Microbio - mesophilic aerobic germs R2A (water)

Standard water microbiology tests miss a hidden threat - slow-growing, nutrient-adapted organisms that thrive in purified water systems, forming resilient biofilms that protect pathogens and compromise system integrity long before conventional testing detects problems. R2A agar cultivation detects slow-growing, adapted microorganisms that standard methods miss, providing comprehensive assessment of water system microbiology per Ph. Eur., USP, and ISO 11737-1 requirements. These oligotrophic organisms thrive in nutrient-poor environments typical of purified water systems, often forming biofilms that protect pathogens, generate endotoxins, and compromise system integrity while remaining invisible to standard TSA testing. The extended 7-day incubation at 20-25°C captures stressed and injured cells that indicate system deterioration before complete failure occurs, enabling intervention when remediation remains simple and cost-effective. For pharmaceutical water systems, R2A testing reveals early biofilm formation when basic sanitization suffices, preventing system-wide contamination that requires extensive remediation including system shutdown, aggressive cleaning, and revalidation. Medical device manufacturers use R2A analysis to validate water pretreatment systems ensuring adequate microbial control, monitor reverse osmosis performance detecting membrane degradation before product impact, and demonstrate control over water quality that impacts every manufacturing process from final rinsing to extraction preparation. The lower incubation temperature recovers psychrophilic organisms that grow at ambient temperatures in distribution systems but won't culture at 30-35°C used for TSA, providing more representative assessment of actual system bioburden. Trending R2A results alongside TSA counts reveals when systems develop oligotrophic populations indicating biofilm formation, nutrient accumulation, or inadequate sanitization frequency that standard testing alone cannot detect. Regulatory expectations increasingly include R2A testing demonstrating comprehensive water quality control, particularly for facilities with large distribution systems or those experiencing recurring contamination issues despite acceptable TSA results.

No.
1002104
Analyses category
Sample type
Liquid sample
Sample requirement (type)
N/A
Sample quantities
100 ml
Equipment
Manual counting
Lead Time Standard (Days)
10
Lead Time Express (Days)
8
Lead Time Super Express (Days)
5
Test facility
In House
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