Category Archives: E.coli

Ireland – Recall of a Batch of Donnybrook Fair Tipperary Brie due to the Presence of E. coli

FSAI

Summary
Category 1: For Action
Alert Notification: 2021.96
Product: Donnybrook Fair Tipperary Brie; pack size:155g; approval number: IE 1089 EC
Batch Code: Use by date: 17/11/2021
Country Of Origin: Ireland

Message:

The above batch of Donnybrook Fair Tipperary Brie is being recalled due to the presence of E. coli.  Point-of-sale recall notices will be displayed in stores supplied with the implicated batch.

Nature Of Danger:

E. coli at the levels detected indicates a possible hygiene issue and the potential for the presence of harmful bacteria.

Action Required:

Manufacturers, wholesalers, distributors, caterers & retailers:

Retailers are requested to remove the implicated batch from sale.

Consumers:

Consumers are advised not to eat the implicated batch.

Donnybrook Fair Tipperary Brie

Ireland – Recall of a Batch of Joyces Supermarkets of Galway Tipperary Brie due to the Presence of E. coli.

FSAI

Tipperary Brie for Recall

Summary
Category 1: For Action
Alert Notification: 2021.95
Product: Joyce’s Supermarkets of Galway Tipperary Brie; pack size:155g; approval number: IE 1089 EC
Batch Code: Use by date: 17/11/2021
Country Of Origin: Ireland

Message:

The above batch of Joyce’s Supermarkets of Galway Tipperary Brie is being recalled due to the presence of E. coli.  Point-of-sale recall notices will be displayed in stores supplied with the implicated batch.

Nature Of Danger:

E. coli at the levels detected indicates a possible hygiene issue and the potential for the presence of harmful bacteria.

Action Required:

Manufacturers, wholesalers, distributors, caterers & retailers:

Retailers are requested to remove the implicated batch from sale.

Consumers:

Consumers are advised not to eat the implicated batch.

RASFF Alerts – E.coli – Live Mussels – Japanese Clams

RASFF

Too high count of Escherichia coli in live mussels (Mytilus galloprovincialis) from Italy, with raw material from Spain in Croatia and Slovenia

RASFF

Escherichia coli in live mussels (Mytilus galloprovincialis)//presenza di E.coli beta-glucuronidasi + oltre i limiti di legge in cozze from Spain in Italy

RASFF

Too high count of Escherichia coli in live japanese clams from Spain in France

RASFF Alert – Staphylococcus aureus – E.coli – TVC – Enterobacteriaceae – Chilled Noodles with Eggs

RASFF

Coagulase-positive Staphylococcus (2300 CFU/g), too high count of aerobic mesophiles (210000000 CFU/g) and high counts of Enterobacteriaceae (18000000 CFU/g) and of Escherichia coli (5100 CFU/g) in chilled noodles with eggs from Slovakia in Austria

RASFF Alerts – STEC E.coli – Puff Pastry – Tuna Salad – Romaine Lettuce

RASFF

Verotoxin-producing E. coli in fresh puff pastry from Austria in Germany

RASFF

Shigatoxin-producing Escherichia coli (stx1+, stx2 + /25g) in tuna salad from the Netherlands in Belgium

RASFF

Shigatoxin-producing Escherichia coli (stx1 +, stx2 + /25g) in romaine lettuce from the Netherlands in Belgium

Research – Transmission of Escherichia coli from Manure to Root Zones of Field-Grown Lettuce and Leek Plants

MDPI

Pathogenic Escherichia coli strains are responsible for food-borne disease outbreaks upon consumption of fresh vegetables and fruits. The aim of this study was to establish the transmission route of E. coli strain 0611, as proxy for human pathogenic E. coli, via manure, soil and plant root zones to the above-soil plant compartments. The ecological behavior of the introduced strain was established by making use of a combination of cultivation-based and molecular targeted and untargeted approaches. Strain 0611 CFUs and specific molecular targets were detected in the root zones of lettuce and leek plants, even up to 272 days after planting in the case of leek plants. However, no strain 0611 colonies were detected in leek leaves, and only in one occasion a single colony was found in lettuce leaves. Therefore, it was concluded that transmission of E. coli via manure is not the principal contamination route to the edible parts of both plant species grown under field conditions in this study. Strain 0611 was shown to accumulate in root zones of both species and metagenomic reads of this strain were retrieved from the lettuce rhizosphere soil metagenome library at a level of Log 4.11 CFU per g dry soil. View Full-Text

Research – Irradiation to tackle foodborne bacteria

Food Manufacture

Alison Johnson, managing director at Food Forensics, discusses the use of irradiation in the fight against salmonella, campylobacter and E.coli.

