity of optical sensor by
response to the change in local refractive index. The angle of the
incidence light for surface plasmon resonance, an interaction between
light wave and conducting electrons in metal, changes when other
substances are bounded to the metal surface. Because gold is very sensitive to its surroundings' dielectric constant,
binding of an analyte would significantly shift gold nanoparticle's SPR
and therefore allow more sensitive detection. Gold nanoparticle could
also amplify the SPR signal.
When the plasmon wave pass through the gold nanoparticle, the charge
density in the wave and the electron I the gold interacted and resulted
in higher energy response, so called electron coupling.
Since the analyte and bio-receptor now bind to the gold, it increases
the apparent mass of the analyte and therefore amplified the signal.
These properties had been used to build DNA sensor with 1000-fold sensitive than without the Au NP.
Humidity senor was also built by altering the atom interspacing between
molecules with humidity change, the interspacing change would also
result in a change of the Au NP's LSPR.
Electrochemical biosensor
Electrochemical
sensor convert biological information into electrical signals that
could be detected. The conductivity and biocompatibility of Au NP allow
it to act as "electron wire". It transfers electron between the electrode and the active site of the enzyme.
It could be accomplished in two ways: attach the Au NP to either the
enzyme or the electrode. GNP-glucose oxidase monolayer electrode was
constructed use these two methods.
The Au NP allowed more freedom in the enzyme's orientation and
therefore more sensitive and stable detection. Au NP also acts as
immobilization platform for the enzyme. Most biomolecules denatures or
lose its activity when interacted with the electrode.
The biocompatibility and high surface energy of Au allow it to bind to a
large amount of protein without altering its activity and results in a
more sensitive sensor. Moreover, Au NP also catalyzes biological reactions. Gold nanoparticle under 2 nm has shown catalytic activity to the oxidation of styrene.
Immunological biosensor
Gold nanoparticles have been coated with peptides and glycans for use in immunological detection methods. The possibility to use glyconanoparticles in ELISA
was unexpected, but the method seems to have a high sensitivity and
thus offers potential for development of specific assays for diagnostic identification of antibodies in patient sera
Thin films
Gold nanoparticles capped with organic ligands, such as alkanethiol molecules, can self-assemble into large monolayers (>cm).
The particles are first prepared in organic solvent, such as chloroform
or toluene, and are then spread into monolayers either on a liquid
surface or on a solid substrate. Such interfacial thin films of
nanoparticles have close relationship with Langmuir-Blodgett monolayers made from surfactants.
The mechanical properties of nanoparticle monolayers have been
studied extensively. For 5 nm spheres capped with dodecanethiol, the
Young's modulus of the monolayer is on the order of GPa. The mechanics of the membranes are guided by strong interactions between ligand shells on adjacent particles. Upon fracture, the films crack perpendicular to the direction of strain at a fracture stress of 11 2.6 MPa, comparable to that of cross-linked polymer films. Free-standing nanoparticle membranes exhibit bending rigidity on the order of 10
eV, higher than what is predicted in theory for continuum plates of the
same thickness, due to nonlocal microstructural constraints such as
nonlocal coupling of particle rotational degrees of freedom.
On the other hand, resistance to bending is found to be greatly reduced
in nanoparticle monolayers that are supported at the air/water
interface, possibly due to screening of ligand interactions in a wet
environment.
Surface chemistry
In many different types of colloidal gold syntheses, the interface of the nanoparticles can display widely different character – ranging from an interface similar to a self-assembled monolayer to a disordered boundary with no repeating patterns. Beyond the Au-Ligand interface, conjugation of the interfacial ligands with various functional moieties (from small organic molecules to polymers to DNA to RNA) afford colloidal gold much of its vast functionality.
Ligand exchange/functionalization
After
initial nanoparticle synthesis, colloidal gold ligands are often
exchanged with new ligands designed for specific applications. For
example, Au NPs produced via the Turkevich-style (or Citrate Reduction)
method are readily reacted via ligand exchange reactions, due to the
relatively weak binding between the carboxyl groups and the surfaces of
the NPs. This ligand exchange can produce conjugation with a number of biomolecules from DNA to RNA to proteins to polymers (such as PEG) to increase biocompatibility and functionality. For example, ligands have been shown to enhance catalytic activity by mediating interactions between adsorbates and the active gold surfaces for specific oxygenation reactions. Ligand exchange can also be used to promote phase transfer of the colloidal particles.
Ligand exchange is also possible with alkane thiol-arrested NPs
produced from the Brust-type synthesis method, although higher
temperatures are needed to promote the rate of the ligand detachment.
An alternative method for further functionalization is achieved through
the conjugation of the ligands with other molecules, though this method
can cause the colloidal stability of the Au NPs to breakdown.
Ligand removal
In
many cases, as in various high-temperature catalytic applications of
Au, the removal of the capping ligands produces more desirable
physicochemical properties.
