A medical autoclave is a device that uses
steam to
sterilize equipment and other objects. This means that all
bacteria,
viruses,
fungi, and
spores are inactivated. However,
prions, such as those associated with
Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease, and some toxins released by certain bacteria, such as
Cereulide, may not be destroyed by autoclaving at the typical 134 °C for three minutes or 121 °C for 15 minutes and instead should be immersed in sodium hydroxide (1M NaOH) and heated in a gravity displacement autoclave at 121 °C for 30 min, cleaned, rinsed in water and subjected to routine sterilization. Although a wide range of
archaea species, including
Geogemma barossii (Strain 121), can survive and even reproduce at temperatures found in autoclaves, their growth rate is so slow at the lower temperatures in the less extreme environments occupied by humans that it is unlikely they could compete with other organisms. None of them are known to be infectious or otherwise pose a health risk to humans. Their biochemistry is so different from that of humans, and their multiplication rate is so slow, that microbiologists need not worry about them. Because
damp heat is used,
heat-labile products (such as some
plastics) cannot be sterilized this way or they will melt.
Paper and other products that may be damaged by steam must also be sterilized another way. In all autoclaves, items should always be separated to allow the steam to penetrate the load evenly. Many procedures today employ single-use items rather than sterilizable, reusable items. This first happened with
hypodermic needles, but today many
surgical instruments (such as
forceps,
needle holders, and
scalpel handles) are commonly single-use rather than reusable items (see
waste autoclave). Autoclaving is often used to sterilize medical waste prior to disposal in the standard
municipal solid waste stream. This application has become more common as an alternative to
incineration due to environmental and health concerns about the combustion by-products emitted by incinerators, especially from the small units which were commonly operated at individual hospitals. Incineration or a similar thermal oxidation process is still often mandated for pathological waste and other very toxic or infectious medical waste. For liquid waste, an
effluent decontamination system is the equivalent hardware. In most of the industrialized world
medical-grade autoclaves are regulated
medical devices. Many medical-grade autoclaves are therefore limited to running regulator-approved cycles. Because they are optimized for continuous hospital use, they favor rectangular designs, require demanding maintenance regimens, and are costly to operate. (A properly calibrated medical-grade autoclave uses thousands of gallons of water each day, independent of task, with correspondingly high electric power consumption.) ==In research==