Category Archives: Eurofins Laboratories

RASFF Alerts – E.coli – Lamb Meal – Beef – Clams – Centella

RASFF – Too high count of Enterobacteriaceae (300;510;470;370;340 CFU/g) in lamb meal from the Netherlands, with raw material from New Zealand in Belgium

RASFF – Shigatoxin-producing Escherichia coli (presence /25g) in boneless beef meat  (Bos taurus) from Uruguay in Spain

RASFF – Too high count of Escherichia coli (9200 MPN/100g) in clams from Italy

RASFF – high count of Escherichia coli (2600 CFU/100g) in centella (Centella asiatica) from Sri Lanka

 

RASFF Alerts – Salmonella – Chicken – Salami – Basil – Black Pepper-Paan Leaves – Spinach – Dog Chews

RASFF – Salmonella Heidelberg (presence /25g) in frozen salted chicken breast fillets from Brazil in the Netherlands

RASFF – Salmonella spp. (presence /25g) in salami without garlic from Belgium

RASFF – Salmonella (present /25g) in holy basil fresh leaves from Thailand in Denmark

RASFF -Salmonella spp. (presence /25g) in black pepper from Vietnam infested with moulds (2.2 %) in Poland

RASFF – Salmonella spp. (1 out of 5 samples /25g) in paan leaves (betel/pan) from Bangladesh in the UK

RASFF – Salmonella Stendal (presence /25g) in frozen chicken livers from Brazil in Bulgaria

RASFF – Salmonella Weltevreden in spinach from Sri Lanka in Norway

RASFF – Salmonella typhimurium (presence /25g) in frozen chicken meat (Gallus gallus) from Brazil in Portugal

RASFF – Salmonella enteritidis (1 out of 5 samples /25g) in frozen whole chicken hen from Poland, with raw material from the Czech Republic in Poland

RASFF – Salmonella in dog chews from Germany

USA – Las Vegas Firefly Restaurant Salmonella Outbreak – 200 Cases – 20 States – UK and Canada

Food Poison JournalSalmonella

According to a report just released by the Southern Nevada Health Department, as of May 5, 2013 at least 196 patrons and 4 employees of Firefly who consumed food and/or drinks at Firefly restaurant during April 21-26, 2013 have been determined to be confirmed or probable cases of Salmonella infection.  From various surveillance data sources, reports of illness from restaurant patrons who normally reside in twenty states:

Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Illinois, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Mississippi, North Carolina, New Hampshire, Nevada, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Texas, Utah, Washington and two foreign countries (Canada, United Kingdom).

Illness onset dates occurred within the April 22 to May 1, 2013 time frame.  The onset date with the peak number of ill restaurant patrons was April 24, 2013. Because the incubation period for Salmonella is usually 12-36 hours, this might suggest that patrons who ate at Firefly on April 22-23, 2013 had the highest risk of exposure to the pathogen.

According to some there is a call to name this species as Salmonella Firefly – after the restaurant.

Serotyping of the isolates indicated that the outbreak strain was Salmonella (assigned with the antigenic code “I:4,5,12:i:-”.

RASFF Alerts – Salmonella in Food – Poultry – Lettuce

RASFF – Salmonella Napoli (present /25g) in radicchio lettuce from Italy in Denmark

RASFF – Salmonella spp. (presence /25g) in frozen poultry meat preparations from Brazil in the Netherlands

RASFF – Salmonella spp. (presence /25g) in frozen poultry meat preparations from Brazil in the Netherlands

RASFF – Salmonella enteritidis (present /25g) in chilled and frozen poultry meat from Poland, with raw material from Slovakia in Poland

Research – Antimicrobials – Listeria – Sampling Plans and Clustering

Science Direct

The present study investigated the efficacy of sub-inhibitory concentrations (SICs, concentrations not inhibiting bacterial growth) and bactericidal concentrations (MBCs) of four, generally recognized as safe (GRAS), plant-derived antimicrobials (PDAs) in inhibiting Listeria monocytogenes (LM) biofilm formation and inactivating mature LM biofilms, at 37, 25 and 4°C on polystyrene plates and stainless-steel coupons. In addition, the effect of SICs of PDAs on the expression of LM genes critical for biofilm synthesis was determined by real-time quantitative PCR. The PDAs and their SICs used for inhibition of biofilm were trans-cinnamaldehyde (TC 0.50, 0.75 mM), carvacrol (CR 0.50, 0.65 mM), thymol (TY 0.33, 0.50 mM), and eugenol (EG 1.8, 2.5 mM), whereas the PDA concentrations used for inactivating mature biofilms were 5.0 and 10.0 mM (TC, CR), 3.3 and 5.0 mM (TY), 18.5 and 25.0 mM (EG). All PDAs inhibited biofilm synthesis and inactivated fully formed LM biofilms on both matrices at three temperatures tested (P<0.05). Real-time quantitative PCR data revealed that all PDAs down-regulated critical LM biofilm-associated genes (P<0.05). Results suggest that TC, CR, TY, and EG could potentially be used to control LM biofilms in food processing environments, although further studies under commercial settings are necessary.

