Volume 9, Issue 2 (may,jun 2015[PERSIAN] 2015)                   mljgoums 2015, 9(2): 119-126 | Back to browse issues page

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Pashaie Naghadeh, A, Dabirzadeh, M, Davoodi, T, Hashemi, M. Seroepidemiology of Toxoplasmose in pregnant women in Tabas City. mljgoums 2015; 9 (2) :119-126
URL: http://mlj.goums.ac.ir/article-1-691-en.html
1- Faculty of medicine, Zabol University of Medical Sciences, Zabol, Iran
2- Department of Parasitology and Mycology, Zabol University of Medical Sciences, Zabol, Iran , mdabirzadeh20002000@yahoo.com
3- Department of Parasitology and Mycology, Faculty of Medicine, Zahedan University of Medical Sciences, Zahedan, Iran
4- Department of Parasitology and Mycology, Faculty of Medicine, Zabol University of Medical Sciences, Zabol, Iran
Abstract:   (14839 Views)

Abstract

Background and objective: Bioindicators of drinking water are always influenced by physical and chemical factors such as turbidity and chlorine.  Considering the assessment of drinking water quality is based on residual chlorine, E.coli, heterotrophic bacteria and turbidity.  We aimed to evaluate the effect of pH, chlorine residual and turbidity on the microbial bioindicators.

Material and methods: In this descriptive-analytic study, 324 and 32 water samples were collected from rural and urban water distribution network of Aq Qala city in 2013, respectively. All steps were performed according to standard methods.

Results: In rural water supply, 5%, 9% and 33% of the samples were contaminated with fecal coliform, fecal streptococcus and the heterotrophic more than 500CFU / ml. In urban network, coliform contamination was not seen and other bioindicators were less than those of rural networks were. Turbidity of above 5 NTU in urban and rural samples was 3 and 9 percent, respectively. Bioindicators had significant relationship with residual chlorine, fecal coliform bacteria with pH and turbidity with heterotrophic bacteria (P ≤0.05).

Conclusion: The presence of fecal streptococcus bacteria in some samples without fecal coliform cannot confirm the safety of drinking water.  Microbial contamination in the presence of residual chlorine implies that just chlorination   is not enough for having healthy water.

Keywords: Chlorine, Turbidity, Biological Factors, Drinking water

Research Article: Original Paper |
Received: 2015/07/21 | Accepted: 2015/07/21 | Published: 2015/07/21 | ePublished: 2015/07/21

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.