نتایج جستجو برای: c botulinum spores

تعداد نتایج: 1073610  

1999
PABLO S. FERNÁNDEZ MICHAEL W. PECK

Refrigerated processed foods of extended durability such as cook-chill and sous-vide foods rely on a minimal heat treatment at 70 to 95°C and then storage at a refrigeration temperature for safety and preservation. These foods are not sterile and are intended to have an extended shelf life, often up to 42 days. The principal microbiological hazard in foods of this type is growth of and toxin pr...

Journal: :Journal of microbiological methods 2005
M D Johnston S Lawson J A Otter

The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of hydrogen peroxide vapour (HPV) against spores of Clostridium botulinum, for use as a method for decontaminating environments where this pathogen has been handled. Spores were dried onto stainless steel slides and exposed to HPV in a sealed glovebox enclosure, transferred to a quenching agent at timed intervals during the exposure period, bef...

2017
Robert R. Butler Kristin M. Schill Yun Wang Jean-François Pombert

Clostridium sporogenes PA 3679 is a non-toxic endospore former that is widely used as a surrogate for Clostridium botulinum by the food processing industry to validate thermal processing strategies. PA 3679 produces spores of exceptionally high heat resistance without botulinum neurotoxins, permitting the use of PA 3679 in inoculated pack studies while ensuring the safety of food processing fac...

Journal: :Revista Argentina de microbiologia 2009
M D Sagua C Lúquez C P Barzola M I Bianco R A Fernández

Infant botulism is the most common form of human botulism; however, its transmission has not been completely explained yet. Some of the most recognized potential sources of Clostridium botulinum spores are the soil, dust, honey and medicinal herbs. In Argentina, 456 cases of infant botulism were reported between 1982 and 2007. C. botulinum type A was identified in 455 of these cases whereas typ...

Journal: :Applied and environmental microbiology 2013
Daniel Leclair Jeffrey M Farber Bill Doidge Burke Blanchfield Sandy Suppa Franco Pagotto John W Austin

The distribution and levels of Clostridium botulinum type E were determined from field sites used by Inuit hunters for butchering seals along the coast of Nunavik. The incidence rates of C. botulinum type E in shoreline soil along the coast were 0, 50, and 87.5% among samples tested for the Hudson Strait, Hudson Bay, and Ungava Bay regions, respectively. Spores were detected in seawater or coas...

Journal: :International journal of food microbiology 2016
Xavier F Hospital Eva Hierro Sandra Stringer Manuela Fernández

Nitrite has been traditionally used to control Clostridium botulinum in cured meat products. However, in the case of dry fermented sausages, environmental factors such as pH, aw and the competitive microbiota may exert a more relevant role than nitrite in the inhibition of the growth and toxin production by C. botulinum. In this challenge test study, two varieties of Mediterranean dry sausages ...

Journal: :Journal of clinical microbiology 1996
G Franciosa L Fenicia C Caldiani P Aureli

A PCR was developed and applied for the detection of Clostridium botulinum type C in 18 avian and environmental samples collected during an outbreak of avian botulism, and the results were compared with those obtained by conventional methodologies based on the mouse bioassay. PCR and mouse bioassay results compared well (100%) after the enrichment of samples, but PCR results directly indicated ...

2013
Mark Linton Malachy Connolly Laurette Houston Margaret F. Patterson

High pressure processing (HPP) is used as a post-process decontamination treatment to ensure that cooked chicken is free from Listeria monocytogenes and other food poisoning bacteria. However HPP does not inactivate bacterial endospores and the conditions in cooked chicken could support the growth of Clostridium botulinum. Therefore some method for controlling the germination of spores and thei...

2017
Shiwei Wang Jason Brunt Michael W. Peck Peter Setlow Yong-Qing Li

The Gram-positive spore-forming anaerobe Clostridium sporogenes is a significant cause of food spoilage, and it is also used as a surrogate for C. botulinum spores for testing the efficacy of commercial sterilization. C. sporogenes spores have also been proposed as a vector to deliver drugs to tumor cells for cancer treatments. Such an application of C. sporogenes spores requires their germinat...

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