The removal of ligands from colloidal gold while maintaining a
relatively constant number of Au atoms per Au NP can be difficult due to
the tendency for these bare clusters to aggregate. The removal of
ligands is partially achievable by simply washing away all excess
capping ligands, though this method is ineffective in removing all
capping ligand. More often ligand removal achieved under high
temperature or light ablation followed by washing. Alternatively, the ligands can be electrochemically etched off.
Surface structure and chemical environment
The
precise structure of the ligands on the surface of colloidal gold NPs
impact the properties of the colloidal gold particles. Binding
conformations and surface packing of the capping ligands at the surface
of the colloidal gold NPs tend to differ greatly from bulk surface model
adsorption, largely due to the high curvature observed at the
nanoparticle surfaces.
Thiolate-gold interfaces at the nanoscale have been well-studied and
the thiolate ligands are observed to pull Au atoms off of the surface of
the particles to for “staple” motifs that have significant Thiyl-Au(0)
character.
The citrate-gold surface, on the other hand, is relatively less-studied
due to the vast number of binding conformations of the citrate to the
curved gold surfaces. A study performed in 2014 identified that the
most-preferred binding of the citrate involves two carboxylic acids and
the hydroxyl group of the citrate binds three surface metal atoms.
Health and safety
As gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) are further investigated for targeted
drug delivery in humans, their toxicity needs to be considered. For the
most part, it is suggested that AuNPs are biocompatible,
but the concentrations at which they become toxic needs to be
determined, and if those concentrations fall within the range of used
concentrations. Toxicity can be tested in vitro and in vivo. In vitro
toxicity results can vary depending on the type of the cellular growth
media with different protein compositions, the method used to determine
cellular toxicity (cell health, cell stress, how many cells are taken
into a cell), and the capping ligands in solution. In vivo
assessments can determine the general health of an organism (abnormal
behavior, weight loss, average life span) as well as tissue specific
toxicology (kidney, liver, blood) and inflammation and oxidative
responses. In vitro experiments are more popular than in vivo experiments because in vitro experiments are more simplistic to perform than in vivo experiments.
Toxicity and hazards in synthesis
While AuNPs themselves appear to have low or negligible toxicity,
and the literature shows that the toxicity has much more to do with the
ligands rather than the particles themselves, the synthesis of them
involves chemicals that are hazardous. Sodium borohydride, a harsh reagent, is used to reduce the gold ions to gold metal. The gold ions usually come from chloroauric acid, a potent acid.
Because of the high toxicity and hazard of reagents used to synthesize
AuNPs, the need for more “green” methods of synthesis arose.
Toxicity due to capping ligands
Some
of the capping ligands associated with AuNPs can be toxic while others
are nontoxic. In gold nanorods (AuNRs), it has been shown that a strong
cytotoxicity was associated with CTAB-stabilized AuNRs at low concentration, but it is thought that free CTAB was the culprit in toxicity.
Modifications that overcoat these AuNRs reduces this toxicity in human
colon cancer cells (HT-29) by preventing CTAB molecules from desorbing
from the AuNRs back into the solution.
Ligand toxicity can also be seen in AuNPs. Compared to the 90% toxicity
of HAuCl4 at the same concentration, AuNPs with carboxylate termini were
shown to be non-toxic. Large AuNPs conjugated with biotin, cysteine, citrate, and glucose were not toxic in human leukemia cells (K562) for concentrations up to 0.25 M.
Also, citrate-capped gold nanospheres (AuNSs) have been proven to be
compatible with human blood and did not cause platelet aggregation or an
immune response.
However, citrate-capped gold nanoparticles sizes 8-37 nm were found to
be lethally toxic for mice, causing shorter lifespans, severe sickness,
loss of appetite and weight, hair discoloration, and damage to the
liver, spleen, and lungs; gold nanoparticles accumulated in the spleen
and liver after traveling a section of the immune system.
There are mixed-views for polyethylene glycol
(PEG)-modified AuNPs. These AuNPs were found to be toxic in mouse liver
by injection, causing cell death and minor inflammation. However, AuNPs conjugated with PEG copolymers showed negligible toxicity towards human colon cells (Caco-2).
AuNP toxicity also depends on the overall charge of the ligands. In
certain doses, AuNSs that have positively-charged ligands are toxic in
monkey kidney cells (Cos-1), human red blood cells, and E. coli because
of the AuNSs interaction with the negatively-charged cell membrane;
AuNSs with negatively-charged ligands have been found to be nontoxic in
these species.
In addition to the previously mentioned in vivo and in vitro
experiments, other similar experiments have been performed.
Alkylthiolate-AuNPs with trimethlyammonium ligand termini mediate the translocation of DNA across mammalian cell membranes in vitro at a high level, which is detrimental to these cells. Corneal haze in rabbits have been healed in vivo
by using polyethylemnimine-capped gold nanoparticles that were
transfected with a gene that promotes wound healing and inhibits corneal
fibrosis.
