Milton sterilizing fluid

Milton sterilizing fluid is produced by Procter & Gamble for sterilization uses. It contains 1% sodium hypochlorite (NaClO) and 16.5% sodium chloride (NaCl; common salt). 1:80 dilution is used to sterilise babies' feeding utensils, including baby bottles. It is sold in dissolvable tablets which are then mixed with cold water and placed in a lidded bucket. This method of bottle sterilization is marketed as "The Milton Method".

An inter-war bottle of Milton's Fluid, Hunterian Museum, Glasgow

A 1:20 solution is isotonic with body fluids. 1:4 dilution is used for wound management applications; this contains 0.25% (w/v) available chlorine and has a pH of 10.5–11.2.[1][2] The fluid has been used in endodontics, for example to irrigate an infected root canal, although it is not medically licensed for use in the mouth.[3]

History

The product and company began in Britain in 1916 and were named after the poet John Milton as a "safe" household name. During the First World War the fluid was used on the front to treat burns and skin conditions.[4]

In 1947 a widespread outbreak of gastroenteritis in the UK, causing the death of 4,500 children under the age of one, many of these in hospitals, where, it turns out, the repeated sterilisation of glass baby bottles containing a small residue of milk by boiling them had resulted in invisible deposits of "milk stone," which provided a medium for the growth of harmful bacteria. This led to a national objective of finding an alternative to sterilising milk bottles by boiling, and Milton fluid was the antiseptic advocated by hospitals and government agencies. This cold water method was generally available and simple for all to use, and virtually all mothers adopted this method.[4]

References

  1. mail-archive.com - Re: SaF Milton sterilizing fluid
  2. smtl.co.uk - Dressings Times, 3rd edition
  3. John S. Rhodes (2005). Advanced Endodontics: Clinical Retreatment and Surgery. CRC Press. p. 130. ISBN 978-0-203-44928-8.
  4. "Our History". www.milton-tm.com. Retrieved 9 March 2019.
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