Food Micro Final - Food Safety/ Foodborne Illness
foods associated with Non-hemorrhagic type E. coli
Non-hemorrhagic types : human fecal contaminant EPEC- contaminated water for bottle fed infants in developing countries ETEC- water or food contaminated with human feces
pathogen leading to most foodborne illnesses
Norovirus
pathogen leading to most foodborne deaths
Salmonella
Pathogens that wait and produce toxin in the body
Shigella, Salmonella, etc.
infant botulism
consuming spores big deal for age 2 or under, because they don't have established microflora, the GI tract is void of organisms often associated with honey (relieve coughs, colic) but may contain C. botulinum spores
way shigella gets into system:
contaminated water, sanitation irrigation water greater issue than municipal
what most happen before illness can occur?
contamination event (H2O, rodents, mishandling, improper storage)
3 most common parasites
cryptosporidium, cyclospora, giardia
foods associated with salmonella
eggs, poultry, meat, cheese, raw fruits/ veggies common occurrence with animals (poultry, pork)
illnesses associated with salmonella
enteric fever - typhoid strains salmonellosis - enterocolitis (inflammation of intestinal tract) due to other salmonella
causes of salmonella
fecal contaminant, inadequate cooking, cross contamination, using contaminated raw ingredients
foodborne disease - main issue
food service and mass feeding settings; improper food storage and preparation practices
foods associated with bacillus cereus
foods held at too warm of temps foods not heated sufficiently to eliminate spores, if present vomiting type - associated with rice products and other starchy foods (potatoes, pasta, cheese) diarrhea type - wide variety foods (meat, veggies, milk, fish, sauces, soups, salads)
prevention/ reduction of C. botulinum
proper thermal processing and refrigeration using preservatives - nitrite/ nitrate, sorbate -Class 1 recall since its life threatening
foods associated with campylobacter
raw and undercooked poultry, contaminated water, unpasteurized milk
foods containing shigella
raw produce, contaminated drinking water, uncooked foods and cooked foods that are not reheated after contact with infected handler
way bacillus cereus gets into food
very common in environment
treating staph aureus
wait it out, take a lot of fluids
prevention/treatment of E. coli
water quality and sanitation issues addressed typical thermal treatment to kill salmonella will kill E. coli
issue leading to bacillus cereus
underprocessing and mishandling foods
Staphylococcus aureus facts
-often occurs due to mishandling -enterotoxin -gram positive coccus -can grow at elevated salt levels (up to 15%) -infects GI tract -sudden onset, 1-6 hours -duration: 1-2 days -symptoms: nausea, vomiting, cramping, diarrhea
host defense mechanisms
-pathogens can't survive from pH 2.5-3.5 -Bile acid resistant to gram + bacteria, -Peristalsis (muscle contractions, hard for microbes to attach to intestinal cell) -purging, diarrhea or vomiting -immunological factors (antigen and antibody reaction may occur) -gastric acid -hepatic filtration (filtered out in liver) -mucus -epithelium/ epithelial cells are barrier -indigenous microflora (acts on food mass to degrade it, inhibitory to invading microbes)
factors leading to foodborne illness outbreaks
1. improper processing 2. poor personal hygiene 3. cross contamination 4. improper reheating 5. poor storage practices
5 categories of foodborne illness
1. infections 2. intoxications 3. metabolic food disorders 4. allergies 5. idiosyncratic illnesses
to determine hazards of foodborne disease, need to know:
1. pathogens that are potential problems with a particular product 2. factors that control the growth and survival of pathogens 3. factors that can be used to eliminate pathogens
ways to destroy or remove foodborne pathogens
1. proper thermal processing 2. freezing (slows growth) 3. high pressure 4. irradiation 5. antimicrobials
ways to prevent cross contamination
1. separate raw and ready to eat foods 2. hazard analysis - severity and likelihood event occurs 3. chlorinate wash water to reduce contamination in RTE foods
factors influencing infectious dose
1. susceptibility of host (age, health history, what they have eaten) 2. infectious nature of pathogen 3. ability to produce toxins 4. processing and handling practices
symptoms / frequency/ treatment of C. botulinum
10-30 foodborne outbreaks/ yr onset: 12-72 hrs duration varies symptoms: weakness, double vision, hard to speak and swallow, constipation, hard to breathe treatment: antitoxin, respiration/ nutrition care
ideal food warming temps
135 F or above if temp drops to 125 F, in growth range of pathogens thermophilic spoilage may occur
temperature leading to pathogen rapid growth range/ very dangerous
25 - 40 C (77 - 104 F)
shigella facts
4 types, all produce toxins nonmotile gram negative rod facultative anaerobe illness: bacterial dysentery or shigellosis
danger zone of pathogens
5 - 55 C (41 - 131 F)
infectious dose of c. perfringens
> 10^8 vegetative cells if consuming more than 1 million/ gram, issues arise
most toxic types of C. botulinum
A and B
Pathogens where the toxin already present/ produced on food
C. botulinum B. cereus S. aureus
Enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC) - hemorrhagic colitis
E. coli 0157: H7, hemorrhagic colitis - onset: 1-8 days, duration: 5-10 days, severe cramps, watery then bloody diarrhea. common in children less than age 4.
