NEW WATER STUDY DEMONSTRATES SPEED AND EFFICIENCY OF IDEXX Pseudalert® TEST FOR SWIMMING POOL AND SPA WATERS COMPARED TO MEMBRANE FILTRATION

NEW WATER STUDY DEMONSTRATES SPEED AND EFFICIENCY OF IDEXX Pseudalert® TEST FOR SWIMMING POOL AND SPA WATERS COMPARED TO MEMBRANE FILTRATION

IDEXX, the global leader in rapid microbiological test kits for water, today announced the publication of a peer reviewed Pan European study*, in Current Microbiology, “Evaluation of the Pseudalert®/Quanti-Tray® MPN Test for the Rapid Enumeration of Pseudomonas aeruginosa in Swimming Pool and Spa Pool Waters.” The paper concludes that the IDEXX Pseudalert/Quanti-Tray method, produces confirmed results in a shorter time than the standard reference international and national membrane filtration-based culture methods for P. aeruginosa, which both use Pseudomonas CN agar. The authors concluded that Pseudalert/Quanti-tray was a valid alternative method for recreational water analysis.
The study was conducted on both routinely analysed pool waters and swimming pool waters spiked with reference and environmental strains (obtained from swimming pool or spa pool water samples) of P. aeruginosa. The data were analysed according to the principles outlined in The Microbiology of Drinking Water—Part 3 (MoDW Part 3) [13] for the preliminary analysis of the data from each participating laboratory, and ISO 17994:2014 [7] to assess the comparability of performance between the Pseudalert/Quanti-Tray method and the reference method.
The report went on to conclude that the Pseudalert/Quanti-Tray method needed less analyst labour time per sample, with no need for confirmation testing. Additionally, results are available within 24 hours compared to a minimum of 48 hours for the ISO 16266 and MoDW Part 8 methods, allowing a more rapid response to the presence of P. aeruginosa in pool and spa waters.
“This study clearly demonstrates that Pseudalert is an effective test which detects P. aeruginosa quickly, enabling users to safeguard against ‘hot-tub rash,’ otherwise known as hot tub folliculitis, and a host of other infections, avoiding illness risk in sensitive populations,” commented Andrew Headland, Senior Business Manager, for IDEXX EMEA. “Sample results in recreational waters need to be confirmed as quickly as possible and this study clearly demonstrates that Pseudalert is a fast, accurate and efficient alternative to the more time consuming membrane filtration methods.”
Launched in 2011, the IDEXX Pseudalert test is based on a bacterial enzyme detection technology that signals the presence of P. aeruginosa through the hydrolysis of a substrate in the Pseudalert reagent. P. aeruginosa cells rapidly grow and reproduce using the rich supply of amino acids, vitamins and other nutrients present in the Pseudalert reagent. Actively growing strains of P. aeruginosa have an enzyme that metabolises the substrate in the reagent to produce blue fluorescence under ultraviolet light.
Where quantification of a sample is required, IDEXX has developed a simple device known as a Quanti-Tray, which consists of 51 individually sealable cells. The Quanti-Tray can also be incubated for 24 hours after which the fluorescent cells can be counted and quantified by reference to an MPN table.

For more information contact: Richard Kerns at NEPR: [email protected]

[email protected]

+44 (0) 1638 676800)