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View Full Version : Acetic Acid, the Active Component of Vinegar, Is an Effective Tuberculocidal Disinfec



Serpo
27th February 2014, 06:16 PM
Effective and economical mycobactericidal disinfectants are needed to kill both Mycobacterium tuberculosis and non-M. tuberculosis mycobacteria. We found that acetic acid (vinegar) efficiently kills M. tuberculosis after 30 min of exposure to a 6% acetic acid solution. The activity is not due to pH alone, and propionic acid also appears to be bactericidal. M. bolletii and M. massiliense nontuberculous mycobacteria were more resistant, although a 30-min exposure to 10% acetic acid resulted in at least a 6-log10 reduction of viable bacteria. Acetic acid (vinegar) is an effective mycobactericidal disinfectant that should also be active against most other bacteria. These findings are consistent with and extend the results of studies performed in the early and mid-20th century on the disinfectant capacity of organic acids.
IMPORTANCE Mycobacteria are best known for causing tuberculosis and leprosy, but infections with nontuberculous mycobacteria are an increasing problem after surgical or cosmetic procedures or in the lungs of cystic fibrosis and immunosuppressed patients. Killing mycobacteria is important because Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains can be multidrug resistant and therefore potentially fatal biohazards, and environmental mycobacteria must be thoroughly eliminated from surgical implements and respiratory equipment. Currently used mycobactericidal disinfectants can be toxic, unstable, and expensive. We fortuitously found that acetic acid kills mycobacteria and then showed that it is an effective mycobactericidal agent, even against the very resistant, clinically important Mycobacterium abscessus complex. Vinegar has been used for thousands of years as a common disinfectant, and if it can kill mycobacteria, the most disinfectant-resistant bacteria, it may prove to be a broadly effective, economical biocide with potential usefulness in health care settings and laboratories, especially in resource-poor countries.
http://mbio.asm.org/content/5/2/e00013-14

mick silver
27th February 2014, 06:31 PM
how does this work ... you drink it ... pour it on you are what

Glass
27th February 2014, 06:32 PM
This is good news IMO. I know someone who is going to get their throat and guts cut out by doctors who have told them it is incurable and only barely controllable. But first they have to cut out the infected areas of oseophagus and stomach. Now not saying same bug. I don't know the exact diagnosis and neither do they. Been told it is an alkaline based virus. First thing I thought was, an alkaline based virus? Could there be such a thing? My experience is that body acidity is the key to a lot of these things thriving, funguses, viruses etc. I actually think the condition this guy has is the same as I had 2 years ago when I started taking the lipsomal for health. after 12 months I was convinced and still am that it saved my life. It helped regenerate a lot of damaged bits inside me. You can feel where the problems are in your body. Their location etc. That coupled with diet of course. Fresh food. You need to good stuff for the rebuild.

Apple cider vinegar IMO is the good stuff. Super Tasty as well. I haven't found any of the cloudy stuff like they have in the US but I'm not going to find that in the supermarket now am I?

Jewboo
27th February 2014, 06:36 PM
What a coincidence. Couple of days ago I used white vinegar to clean my stainless water bottle (http://www.thegreenhead.com/imgs/klean-kanteen-stainless-steel-water-bottle-11.jpg). 50-50 with water and let it sit overnight. It really did a great job. Made it all shiny inside.

mick silver
27th February 2014, 06:38 PM
i buy Apple cider vinegar and what i get not cloudy

Serpo
27th February 2014, 06:39 PM
how does this work ... you drink it ... pour it on you are what


Yes

Serpo
27th February 2014, 06:41 PM
The very best vinegar in my opinion is coconut sap vinegar


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yAf2NHeQ8mAhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yAf2NHeQ8mA

Dogman
27th February 2014, 06:56 PM
Humm, Now I may have a use for what has been living in my frig for many years.

Interesting I happen to have 4-30ml bottles of laboratory grade Glacial Acetic Acid in my frig, left over from making biologic microscope slides.(hobby)

This is the pure stuff and it needs to be diluted a bunch because it is corrosive. Used it to "fix" samples before mounting.

It will freeze somewhere below 60°F

Shami-Amourae
27th February 2014, 08:06 PM
i buy Apple cider vinegar and what i get not cloudy

Only use Braggs brand. ONLY. There is NO substitute.
http://www.globalhealingcenter.com/media/catalog/product/cache/1/image/9df78eab33525d08d6e5fb8d27136e95/b/r/braggs_acv_1.jpg