Science Direct

As in many cases, pathogenic microorganisms contaminate the food material as clusters or group of individual cells; the effectiveness of sampling plans based on mixture distributions representing bacterial agglomeration was assessed. In general, sampling plans that do not take into account such consideration lead to higher probabilities of accepting defective lots. Since quite often no scientific data are available in order to determine the degree of over-dispersion or clustering of the target microorganisms, in this theoretical study we compare the variance-to-mean ratio and the reciprocal of the exponent k of the negative binomial distribution (NB) as measures of dispersion. The mixture Poisson-logarithmic (Plog) model is proposed as a special case of the NB distribution, where the bacterial clusters are Poisson distributed while the individuals in each cluster follow a logarithmic distribution. In order to describe microbial data characterised by an excess of zero counts (1−π), we assess the zero-inflated Poisson (ZIP) and zero-inflated negative binomial (ZINB) distributions as alternative statistical models. The Operating Characteristic (OC) curves generated on the basis of the zero-inflated distributions were compared for fixed values of the variance-to-mean ratio and the parameter π at any mean level of contamination and sample weight adopted. The results show that assuming fixed 1/k and π for the NB and ZIP distributions, respectively, both models converge to a Poisson distribution at the producer’s quality level. In contrast, the consumer’s quality level is highly affected by assuming fixed values of 1/k and π since it increases. The OC curves generated for the NB and ZIP distributions assuming fixed values of the variance-to-mean ratio at any mean level of contamination and sample weight adopted, reveal that both the consumer’s and producer’s quality level are affected, as they both increase. Within the ZINB distribution, a separate investigation is conducted to determine which parameters are mostly responsible for describing microbial over-dispersion. As a general conclusion, for the design of sampling plans based on any statistical distribution, OC curves that reflect microbial agglomeration should be constructed considering that variance is not constant but dependant on the level of microbial concentration of the lot.

European Research – Listeria monocytogenes

DGCCRFlisteria-hp

Monitoring of food contamination by Listeria monocytogenes.

The national plan implemented by the DGCCRF is intended to monitor the contamination of food at the distribution stage. During these checks, investigators collected more than 3,600 samples

Of all the goods taken Listeria monocytogenes was found in 1.5% of cases. Only two cheeses have reached the prescribed limit (100 cfu / g) or 0.06% of the samples analysed. The analysis results indicate a low level of non-compliant products.

These results and the significant decrease in the number of establishments abnormality (38% in 2 years) shows the continuous improvement of the microbiological quality of food and hygiene conditions in the retail sector.

RASFF Alerts – Aflatoxin – Ochratoxin – Rice Bran – Groundnuts – Nutmeg – Pistachios

RASFF – Aflatoxins (B1 = 230 µg/kg – ppb) in rice bran from Sweden

RASFF – Aflatoxins (B1 = 4.3 µg/kg – ppb) in groundnuts from Brazil in the Netherlands

RASFF – Ochratoxin A (23.1 µg/kg – ppb) in ground nutmeg with raw material from India, packaged in Hungary in Ireland

RASFF – Aflatoxins (B1 = 103.6; Tot. = 116.1 µg/kg – ppb) in roasted shelled pistachios from Turkey in Germany

UK – FSA – Where You are Eating Ratings and App

FSA

Check the food hygiene rating before you eat out. Go to

food.gov.uk/ratings

or download the app.

Europe – Norovirus Ongoing Outbreak in Frozen Berries Report -Hepatitis A

EurosurvaillanceClose up 3d render of an influenza-like virus isolated on white

A food-borne outbreak of hepatitis A in Denmark was notified to other countries on 1 March 2013. A case–control study identified frozen berries eaten in smoothies as potential vehicle. In the following weeks, Finland, Norway and Sweden also identified an increased number of hepatitis A patients without travel history. Most cases reported having eaten frozen berries at the time of exposure. By 17 April, 71 cases were notified in the four countries. No specific type of berry, brand or origin of berries has yet been identified.

As of 17 April 2013, 36 cases, of whom 15 were confirmed, have been identified in Finland, Norway and Sweden, giving a total of 71 cases in the four countries (Table 1). Finland and Norway have reported confirmed cases with sequence 1 and 2. In Sweden, two of the eight confirmed cases have an HAV IB sequence with 2% difference to sequence 1 and 1% difference to sequence 2 (called sequence 3).
The overall median age for cases and the median age for confirmed cases is 25 years (range: 3–78 years); 43 cases are female. In Norway and Sweden (but not Finland), more women are affected than men. The distribution of cases by month and HAV sequence type is shown in Figure 1. As of 17 April 2013, Sweden is the only country with cases with symptom onset in April. An increased number of travel-related hepatitis A patients in the same time period (Table 1) may be explained in part by patients infected in Egypt [1].

USA – Raw Milk – E.coli O157 Outbreak

Food Safety NewsimagesCAZ9J1WP

Health officials in Wisconsin suspect three patients sickened by the same strain of E. coli O157:H7 contracted their illnesses after consuming raw milk, Wisconsin Department of Agriculture spokeswoman Raechelle Cline told Food Safety News Thursday.

All three patients reside in Manitowoc County, and they include a three year-old child and his or her mother. Officials are currently testing samples of milk from the suspected dairy and will not identify it unless they prove a connection.

“Raw milk was the most likely commonality we’ve been able to identify,” Cline said. The illnesses occurred in March, and the officials are unaware of any additional cases.

Health institutions such as the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention advise against drinking raw milk, as it has not been pasteurized to eliminate potentially harmful pathogens.