USA – St. John Creamery Raw Goat Milk Recalled For E. coli

Food Poisoning Bulletin

St. John Creamery raw goat milk is being voluntarily recalled for possible E. coli contamination in Washington state. The same product was recalled in September 2021 for possible Listeria monocytogenes contamination. No known illnesses are associated with the consumption of this recalled goat milk at this time.

The recalled product is St. John Creamery raw goat milk that is bottled in half-gallon and one-pint containers. It was sold at the dairy’s on farm store, directly to private customers in drop groups, and at retail stores in western Washington state. The milk has best by dates through 110521 (November 5, 2021)

Research – When the E. coli hits the fan! Evaluating the risks of dust-associated produce cross-contamination

CPS

Dust represents an understudied vehicle for microbial dispersal and produce contamination by pathogens. Dust deposition onto crops during cultivation is inevitable as plant surfaces serve as a major aerosol sink and dust can serve as a vehicle for bacteria. Wind-driven distribution of dust in agricultural environments can also impact food safety when the sources of dust include particles from natural and human-related reservoirs of pathogens. While the populations of enteric pathogens in water is frequently determined and the microbiological quality of soils are monitored, the evaluation of dust and soil-borne particulates is rarely conducted. This study proposes the following: 1). To evaluate the role of dust in transferring foodborne pathogens to produce surfaces grown in eastern and western regions of the US, 2). To determine the role of humidity in the deposition of dust on produce and the survival of pathogens in dust, and 3). To test dust particulates from animal operations in both regions for the presence of biomarkers indicative of fecal contamination and potentially the presence of pathogens. This study will enhance our understanding of pathogen transport from feces into and through produce fields and will quantify the risk associated with contamination from dust under varying environmental/atmospheric conditions.

Technical Abstract

Dust, broadly defined as fine particulate matter resulting from wind erosion on land surfaces and suspended in the air, is an inseparable component of the atmosphere. Dust represents an understudied vehicle for microbial dispersal in agricultural environments and produce contamination by microorganisms pathogenic to humans. Dust not only affects biological processes in plants, such as stomatal gas exchange, but also the plant surface microbiome. Dust deposition onto crops during field cultivation is inevitable as plant surfaces serve as a major aerosol sink. Studies have indicated that dust can serve as a vehicle for bacteria. Wind-driven distribution of dust in agricultural environments could also impact food safety when the sources of dust include particles from natural (soil, decaying vegetation, feral/wild animal droppings) and human-related (manure-amended soils, silage, municipal sewage-based biosolids, composting, and animal production facilities) reservoirs of human pathogens. While the populations of enteric pathogens in water is frequently determined through periodic testing as recommended by the Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA) and the microbiological quality of soils are monitored, the evaluation of dust and soil borne particulates is rarely carried out. This study proposes the following: 1). To evaluate the role of dust in transferring foodborne pathogens to the surfaces of produce commodities specific to the eastern and western agricultural regions of the United States, 2). To determine the role of humidity in the deposition of dust on produce and the survival of foodborne pathogens in dust particulates, and 3). To test dust particulates from animal operations in Georgia and Arizona for the presence of biomarkers indicative of fecal contamination and the presence of enteric pathogens. This project will enhance our understanding of pathogen transport from feces into and through produce fields and will quantify the risk associated with contamination from dust under varying environmental and atmospheric conditions.

Click to access BRIGHT_FINAL.pdf

USA – 5 E. Coli cases confirmed from the Georgia National Fair

41NBC

Five children have been diagnosed with E. Coli connected to the fair. Georgia Department of Public Health says it’s trying to figure out the source of where the bacteria came from.

“Our epidemiologists immediately started looking through our syndromic surveillance, which is just a database that medical providers just dump information into, and you can query certain symptoms,” said Carle Coley, an Environmental Health Director with Georgia DPH. “Once they began to query those symptoms, within 30 minutes we were able to find other cases across the state.”

Georgia DPH put out a survey Thursday and has received 800 responses so far. The investigation should only take a few weeks if it continues to get responses to their survey.

Even if you did not get sick after the fair, DPH is asking you to fill out their survey here: https://sendss.state.ga.us/sendss/!dynamicsurvey.surveypublicprompt?pQATemplateId=14259.