Category Archives: Staphylococcus aureus

Bad Bug New Release

FDA

This book is a great source of Microbiology Information and can be downloaded as a 264 page PDF.

The second edition of the Bad Bug Book3, published by the Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition, of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, provides current information about the major known agents that cause foodborne illness. The information provided in this handbook is abbreviated and general in nature, and is intended for practical use. It is not intended to be a comprehensive scientific or clinical reference. Each chapter in this book is about a pathogen – a bacterium, virus, or parasite – or a natural toxin that can contaminate food and cause illness. The book contains scientific and technical information about the major pathogens that cause these kinds of illnesses. A separate “consumer box” in each chapter provides non-technical information, in everyday language. The boxes describe plainly what can make you sick and, more important, how to prevent it.

Not Food but HPA Update on Petting Farm Hand Washing

HPA 

Ahead of the petting farm season, the HPA is reminding people, especially those with responsibility for young children, to enjoy their farm visits safely by ensuring good hand hygiene after touching farm animals or their surroundings.

Outbreaks of gastrointestinal illness associated with contact with farm animals peak in the spring and summer as this coincides with schools holidays when visits to petting farms tend to be more popular, although outbreaks can occur at other times.

The route of transmission in these illnesses, which include the infections E. coli O157 and Cryptosporidium, is direct contact with animals in petting and feeding areas as well as contact with the droppings of animals on contaminated surfaces around farms.

HPA Hand Wash Poster

Canada Raw Milk Cheese Recalled

Food Poisoing Bulletin

The Canadian Food Inspection Service (CFIA) is recalling raw milk cheese from Fromagerie du Pied-de-Vent Inc. because it may be contaminated with Staphylococcus aureus. The cheese was sold in retail stores in Ontario and Quebec.

MRSA – Source From Antibiotic Treated Livestock

mBioSPhere

A strain of MRSA that humans can contract from livestock most likely became drug resistant due to the use of antibiotics on the farm. That’s according to the authors of a study in mBio this week, who looked closely at the genetic relationships among strains of the antibiotic resistant bacterium MRSA (methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus). They discovered that ST398, a type of MRSA found in livestock that can also be passed to humans was originally a human strain, and it developed resistance to antibiotics once it was picked up by farm animals. The finding illustrates a very close link between antibiotic use on the farm and potentially lethal human infections.

Turkish Cheese – Listeria monocytogenes Study

Science Direct

In this study, the presence of Listeria monocytogenes, Salmonella spp., Staphylococcus aureus and Escherichia coli were investigated in a total of 200 traditional food samples sold in the province of Balikesir in Turkey. L. monocytogenes was detected in 5% of Mihalic cheese samples and 3% of Hosmerim dessert samples. Salmonella spp. was not detected in any of foods. The high prevalence and contamination levels of S. aureus were found in Mihalic cheese (100% and mean 2.69 log CFU/g) and Hosmerim dessert (64% and mean 2 log CFU/g) samples. E. coli was not found in Hosmerim dessert samples while the prevalence and contamination level of E. coli in Mihalic cheese samples were 43% (mean 1.23 log CFU/g). The isolation of L. monocytogenes and other foodborne pathogens from Mihalic cheese and Hosmerim dessert samples indicates that these foods could create serious risk to the public health.

Persistance and Survival of Pathogens in Dry Foods

ILSI Europe Report – 52 Page Full Report

Low-moisture foods and food ingredients, i.e., those appearing to be dry or that have been subjected to a drying process represent important nutritional constituents of human diets. Some of these foods are naturally low in moisture, such as cereals, honey and nuts, whereas others are produced from high-moisture foods that were deliberately submitted to drying (e.g., egg and milk powders). The addition of large amounts of salt or sugar can also be regarded as a ‘drying’ process by reducing the amount of water available for microbial growth.

