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Department of Microbiology and Immunology
and1 Department of Epidemiology and Community Medicine, School of Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, K1H 8M5
The survival of airborne human coronavirus 229E (HCV/229E) was studied under different conditions of temperature (20 ± 1 °C and 6 ± 1 °C) and low (30 ± 5%), medium (50 ± 5%) or high (80 ± 5%) relative humidities (RH). At 20 ± 1 °C, aerosolized HCV/229E was found to survive best at 50% RH with a half-life of 67.33 ± 8.24 h while at 30% RH the virus half-life was 26.76 ± 6.21 h. At 50% RH nearly 20% infectious virus was still detectable at 6 days. High RH at 20 ± 1 °C, on the other hand, was found to be the least favourable to the survival of aerosolized virus and under these conditions the virus half-life was only about 3 h; no virus could be detected after 24 h in aerosol. At 6 ± 1 °C, in either 50% or 30% RH conditions, the survival of HCV/229E was significantly enhanced, with the decay pattern essentially similar to that seen at 20 ± 1 °C. At low temperature and high RH (80%), however, the survival pattern was completely reversed, with the HCV/229E half-life increasing to 86.01 ± 5.28 h, nearly 30 times that found at 20 ± 1 °C and high RH. Although optimal survival at 6 °C still occurred at 50% RH, the pronounced stabilizing effect of low temperature on the survival of HCV/229E at high RH indicates that the role of the environment on the survival of viruses in air may be more complex and significant than previously thought.
Keywords: coronavirus, airborne survival, aerobiology, disease transmission
Received 1 March 1985;
accepted 4 September 1985.
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