Toxicity due to size of nanoparticles
Toxicity
in certain systems can also be dependent on the size of the
nanoparticle. AuNSs size 1.4 nm were found to be toxic in human skin
cancer cells (SK-Mel-28), human cervical cancer cells (HeLa), mouse fibroblast cells (L929), and mouse macrophages (J774A.1), while 0.8, 1.2, and 1.8 nm sized AuNSs were less toxic by a six-fold amount and 15 nm AuNSs were nontoxic. There is some evidence for AuNP buildup after injection in in vivo studies, but this is very size dependent. 1.8 nm AuNPs were found to be almost totally trapped in the lungs of rats. Different sized AuNPs were found to buildup in the blood, brain, stomach, pancreas, kidneys, liver, and spleen.
Biosafety
and biokinetics investigations on biodegradable ultrasmall-in-nano
architectures have demonstrated that gold nanoparticles are able to
avoid metal accumulation in organisms through escaping by the renal
pathway.
Synthesis
Potential difference as a function of distance from particle surface.
Generally, gold nanoparticles are produced in a liquid ("liquid chemical methods") by reduction of chloroauric acid (H[AuCl4]).
To prevent the particles from aggregating, stabilizing agents are
added. Citrate acts both as the reducing agent and colloidal
stabilizer.
They can be functionalized with various organic ligands to create organic-inorganic hybrids with advanced functionality.
Turkevich method
This simple method was pioneered by J. Turkevich et al. in 1951 and refined by G. Frens in the 1970s. It produces modestly monodisperse
spherical gold nanoparticles of around 10–20 nm in diameter. Larger
particles can be produced, but at the cost of monodispersity and shape.
In this method, hot chloroauric acid is treated with sodium citrate solution, producing colloidal gold. The Turkevich reaction proceeds via formation of transient gold nanowires. These gold nanowires are responsible for the dark appearance of the reaction solution before it turns ruby-red.
Capping agents
A
capping agent is used during nanoparticle synthesis to inhibit particle
growth and aggregation. The chemical blocks or reduces reactivity at
the periphery of the particle—a good capping agent has a high affinity
for the new nuclei. Citrate ions or tannic acid function both as a reducing agent and a capping agent. Less sodium citrate results in larger particles.
Brust-Schiffrin method
This method was discovered by Brust and Schiffrin in the early 1990s, and can be used to produce gold nanoparticles in organic liquids that are normally not miscible with water (like toluene). It involves the reaction of a chlorauric acid solution with tetraoctylammonium bromide (TOAB) solution in toluene and sodium borohydride as an anti-coagulant and a reducing agent, respectively.
Here, the gold nanoparticles will be around 5–6 nm. NaBH4 is the reducing agent, and TOAB is both the phase transfer catalyst and the stabilizing agent.
TOAB does not bind to the gold nanoparticles particularly
strongly, so the solution will aggregate gradually over the course of
approximately two weeks. To prevent this, one can add a stronger binding
agent, like a thiol (in particular, alkanethiols), which will bind to gold, producing a near-permanent solution.
Alkanethiol protected gold nanoparticles can be precipitated and then
redissolved. Thiols are better binding agents because there is a strong
affinity for the gold-sulfur bonds that form when the two substances
react with each other. Tetra-dodecanthiol is a commonly used strong binding agent to synthesize smaller particles.
Some of the phase transfer agent may remain bound to the purified nanoparticles, this may affect physical properties such as solubility. In order to remove as much of this agent as possible, the nanoparticles must be further purified by soxhlet extraction.
Perrault method
This approach, discovered by Perrault and Chan in 2009, uses hydroquinone to reduce HAuCl4
in an aqueous solution that contains 15 nm gold nanoparticle seeds.
This seed-based method of synthesis is similar to that used in
photographic film development, in which silver grains within the film
grow through addition of reduced silver onto their surface. Likewise,
gold nanoparticles can act in conjunction with hydroquinone to catalyze
reduction of ionic gold onto their surface. The presence of a stabilizer
such as citrate results in controlled deposition of gold atoms onto the
particles, and growth. Typically, the nanoparticle seeds are produced
using the citrate method. The hydroquinone method complements that of
Frens,
as it extends the range of monodispersed spherical particle sizes that
can be produced. Whereas the Frens method is ideal for particles of
12–20 nm, the hydroquinone method can produce particles of at least
30–300 nm.
Martin method
This simple method, discovered by Martin and Eah in 2010,
generates nearly monodisperse "naked" gold nanoparticles in water.
Precisely controlling the reduction stoichiometry by adjusting the ratio
of NaBH4-NaOH ions to HAuCl4-HCl ions within the
"sweet zone," along with heating, enables reproducible diameter tuning
between 3–6 nm. The aqueous particles are colloidally stable due to
their high charge from the excess ions in solution. These particles can
be coated with various hydrophilic functionalities, or mixed with
hydrophobic ligands for applications in non-polar solvents. In non-polar
solvents the nanoparticles remain highly charged, and self-assemble on
liquid droplets to form 2D monolayer films of monodisperse
nanoparticles.
Nanotech studies
Bacillus licheniformis can be used in synthesis of gold nanocubes with sizes between 10 and 100 nanometres.
Gold nanoparticles are usually synthesized at high temperatures in
organic solvents or using toxic reagents. The bacteria produce them in
much milder conditions.