pathogens that are hazards at any level
E. coli 0157:H7 Shigella Cyclospora
Feces from ruminant animals (cattle/sheep) coming in contact with food is associated with what pathogen
EHEC
E. coli 0157:H7
EHEC combo of antigens 0157: somatic antigen H7: flagellant antigen causes GI tract issues
EPEC and EIEC illnesses
EPEC- infantile diarrhea EIEC- bacillary dysentery occurs sporadically due to sanitation issues
which intestine does ETEC and EHEC affect?
ETEC- small intestine EHEC- large intestine
EIP
Emerging Infections Program of CDC
Enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC) - hemolytic uremic syndrome (HES)
HUS - in young kids, leaves the GI tract, infects the circulatory system, infects the kidneys - causes major kidney damage
pathogen that grows at refrigeration temps
Listeria
bacillus cereus symptoms
Most cases go unreported - no complications usually. produces 2 different kinds of toxins- its one OR other. Both last about 24 hours. 1. vomiting (emetic), duration 6-15 hr 2. diarrhea, duration 0.5-6 hr
EHEC Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP)
TTP is rare. the organism relocates to the brain and impairs brain, usually results in death
two pathogens with high mortality rate, but low number of illnesses/ occurrences (basically when it happens, its bad)
Toxoplasma gondii and Listeria monocytogenes
foodborne pathogens biggest risk to people at what age
Under age 5
FoodNET
active surveillance measure, principle foodborne disease component of CDC's emerging infections program (EIP)
factors that can control pathogen survival and growth
aerobic conditions Aw pH temperature nutrients proper O2 level
pathway of salmonella enterotoxin
after ingesting, passes through GI tract to epithelial cells. attaches to receptor site and produces enterotoxin. affects fluid flow of the cell. causes water to diffuse out of body into intestinal tract - causing diarrhea
food safety - purpose
aim to determine what hazards can be related with a specific product and process, and try to control the situation. basically - reduce the risk and hazard level to make a safe product
prevention/ reduction of C. perfringens
almost impossible to completely avoid contamination - limit the problem with proper food handling cook food then quickly cool so spores don't germinate
serovar
antigenic makeup on cell surface or flagella - degree of virulence influences it. antigens/ antibody rxn helps identify salmonella between each serovar
infectious dose of shigella
as little as 10 cells can cause illness
how does campylobacter get in food
bird picks up microbe, infects GI tract of chickens, spreads from bird to bird (not harming animal) -if its a positive flock, spread contaminant in processing facility
C. botulinum type E
found naturally in aquatic environments associated with fish and shellfish sensitive to heat can grow at cold temps (3.3 C) and in fridge
Enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC)
gastroenteritis, travelers diarrhea (going to another country and eating/ drinking) onset: 1-3 days duration: 3-7 days symptoms: watery diarrhea, ab cramps, low-grade fever, nausea, and malaise more inconvenient issue - not super serious
E. coli facts
gram negative facultative anaerobe 4 types: EPEC and EIEC - waterborne, sanitation issue in developing world; ETEC and EHEC - foodborne
Campylobacter jejuni facts
gram negative curved rod motile microaerophile (reduced O2 levels, and increased CO2 levels) sensitive to stresses of environment- goes dormant then can be reactivated. heat sensitive-killed easily. hard to isolate/ identify
salmonella facts
gram negative rod facultative anaerobe 5-45 C pH 4-9, high Aw, heat resistant for a non sporeformer can remain viable outside host (chickens) - inoculated in soil, hangs out til conditions improve
Clostridium botulinum facts
gram positive rod anaerobic forms endospores Types A, B, and E affect foods
Listeria facts
gram positive rod humans are intestinal carriers relatively hardy non-sporeformer found in environment (plants, soil, crevices in food processing) grows at fridge temps
Enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC) occurrence
half due to 0157: H7 not as numerable as salmonella, but serious symptoms
food associated with c. perfringens
high protein foods (meat and poultry) gravy dried or precooked foods time/ temp abused foods
what is c. botulinum outbreaks due most often to
improperly preparing food, home canning/ fermentation not often in commercial uses naturally found in soil (A and B)
