Inactivation of ascaris for thermal treatment and drying applications in faecal sludge

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Abstract

Ascaris lumbricoides is the most common helminth of human health importance, and the most resilient helminth found in faecal sludge. There are numerous types of sludge treatments; however, heating and drying are most commonly used for pathogen inactivation. Ascaris suum eggs were heated in a water bath at 40–55∘C for 10 seconds to 60 minutes in water, as well as heated in both urine diversion dry toilet and ventilated improved pit latrine sludge at 40∘C, 60∘Cand80∘C for times ranging from 5 seconds to 120 minutes. Eggs were also spiked into sludges of different moisture contents and incubated over 12 weeks at 25∘C, with samples analysed weekly. Overall, we concluded that eggs were inactivated at temperatures >50∘C, that the temperature–time relationship directly impacted the efficacy of heat treatment, that suspension medium had no effect, and that eggs survived better in wet rather than dry sludges.

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Naidoo, D., Archer, C. E., Septien, S., Appleton, C. C., & Buckley, C. A. (2020). Inactivation of ascaris for thermal treatment and drying applications in faecal sludge. Journal of Water Sanitation and Hygiene for Development, 10(2), 209–219. https://doi.org/10.2166/washdev.2020.119

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