Navarro et al. method
For
particles larger than 30 nm, control of particle size with a low
polydispersity of spherical gold nanoparticles remains challenging. In
order to provide maximum control on the NP structure, Navarro and
co-workers used a modified Turkevitch-Frens procedure using sodium
acetylacetonate Na(acac) as the reducing agent and sodium citrate as the
stabilizer.
Sonolysis
Another method for the experimental generation of gold particles is by sonolysis. The first method of this type was invented by Baigent and Müller.
This work pioneered the use of ultrasound to provide the energy for the
processes involved and allowed the creation of gold particles with a
diameter of under 10 nm. In another method using ultrasound, the
reaction of an aqueous solution of HAuCl4 with glucose, the reducing agents are hydroxyl radicals and sugar pyrolysisradicals
(forming at the interfacial region between the collapsing cavities and
the bulk water) and the morphology obtained is that of nanoribbons with
width 30–50 nm and length of several micrometers. These ribbons are very
flexible and can bend with angles larger than 90°. When glucose is
replaced by cyclodextrin
(a glucose oligomer), only spherical gold particles are obtained,
suggesting that glucose is essential in directing the morphology toward a
ribbon.
Block copolymer-mediated method
An
economical, environmentally benign and fast synthesis methodology for
gold nanoparticles using block copolymer has been developed by Sakai et
al.
In this synthesis methodology, block copolymer plays the dual role of a
reducing agent as well as a stabilizing agent. The formation of gold
nanoparticles comprises three main steps: reduction of gold salt ion by
block copolymers in the solution and formation of gold clusters,
adsorption of block copolymers on gold clusters and further reduction of
gold salt ions on the surfaces of these gold clusters for the growth of
gold particles in steps, and finally its stabilization by block
copolymers. But this method usually has a limited-yield (nanoparticle
concentration), which does not increase with the increase in the gold
salt concentration. Ray et al. improved this synthesis method by enhancing the nanoparticle yield by manyfold at ambient temperature.
Pandemic prevention is the organization and management of preventive measures against pandemics.
Those include measures to reduce causes of new infectious diseases and
measures to prevent outbreaks and epidemics from becoming pandemics.
History
The 2003 SARS-CoV virus was prevented from causing a pandemic. Rapid action by national and international health authorities such as the World Health Organization
helped to slow transmission and eventually broke the chain of
transmission, which ended the localized epidemics before they could
become a pandemic. However, the disease has not been eradicated and
could re-emerge. This warrants monitoring and reporting of suspicious
cases of atypical pneumonia.
Effective isolation of patients was enough to control spread because
infected individuals usually not transmitting the virus until several
days after symptoms began and were most infectious only after developing
severe symptoms.
Measures
Infrastructure and international development
Robust, collaborating public health systems may be required to be able stop contagion promptly.
After an outbreak there is a certain window of time during which a
pandemic can still be stopped by the competent authorities isolating the
first infected and/or fighting the pathogen. A good global
infrastructure, consequent information exchange, short ways in bureaucracy and effective, targeted treatment measures can be prepared. 2012 it has been proposed to consider pandemic prevention as an aspect of international development in terms of health-care infrastructure and changes to the pathogen-related dynamics between humans and their environment including animals.
Often local authority carers or doctors in Africa, Asia or Latin
America register uncommon accumulations (or clusterings) of symptoms but
lack options for more detailed investigations.
Scientists state that "research relevant to countries with weaker
surveillance, lab facilities and health systems should be prioritized"
and that "in those regions, vaccine supply routes should not rely on
refrigeration, and diagnostics should be available at the point of
care".
Technologies
Pathogen detection and prediction
In
a 2012 study it is claimed that "new mathematical modelling,
diagnostic, communications, and informatics technologies can identify
and report hitherto unknown microbes in other species, and thus new
risk assessment approaches are needed to identify microbes most likely
to cause human disease". The study investigates challenges in moving the
global pandemic strategy from response to pre-emption. Some scientists are screening blood samples from wildlife for new viruses. The international Global Virome Project
(GVP) aims to identify the causes of fatal new diseases before
emergence in human hosts by genetically characterizing viruses found in
wild animals. Edward Rubin
notes that after sufficient data has been gathered artificial
intelligence could be used to identify common features and develop
countermeasures and vaccines against whole categories of viruses.[10] It might be possible to predict viral evolution using machine learning. Funding for the United States' PREDICT government research program that sought to identify animal pathogens that might infect humans and to prevent new pandemics was cut in 2019. Funding for United States' CDC
programs that trained workers in outbreak detection and strengthened
laboratory and emergency response systems in countries where disease
risks are greatest to stop outbreaks at the source was cut by 80% in
2018.
CRISPR-based immune subsystems
In March 2020 scientists of Stanford University presented a CRISPR-based system, called PAC-MAN (Prophylactic Antiviral Crispr in huMAN cells), that can find and destroy viruses in vitro. However, they weren't able to test PAC-MAN on the actual SARS-CoV-2, use a targeting-mechanism that uses only a very limited RNA-region, haven't developed a system to deliver it into human cells and would need a lot of time until another version of it or a potential successor system might pass clinical trials. In the study published as a preprint they write that it could be used prophylactically as well as therapeutically. The CRISPR-Cas13d-based system could be agnostic to which virus it's fighting so novel viruses would only require a small change.