Drying (removal of water) has been used since ancient times to preserve food. Although many pathogens and spoilage microorganisms can survive the drying process, this preservation technology is very effective because microbial growth will cease if water is no longer available for biological reactions. The water activity (aw) necessary to prevent growth of microorganisms, i.e., to inhibit physiological activities necessary for cell division, is 0.60 or less. If more water is available, some species of xerophilic spoilage moulds and osmophilic yeasts can grow at aw0.60 – 0.70; however, the minimum aw  for mycotoxin production by moulds is 0.80 with the majority not producing mycotoxins below a w 0.85 (Cousin et al., 2005). The minimum aw for growth of most bacteria is 0.87, although halophilic bacteria can grow at aw as low as 0.75. Among the pathogenic microorganisms, Staphylococcus aureus is particularly well-adapted to reduced moisture environments. Under optimal conditions it can grow at aw as low as 0.83 but in most foods the minimum is aw 0.85 (ICMSF, 1996). With this exception aside, in the context of this monograph, all foods and food ingredients that have an aw that prevents the growth of bacterial foodborne pathogens, i.e., with an aw of 0.85 or lower, are considered. These foods and ingredients are referred to as having low moisture or low aw. A wide range of products falls in this category: animal feeds such as fishmeal and pet foods, cereals, chocolate, cocoa powder, dried fruits and vegetables, egg powder, fermented dry sausage, flour, meal and grits, herbs, spices and condiments, honey, hydrolysed vegetable protein powder, meat powders, dried meat, milk powder, pasta, peanut butter, peanuts and tree nuts, powdered infant formula, rice and other grains, and seeds (e.g., sesame, melon, pumpkin, linseed). Although low moisture foods have some clear advantages with respect to food safety, there are nevertheless some major concerns:

• Many microorganisms, including pathogens, are able to survive drying processes. Once in a dried state, metabolism is greatly reduced, i.e., there is no growth but vegetative cells and spores may remain viable for several months or even years. They can often persist longer in low moisture foods and in dry food processing environments than in high-moisture foods and wet environments.

• It is often difficult or even impossible to eliminate pathogens from foods with low moisture by processes such as application of mild heat treatment (e.g., pasteurisation) or high hydrostatic pressure that work very well for high-moisture foods.

• Food processing environments, in which dried foods are handled, must be maintained at low humidity and kept dry, and this can give rise to problems in cleaning and sanitising, which are usually ‘wet’ procedures.

• Finally, it is of concern that consumers sometimes wrongly believe that low-moisture foods are sterile, which may lead to dangerous practices such as keeping reconstituted infant formula at ambient temperature for prolonged periods, thereby creating growth opportunities for pathogens such as Bacillus cereus and Cronobacter species.

MRSA – Retail Pork – Higher Levels Than Expected

Food Safety News

Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) may be more prevalent in retail pork products than previously thought, according to a study published in the Public Library of Science’s PLoS ONE in January.

More than six percent of 395 pork samples, taken from 36 grocery stores in Iowa, Minnesota, and New Jersey, were contaminated with MRSA, which is significantly higher than previous studies. More than 64 percent of samples tested positive for Staphylococcus aureus, or staph bacteria. The results also did not show a significant difference in MRSA contamination between conventional meats and alternative, or antibiotic-free meats.

Study Link

New Form of MRSA – From India – ca-MRSA

Although not foodborne in this instance, with US studies linking MRSA to foodborne illness and other world studies linking MRSA to retail meats the article in Lab Saints is quite interesting.

Community-acquired methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus (ca-MRSA) bacterium that is resistant to almost all common antibiotics.

In India, where poor hygiene and the availability of over-the-counter antibiotics lead to development of resistance, an estimated 100 to 200 million people are reportedly already carriers of these virtually unbeatable killer bacteria. The killer bugs have also reached England, presumably through medical tourists who travelled to India for cosmetic surgery, and reportedly already infected several hundred people. A few cases have also turned up in Germany.

The bacterium has become a serious health threat in the United States

MRSA Levels in Pork 7% – US Study

Science Daily

Retail pork products in the U.S. have a higher prevalence of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus bacteria (MRSA) than previously identified. This in theory may well apply to retail pork products in the UK and Europe although there is not data to confirm this. The report also states ” the this organism is estimated to cause around 185,000 cases of food poisoning each year. ” I am not aware of figures for the UK and Europe on MRSA causing foodborne illness.

Full Report

Mass Spectrometry – Rapid Staph Indentifications!

This report could send a chill into any microbiologists heart………….chemists getting involved with microbiology!

Researchers from the Georgia Institute of Technology and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) have developed a new laboratory test that can rapidly identify the bacterium responsible for staph infections. This new test takes advantage of unique isotopic labeling combined with specific bacteriophage amplification to rapidly identify Staphylococcus aureus.

The test uses mass spectrometry to quantify the number of S. aureus organisms in a large number of samples in just a few hours, compared to a day or two for culturing techniques typically used to detect this bacterium.

Science Daily Article