Guest guest Posted June 24, 2010 Report Share Posted June 24, 2010 Interesting ! Do you have any more info on this Mr. Shane ? There is also the Burkard 9100 sampler that samples air and deposit the spores /fragments / dustparticles on a slow-moving, coated glass-slide… It is of cours not " real-time " , and you need a good microscopist, but at least you can detect the variation in a time-serie (up to 6-12 hours ) Med Vennlig Hilsen Ole Carlson MYCOTEAM AS Forskningsveien 3B Postboks 5, Blindern 0313 Oslo +47 952 38 931 mobil/direkte +47 22 96 56 38 sent. bord oec@... Fra: iequality [mailto:iequality ] På vegne av Shane Sendt: 24. juni 2010 12:51 Til: iequality Emne: Re: Re: Real-time mold analysis , There are indeed real-time pollen and mold counting machines. To my knowledge, a Japan group is the most advanced. However, these are not very good and do not count everything because they use fluorescent taggants and many of the fungal spores do not bind with the taggant. This is a long way of saying that whoever told you there was a real-time mold counter was clearly not talking about something that identifiied the actual mold. Probably particle counter as you supposed. ------------------------------------------------------------ D. Shane, Ph.D. Chief Mycologist 1675 N. Commerce Pkwy. Weston, FL 33326 (work) , ext. 268 (fax) On Wednesday23Jun, 2010, at 7:33 PM, cassidykuchenbecker wrote: : Excellent question. To my knowledge, there is not machine that gives spore trap counts, besides a person with a microscope. MycoMeter does have a device that provides a general qualification of the amount of total fungal debris in air samples. If this works like their original MycoMeter samples, then results can be given in 15 minutes or so. The MycoMeter works on a relative scale, but doesn't give actual counts. I would really hesitate using air samples or even particle samples unless they are collected during several rounds, as any single sampling ponint may drastically vary from the next. There are standards for duct cleaning that include a visual assessment and quantifying surface dust amounts. Email me if you want more info on these standards. Personally, I do a visual assessment followed by a few surface tape samples to ensure fungal debris (if it was present) was sufficently removed. Cassidy Kuchenbecker Environmental Initiatives ck@... > > I wonder if I am keeping up with the latest technology or if this is just another gimmick. A caller asked me about an test that provides a spore count in real time that was offered by a company that provides duct cleaning. Are there real-time tests available that indicate a quantifiable level of mold contamination or spore count? > > As an aside, it seems to me that just a particle count would be a useful tool to sell duct cleaning service. > > > Bouton | Healthy Homes Program > Tel: ; Fax: ; pbouton@... > Columbus Public Health > 240 Parsons Avenue, Columbus, Ohio 43215, www.publichealth.columbus.gov<http://www.publichealth.columbus.gov/>, Visit us on Facebook<http://www.facebook.com/columbuspublichealth> and Twitter<http://www.twitter.com/columbushealth> > > " This e-mail is intended for the sole use of the intended recipient and may contain privileged, sensitive, or protected health information. If you are not the intended recipient, be advised that the unauthorized use, disclosure, copying, distribution, or action taken in reliance on the contents of this communication is prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in error, please notify the sender via telephone or return e-mail and immediately delete this e-mail. " > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 24, 2010 Report Share Posted June 24, 2010 Ole,There are several (including more than one type of Burkard) slit samplers that sample continuously, but you are right, they are real time.The paper I was referring to came out a numbrer of years ago. I will see if I can find my copy. If I find it I will certainly send it to you. It had color plates.As I recall, there was also a Harvard-developed machine that was trying to do the same thing, but nothing was published to my knowledge.Sorry for being so vague. It has been a long time since I have thought about these issue because they simply don't work well.john Interesting ! Do you have any more info on this Mr. Shane ? There is also the Burkard 9100 sampler that samples air and deposit the spores /fragments / dustparticles on a slow-moving, coated glass-slide… It is of cours not "real-time", and you need a good microscopist, but at least you can detect the variation in a time-serie (up to 6-12 hours ) Med Vennlig Hilsen Ole Carlson MYCOTEAM AS Forskningsveien 3B Postboks 5, Blindern 0313 Oslo +47 952 38 931 mobil/direkte +47 22 96 56 38 sent. bord oecmycoteam (DOT) no Fra: iequality [mailto:iequality ] På vegne av Shane Sendt: 24. juni 2010 12:51 Til: iequality Emne: Re: Re: Real-time mold analysis , There are indeed real-time pollen and mold counting machines. To my knowledge, a Japan group is the most advanced. However, these are not very good and do not count everything because they use fluorescent taggants and many of the fungal spores do not bind with the taggant. This is a long way of saying that whoever told you there was a real-time mold counter was clearly not talking about something that identifiied the actual mold. Probably particle counter as you supposed. ------------------------------------------------------------ D. Shane, Ph.D. Chief Mycologist 1675 N. Commerce Pkwy. Weston, FL 33326 (work) , ext. 268 (fax) <image001.png> On Wednesday23Jun, 2010, at 7:33 PM, cassidykuchenbecker wrote: : Excellent question. To my knowledge, there is not machine that gives spore trap counts, besides a person with a microscope. MycoMeter does have a device that provides a general qualification of the amount of total fungal debris in air samples. If this works like their original MycoMeter samples, then results can be given in 15 minutes or so. The MycoMeter works on a relative scale, but doesn't give actual counts. I would really hesitate using air samples or even particle samples unless they are collected during several rounds, as any single sampling ponint may drastically vary from the next. There are standards for duct cleaning that include a visual assessment and quantifying surface dust amounts. Email me if you want more info on these standards. Personally, I do a visual assessment followed by a few surface tape samples to ensure fungal debris (if it was present) was sufficently removed. Cassidy Kuchenbecker Environmental Initiatives ckenviroinit > > I wonder if I am keeping up with the latest technology or if this is just another gimmick. A caller asked me about an test that provides a spore count in real time that was offered by a company that provides duct cleaning. Are there real-time tests available that indicate a quantifiable level of mold contamination or spore count? > > As an aside, it seems to me that just a particle count would be a useful tool to sell duct cleaning service. > > > Bouton | Healthy Homes Program > Tel: ; Fax: ; pbouton@... > Columbus Public Health > 240 Parsons Avenue, Columbus, Ohio 43215, www.publichealth.columbus.gov<http://www.publichealth.columbus.gov/>, Visit us on Facebook<http://www.facebook.com/columbuspublichealth> and Twitter<http://www.twitter.com/columbushealth> > > "This e-mail is intended for the sole use of the intended recipient and may contain privileged, sensitive, or protected health information. If you are not the intended recipient, be advised that the unauthorized use, disclosure, copying, distribution, or action taken in reliance on the contents of this communication is prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in error, please notify the sender via telephone or return e-mail and immediately delete this e-mail." > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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