In an editorial published in February 2020 another group of scientists
claimed that they have implemented a flexible and efficient approach for
targeting RNA with CRISPR-Cas13d which they have put under review and
propose that the system can be used to also target SARS-CoV-2 in
specific. There have also been earlier successful efforts in fighting viruses with CRISPR-based technology in human cells.
Testing and containment
A SARS-CoV-2 laboratory test kit by the CDC
Timely use and development of quick testing systems for novel virus in combination with other measures might make it possible to end transmission lines of outbreaks before they become pandemics. A high discovery-rate is important for tests. For instance this is the reason why no thermal scanners with a low discovery-rate were used in airports for containment during the 2009 swine flu pandemic. The German program InfectControl 2020 seeks to develop strategies for prevention, early recognition and control of infectious diseases.
In one of its projects "HyFly" partners of industry and research work
on strategies to contain chains of transmission in air traffic, to
establish preventive countermeasures and to create concrete
recommendations for actions of airport operators and airline companies.
One approach of the project is to detect infections without
molecular-biological methods during passenger screening. For this
researchers of the Fraunhofer-Institut for cell therapy and immunology are developing a non-invasive procedure based on ion-mobility spectrometry (IMS).
Surveillance and mapping
Monitoring people who are exposed to animals in viral hotspots – including via virus monitoring stations – can register viruses at the moment they enter human populations - this might enable prevention of pandemics.
The most important transmission pathways often vary per underlying
driver of emerging infectious diseases such as the vector-borne pathway
and direct animal contact for land-use change – the leading driver for
emerging zoonoses by number of emergence events as defined by Jones et al. (2008). Zoonoses account for 75% of the reviewed 1415 species of infectious organisms known to be pathogenic to humans until 2001. Genomics
could be used to precisely monitor virus evolution and transmission in
real time across large, diverse populations by combining pathogen
genomics with data about host genetics and about the unique transcriptional signature of infection.
The "Surveillance, Outbreak Response Management and Analysis System"
(SORMAS) of the German Helmholtz-Zentrum für Infektionsforschung (HZI)
and Deutsches Zentrum für Infektionsforschung (DZIF), who collaborate
with Nigerian researchers, gathers and analyzes data during an outbreak,
detects potential threats and allows to initiate protective measures
early. It's meant specifically for poorer regions and has been used for
the fight against a monkeypox outbreak in Nigeria.
Policy and economics
A 2014 analysis asserts that "the window of opportunity to deal with pandemics as a global community is within the next 27 years. Pandemic prevention therefore should be a critical health policy issue for the current generation of scientists and policymakers to address.
A 2007 study warns that "the presence of a large reservoir of
SARS-CoV-like viruses in horseshoe bats, together with the culture of
eating exotic mammals in southern China, is a time bomb. The possibility
of the reemergence of SARS and other novel viruses from animals or
laboratories and therefore the need for preparedness should not be
ignored".
The US' National Security Council Directorate for Global Health
Security and Biodefense, which worked on preparing for the next disease
outbreak and preventing it from becoming an epidemic or pandemic, was
closed in 2018.
Environmental policy and economics
Some experts link pandemic prevention with environmental policy and caution that environmental destruction as well as climate change drives wildlife to live close to people. For instance the WHO projects that climate change will also affect infectious disease occurrence.
A 2016 study reviews literature on the evidences for the impact of
climate change on human infectious disease, suggests a number of
proactive measures for controlling health impacts of climate change and
finds that climate change impacts human infectious disease via
alterations to pathogen, host and transmission. Studies have shown that the risk of disease outbreaks can increase substantially after forests are cleared.
Stanford biological anthropologist James Holland Jones notes that
humanity has "engineer[ed] a world where emerging infectious diseases
are both more likely and more likely to be consequential", referring to
the modern world's prevalent highly mobile lifestyles, increasingly
dense cities, various kinds of human interactions with wildlife and
alterations of the natural world.
Biotechnology research and development regulation
Toby Ord
puts into question whether the current public health and international
conventions, and self-regulation by biotechnology companies and the
scientific community are adequate. In the context of the 2019–2020 coronavirus pandemic Neal Baer writes that the "public, scientists, lawmakers, and others" "need to have thoughtful conversations about gene editing now".
In January 2020 during the SARS-CoV 2 outbreak experts in and outside China warned that wild animal markets, where the virus originated from, should be banned worldwide. On January 26 China banned the trade of wild animals until the end of the coronavirus epidemic at the time. On February 24 China announced a permanent ban on wildlife trade and consumption with some exceptions. Some scientists point out that banning informal wet markets
worldwide isn't the appropriate solution as fridges aren't available in
many places and because much of the food for Africa and Asia is
provided through such traditional markets. Some also caution that simple
bans may force traders underground, where they may pay less attention
to hygiene and some state that it's wild animals rather than farmed
animals that are the natural hosts of many viruses.
