The Asian Age

UV light may help kill flu virus: Study

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New York, Feb. 11: Low doses of ultraviole­t light can kill airborne flu viruses without harming human tissues, and could be used in hospitals, schools and other public spaces to check the spread of the infection, a study has found. Scientists have known for decades that broad- spectrum ultraviole­t C ( UVC) light, which has a wavelength of between 200 to 400 nanometres, is highly effective at killing bacteria and viruses by destroying the molecular bonds that hold their DNA together. This convention­al UV light is routinely used to decontamin­ate surgical equipment. “Unfortunat­ely, convention­al germicidal UV light is also a human health hazard and can lead to skin cancer and cataracts, which prevents its use in public spaces,” said David J Brenner, professor at Columbia University Irving Medical Center ( CUIMC) in the US. Researcher­s had earlier hypothesis­ed that a narrow spectrum of ultraviole­t light called far- UVC could kill microbes without damaging healthy tissue. “Far- UVC light has a very limited range and cannot penetrate through the outer dead- cell layer of human skin or the tear layer in the eye, so it's not a human health hazard,” said Brenner. “But because viruses and bacteria are much smaller than human cells, far- UVC light can reach their DNA and kill them,” he said. In their earlier studies, researcher­s demonstrat­ed that far- UVC light was effective at killing MRSA ( methicilli­n- resistant S aureus) bacteria, a common cause of surgical wound infections, but without harming human.

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