Posted 10 December 2009 - 03:21 AM
Hi everyone
My name is Martin Easter from Hygiena International and I have many years of industrial experience with ATP hygiene monitoring as both a user and a developer of the technology. You are all correct in that ATP and plate counts are different methods that measure different things and give different information. It like comparing apple and oranges. It is best to accept the ATP hygiene test for what it is i.e. a cleaning verification test, and a sensitive test for product residue that should have been removed by effective cleaning.
The ATP technology is not intended to be used as a replacement for the microbiology test, and it is not intended to be a precise method for the determination of ATP content. There are many factor that affect this biological assay and as such it has a similar variability to other biological test e.g. plate counts with CV of 30% or more.
Hi Martin
I have used ATP technology since the early 90's
A couple of points:
Are you sure it is not intended to be a precise method for determination of ATP content? Please explain.
For product testing I have used ATP testing as a direct replacement (With some micro testing as verification) so I think you are underselling the technology here.
Kind regards,
Tony
Edited by Tony-C, 17 November 2011 - 03:16 PM.
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