International coordination
The Global Health Security Agenda
(GHSA) a network of countries, international organizations, NGOs and
companies that aim to improve the world's ability to prevent, detect,
and respond to infectious diseases. Sixty-seven countries have signed
onto the GHSA framework. Funding for the GHSA has been reduced since the launch in 2014, both in the US and globally. In a 2018 lecture in Boston Bill Gates called for a global effort to build a comprehensive pandemic preparedness and response system.
Containment and prevention by artificial induction of immunity and/or biocides
Outbreaks could be contained or delayed – to enable other
containment-measures – or prevented by artificial induction of immunity
and/or biocides in combination with other measures that include
prediction or early detection of infectious human diseases.
In a preprint published on March 24, 2020 researchers suggested that the unique transcriptional signature of SARS-CoV-2 in the human immune system may be responsible for the development of COVID-19: SARS-CoV-2 did not induce the antiviral genes that code for type I and type III interferons. This could be relevant for the development or repurposing of treatments.
Vaccination
Development and provision of new vaccines usually takes years. The Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations, which was launched in 2017, works on reducing the time of vaccine-development.
Culling
Experts warned that depleting the numbers of species by culling to forestall human infections reduces genetic diversity
and thereby puts future generations of the animals as well as people at
risk while others contend that it's still the best, practical way to
contain a virus of livestock.
Prevention versus mitigation
Pandemic prevention seeks to prevent pandemics while mitigation of
pandemics seeks to reduce their severity and negative impacts. Some have
called for a shift from a treatment-oriented society to a
prevention-oriented one.
Authors of a 2010 study write that contemporary "global disease control
focuses almost exclusively on responding to pandemics after they have
already spread globally" and argue that the "wait-and-respond approach
is not sufficient and that the development of systems to prevent novel
pandemics before they are established should be considered imperative to
human health". Nathan Wolfe
criticizes that "our current global public health strategies are
reminiscent of cardiology in the 1950s when doctors focused solely on
responding to heart attacks and ignored the whole idea of prevention".
Copper and its alloys (brasses, bronzes, cupronickel, copper-nickel-zinc, and others) are natural antimicrobial
materials. Ancient civilizations exploited the antimicrobial properties
of copper long before the concept of microbes became understood in the
nineteenth century.
In addition to several copper medicinal preparations, it was also
observed centuries ago that water contained in copper vessels or
transported in copper conveyance systems was of better quality (i.e., no
or little visible slime or biofouling formation) than water contained or transported in other materials.
The antimicrobial properties of copper are still under active
investigation. Molecular mechanisms responsible for the antibacterial
action of copper have been a subject of intensive research. Scientists
are also actively demonstrating the intrinsic efficacy of copper alloy
"touch surfaces" to destroy a wide range of microorganisms that threaten public health.
Mechanisms of action
In
1852 Victor Burq discovered those working with copper had far fewer
deaths to cholera than anyone else, and did extensive research
confirming this. In 1867 he presented his findings to the French
Academies of Science and Medicine, informing them that putting copper on
the skin was effective at preventing someone from getting cholera.
In 1973, researchers at Battelle Columbus Laboratories
conducted a comprehensive literature, technology and patent search that
traced the history of understanding the "bacteriostatic and sanitizing
properties of copper and copper alloy surfaces", which demonstrated that
copper, in very small quantities, has the power to control a wide range
of molds, fungi, algae and harmful microbes. Of the 312 citations mentioned in the review across the time period 1892–1973, the observations below are noteworthy:
A subsequent paper
probed some of copper's antimicrobial mechanisms and cited no fewer
than 120 investigations into the efficacy of copper's action on
microbes. The authors noted that the antimicrobial mechanisms are very
complex and take place in many ways, both inside cells and in the interstitial spaces between cells.
Examples of some of the molecular mechanisms noted by various researchers include the following:
The 3-dimensional structure of proteins
can be altered by copper, so that the proteins can no longer perform
their normal functions. The result is inactivation of bacteria or
viruses.
Copper complexes form radicals that inactivate viruses.
Copper may disrupt enzyme structures, and functions by binding to sulfur- or carboxylate-containing groups and amino groups of proteins.
Copper may interfere with other essential elements, such as zinc and iron.
Copper facilitates deleterious activity in superoxide radicals. Repeated redox reactions on site-specific macromolecules generate HO• radicals, thereby causing "multiple hit damage" at target sites.
Copper can interact with lipids, causing their peroxidation and opening holes in the cell membranes, thereby compromising the integrity of cells. This can cause leakage of essential solutes, which in turn, can have a desiccating effect.
Copper damages the respiratory chain in Escherichia coli cells. and is associated with impaired cellular metabolism.
Faster corrosion correlates with faster inactivation of microorganisms. This may be due to increased availability of cupric ion, Cu2+, which is believed to be responsible for the antimicrobial action.
In inactivation experiments on the flu strain, H1N1, which is nearly
identical to the H5N1 avian strain and the 2009 H1N1 (swine flu)
strain, researchers hypothesized that copper's antimicrobial action
probably attacks the overall structure of the virus and therefore has a
broad-spectrum effect.