prevention of shigella
improved water quality and sanitation, processes that eliminate other pathogens (salmonella) are effective
foods associated with hemorrhagic type E. coli
intestinal tract of cattle is primary reservoir for 0157:H7. Feces from ruminant animals (cattle/sheep) coming in contact with food. undercooked beef (hamburger), unpasteurized milk and juice, raw fruits and veggies (sprouts), and contaminated water
limitations of FoodNET
limited to diagnosed diseases, some illnesses acquired through non-foodborne routes (contaminated water, person-person, direct animal contact)
dysentery
lots of watery diarrhea (blood and pus with the stool)
salmonella infectious dose
low (15-20) or high frequency very high in US (2-4 million)/yr
campylobacter infectious dose
low 400-500 treat with fluids
typical foods associated with C. botulinum
low acid foods (pH 4.6) improperly canned foods, fermented fish, baked potatoes in aluminum foil
Enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC) occurrence
more common with travelers to foreign countries - eating/ drinking
2 most common virus types
norovirus (Norwalk virus) and hepatitis A
infectious dose
number of pathogens needed to bring about illness in an individual
Campylobacteriosis symptoms
onset: 2-5 days duration: 2-10 days symptoms: diarrhea (may be bloody), cramps, fever, vomiting low mortality rate - usually no complications very common pathogen
symptoms of shigella
onset: 4-7 days duration: 1-2 days symptoms: ab cramps, diarrhea, fever, vomiting; blood, mucus, pus in stools with watery diarrhea
symptoms/ treatment of salmonella
onset: 6-48 hrs duration: 4-7 days acute symptoms: fever, vomiting, nausea, diarrhea, cramps chronic: arthritis after about 1 month treat with lots of fluids
symptoms of clostridium perfringens
onset: 8-16 hours duration: 1 day symptoms: intense abdominal cramps and watery diarrhea very common in USA
Listeria symptoms
onset: 9-48 hours for GI symptoms; 2-6 weeks for invasive illness influenza and GI like symptoms invasive manifestation: meningitis, encephalitis, cervical infection BIG danger to pregnant women - stillborn, lose child
what pH are C. botulinum spores inactivated
pH 4.6
foodborne infection
pathogen must survive passage to intestines, then takes root in the gut ex) Salmonella, Listeria, E. coli, Shigella
nature of C. botulinum toxin
preformed toxin most lethal natural substance heat labile protein (inactivated at 80 C) - easily denatured at high temps toxin forms in the food by the organism
foods associated with staph aureus
previously heated foods more foodservice than processed foods unrefrigerated or improperly refrigerated meats, potato and egg salads
2 main species of salmonella
s. enterica and s. bongori
how does staph aureus usually occur
sanitation breakdown
prevention of campylobacter
sanitation, proper food service / hygiene issue, flock management, heat processing effective (killed fast)
preventing bacillus cereus
sanitation, proper time/ temperature thermal treatments, proper holding temps can prevent spore growth
prevention/ reduction strategy of staph aureus
sanitation; proper heating, cooling and reheating, holding temps
most severe shigella strain
shigella dysenteriae. issue in developing countries with poor water and sanitation
most common shigella strain in USA
shigella sonnei (mild type)
formula for infectious dose
strain of organism / infectious nature
prevention of salmonella
temp, pH, Aw, sanitation, time/ temp proper time/ temp combo usually eliminates
path of C. botulinum
toxin absorbed from GI tract, enters circulatory system, then affects the nerves blocks acetylcholine release - causing nerve paralysis/ blocking of signal
bacillus cereus facts
toxin preformed on food spore forming gram positive rod facultative anaerobe very common in environment temp: 10-50 C pH: 4.9-9.3
Enterotoxins
toxin that is produced in or affecting intestines, enters through contaminated food or water
foodborne intoxication
toxins are formed on the food, must survive passage through GI and remain active ex) Campylobacter, Staphylcoccus aureus, Bacillus cereus, Clostridium botulinum
Clostridium perfringens facts
types A and C related to foodborne issues gram positive rod enterotoxin, but NOT preformed toxin anaerobic forms endospores - may not form readily in foods short generation time (could be 10 min) may produce large amounts of gas (soup/ gravy have frothy tops)