Four years of experience with silver-copper ionization for control of Legionella in a German university hospital hot water plumbing system

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Abstract

Silver-copper ionization was used for controlling Legionella distribution in a German university hospital hot water plumbing system for 4 years. In the beginning, silver concentrations were not allowed to exceed 10 μg/L because of drinking water regulation limits in Germany. Water samples were monitored for Legionella counts, temperature, and silver and copper concentrations. A significant (P <10 μg/L was not sufficient. Legionella counts increased to 10,000 cfu/L during the third year. During the fourth year, we studied the influence of higher silver concentrations on Legionella distribution. With an average silver level of 30 μg/L, only a 1.3-log reduction in Legionella, to 500 cfu/L, was achieved. The effect was not significant (P = .071); therefore, it must be considered that Legionella developed a tolerance to silver ions.

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Rohr, U., Senger, M., Selenka, F., Turley, R., & Wilhelm, M. (1999). Four years of experience with silver-copper ionization for control of Legionella in a German university hospital hot water plumbing system. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 29(6), 1507–1511. https://doi.org/10.1086/313512

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