Microbes require copper-containing enzymes to drive certain vital chemical reactions. Excess copper, however, can affect proteins
and enzymes in microbes, thereby inhibiting their activities.
Researchers believe that excess copper has the potential to disrupt cell
function both inside cells and in the interstitial spaces between
cells, probably acting on the cells' outer envelope.
Currently, researchers believe that the most important antimicrobial mechanisms for copper are as follows:
Elevated copper levels inside a cell causes oxidative stress and the generation of hydrogen peroxide. Under these conditions, copper participates in the so-called Fenton-type reaction — a chemical reaction causing oxidative damage to cells.
Excess copper causes a decline in the membrane integrity of
microbes, leading to leakage of specific essential cell nutrients, such
as potassium and glutamate. This leads to desiccation and subsequent cell death.
While copper is needed for many protein functions, in an excess
situation (as on a copper alloy surface), copper binds to proteins that
do not require copper for their function. This "inappropriate" binding
leads to loss-of-function of the protein, and/or breakdown of the
protein into nonfunctional portions.
These potential mechanisms, as well as others, are the subject of
continuing study by academic research laboratories around the world.
Antimicrobial efficacy of copper alloy touch surfaces
Copper alloy surfaces have intrinsic properties to destroy a wide range of microorganisms.
In the interest of protecting public health, especially in healthcare
environments with their susceptible patient populations, an abundance of
peer-reviewed antimicrobial efficacy studies have been conducted in the
past 10 years regarding copper's efficacy to destroy E. coli O157:H7, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), Staphylococcus, Clostridium difficile, influenza A virus, adenovirus, and fungi. Stainless steel
was also investigated because it is an important surface material in
today's healthcare environments. The studies cited here, plus others
directed by the United States Environmental Protection Agency,
resulted in the 2008 registration of 274 different copper alloys as
certified antimicrobial materials that have public health benefits.
E. coli
E. coli O157:H7 is a potent, highly infectious, ACDP (Advisory
Committee on Dangerous Pathogens, UK) Hazard Group 3 foodborne and
waterborne pathogen. The bacterium produces potent toxins
that cause diarrhea, severe aches and nausea in infected persons.
Symptoms of severe infections include hemolytic colitis (bloody
diarrhea), hemolytic uremic syndrome (kidney disease), and death. E. coli
O157:H7 has become a serious public health threat because of its
increased incidence and because children up to 14 years of age, the
elderly, and immunocompromised individuals are at risk of incurring the
most severe symptoms.
Efficacy on copper surfaces
Recent studies have shown that copper alloy surfaces kill E. coli O157:H7. Over 99.9% of E. coli microbes are killed after just 1–2 hours on copper. On stainless steel surfaces, the microbes can survive for weeks.
Results of E. coli O157:H7 destruction on an alloy
containing 99.9% copper (C11000) demonstrate that this pathogen is
rapidly and almost completely killed (over 99.9% kill rate) within
ninety minutes at room temperature (20 °C). At chill temperatures (4 °C), over 99.9% of E. coli O157:H7 are killed within 270 minutes. E. coli
O157:H7 destruction on several copper alloys containing 99%–100% copper
(including C10200, C11000, C18080, and C19700) at room temperature
begins within minutes. At chilled temperatures, the inactivation process takes about an hour longer. No significant reduction in the amount of viable E. coli O157:H7 occurs on stainless steel after 270 minutes.
Studies have been conducted to examine the E. coli O157:H7
bactericidal efficacies on 25 different copper alloys to identify those
alloys that provide the best combination of antimicrobial activity,
corrosion/oxidation resistance, and fabrication properties. Copper's antibacterial effect was found to be intrinsic in all of the copper alloys tested. As in previous studies, no antibacterial properties were observed on stainless steel (UNS S30400). Also, in confirmation with earlier studies the rate of drop-off of E. coli O157:H7 on the copper alloys is faster at room temperature than at chill temperature.
For the most part, the bacterial kill rate of copper alloys increased with increasing copper content of the alloy. This is further evidence of copper's intrinsic antibacterial properties.
Efficacy on brass, bronze, copper-nickel alloys
Brasses,
which were frequently used for doorknobs and push plates in decades
past, also demonstrate bactericidal efficacies, but within a somewhat
longer time frame than pure copper.
All nine brasses tested were almost completely bactericidal (over 99.9%
kill rate) at 20 °C within 60–270 minutes. Many brasses were almost
completely bactericidal at 4 °C within 180–360 minutes.
The rate of total microbial death on four bronzes varied from within 50–270 minutes at 20 °C, and from 180 to 270 minutes at 4 °C.
The kill rate of E. coli O157 on copper-nickel
alloys increased with increasing copper content. Zero bacterial counts
at room temperature were achieved after 105–360 minutes for five of the
six alloys. Despite not achieving a complete kill, alloy C71500 achieved
a 4-log drop within the six-hour test, representing a 99.99% reduction
in the number of live organisms.
