160 ANTISEPTICS AND DISINFECTANTS. 



germicidal agent ; but we may carry the dilution still further, to be 

 on the side of safety, by inoculating a second tube containing the 

 same amount of sterile bouillon from the first, carrying over in the 

 same way one or two ose. We will still be very sure to have a 

 considerable number of the microorganisms to test the question of 

 the destruction of vitality. Instead of bouillon we may use liquefied 

 flesh-peptoiie-gelatin, which gives us the same advantage as to dilu- 

 tion of the disinfecting agent ; and after inoculating two tubes as 

 above indicated, we may make Esmarch roll tubes by turning them 

 upon a block of ice. The development of colonies will show that 

 there was a failure to disinfect ; their absence, after a proper inter- 

 val, will be evidence of the germicidal action of the agent employed. 



Koch's Method. In 1881 Koch published his extended experi- 

 ments made to determine the germicidal power of various chemical 

 agents as tested upon anthrax spores. His method consisted in ex- 

 posing silk threads, to which the dried spores were attached, in a 

 solution of the disinfecting agent, and at intervals transferring one 

 of these threads to a solid culture medium. The precaution was 

 taken to wash the thread in distilled water when the agent tested was 

 supposed to be likely to restrain development. In these experiments 

 a standard solution of the disinfecting agent was used, and the time 

 of exposure was varied from a few hours to many days. 



The Writer's Method. In the writer's experiments, made in 

 1880 and subsequently, a different method has been adopted. The 

 time has been constant usually two hours and the object has been 

 to find the minimum amount of various chemical agents which 

 would destroy the test organisms in this time ; and instead of sub- 

 jecting a few of the test organisms attached to a silk thread to the 

 action of the disinfecting agent, a certain quantity of a recent cul- 

 ture usually five cubic centimetres has been mixed with an equal 

 quantity of a standard, solution of the germicidal agent. Thus five 

 cubic centimetres of a 1 : 200 solution of carbolic acid would be 

 added to five cubic centimetres of a recent culture of the typhoid 

 bacillus, for example, and after two hours' contact one or two ose 

 would be introduced into a suitable nutrient medium to test the 

 question of disinfection. In the case given the result obtained 

 would be set down as the action of a solution of carbolic acid in the 

 proportion of 1 : 400, for the 1 : 200 solution was diluted by the addi- 

 tion of an equal quantity of the culture. 



Other experimenters have adopted still a different method. In- 

 stead of using a considerable and definite quantity of a culture con- 

 taining the test organism, they introduce one or two ose from such 

 a culture into a solution containing a given proportion of the disin- 

 fectant ; then after exposure for a given time the nutrient medium is 

 inoculated. 