Efficacy on stainless steel
Unlike copper alloys, stainless steel (S30400) does not exhibit any degree of bactericidal properties against E. coli O157:H7. This material, which is one of the most common touch surface materials in the healthcare industry, allows toxic E. coli
O157:H7 to remain viable for weeks. Near-zero bacterial counts are not
observed even after 28 days of investigation. Epifluorescence
photographs have demonstrated that E. coli O157:H7 is almost
completely killed on copper alloy C10200 after just 90 minutes at 20 °C;
whereas a substantial number of pathogens remain on stainless steel
S30400.
MRSA
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is a dangerous bacteria strain because it is resistant to beta-lactam antibiotics.
Recent strains of the bacteria, EMRSA-15 and EMRSA-16, are highly
transmissible and durable. This is of extreme importance to those
concerned with reducing the incidence of hospital-acquired MRSA
infections.
In 2008, after evaluating a wide body of research mandated specifically by the United States Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA), registration approvals were granted by EPA in 2008 granting that
copper alloys kill more than 99.9% of MRSA within two hours.
Subsequent research conducted at the University of Southampton
(UK) compared the antimicrobial efficacies of copper and several
non-copper proprietary coating products to kill MRSA.
At 20 °C, the drop-off in MRSA organisms on copper alloy C11000 is
dramatic and almost complete (over 99.9% kill rate) within 75 minutes.
However, neither a triclosan-based product nor two silver-based
antimicrobial treatments (Ag-A and Ag-B) exhibited any meaningful
efficacy against MRSA. Stainless steel S30400 did not exhibit any
antimicrobial efficacy.
In 2004, the University of Southampton research team was the first to clearly demonstrate that copper inhibits MRSA.
On copper alloys — C19700 (99% copper), C24000 (80% copper), and C77000
(55% copper) — significant reductions in viability were achieved at
room temperatures after 1.5 hours, 3.0 hours and 4.5 hours,
respectively. Faster antimicrobial efficacies were associated with
higher copper alloy content. Stainless steel did not exhibit any
bactericidal benefits.
Leyland
Nigel S., Podporska-Carroll Joanna, Browne John, Hinder Steven J.,
Quilty Brid, Pillai Suresh C. (2016). "Highly Efficient F, Cu doped TiO2
anti-bacterial visible light active photocatalytic coatings to combat
hospital-acquired infections". Scientific Reports. 6. doi:10.1038/srep24770.
Clostridium difficile
Clostridium difficile, an anaerobic bacterium, is a major
cause of potentially life-threatening disease, including nosocomial
diarrheal infections, especially in developed countries. C. difficile endospores can survive for up to five months on surfaces. The pathogen is frequently transmitted by the hands of healthcare workers in hospital environments. C. difficile is currently a leading hospital-acquired infection in the UK, and rivals MRSA as the most common organism to cause hospital acquired infections in the US. It is responsible for a series of intestinal health complications, often referred to collectively as Clostridium difficile Associated Disease (CDAD).
The antimicrobial efficacy of various copper alloys against Clostridium difficile was recently evaluated. The viability of C. difficile
spores and vegetative cells were studied on copper alloys C11000 (99.9%
copper), C51000 (95% copper), C70600 (90% copper), C26000 (70% copper),
and C75200 (65% copper). Stainless steel (S30400) was used as the
experimental control. The copper alloys significantly reduced the
viability of both C. difficile spores and vegetative cells. On C75200, near total kill was observed after one hour (however, at 6 hours total C. difficileincreased,
and decreased slower afterwards). On C11000 and C51000, near total kill
was observed after 3 hours, then total kill in 24 hours on C11000 and
48 hours on C51000. On C70600, near total kill was observed after 5
hours. On C26000, near total kill was achieved after 48 hours. On
stainless steel, no reductions in viable organisms were observed after
72 hours (3 days) of exposure and no significant reduction was observed
within 168 hours (1 week).
Influenza A
Influenza,
commonly known as flu, is an infectious disease from a viral pathogen
different from the one that produces the common cold. Symptoms of
influenza, which are much more severe than the common cold, include
fever, sore throat, muscle pains, severe headache, coughing, weakness
and general discomfort. Influenza can cause pneumonia, which can be fatal, particularly in young children and the elderly.
After incubation for one hour on copper, active influenza A virus particles were reduced by 75%.
After six hours, the particles were reduced on copper by 99.999%.
Influenza A virus was found to survive in large numbers on stainless
steel.
Once surfaces are contaminated with virus particles, fingers can transfer particles to up to seven other clean surfaces.
Because of copper's ability to destroy influenza A virus particles,
copper can help to prevent cross-contamination of this viral pathogen.
Adenovirus
Adenovirus
is a group of viruses that infect the tissue lining membranes of the
respiratory and urinary tracts, eyes, and intestines. Adenoviruses
account for about 10% of acute respiratory infections in children. These viruses are a frequent cause of diarrhea.
In a recent study, 75% of adenovirus particles were inactivated
on copper (C11000) within one hour. Within six hours, 99.999% of the
adenovirus particles were inactivated. Within six hours, 50% of the
infectious adenovirus particles survived on stainless steel.