Journal Article10.1111/J.1541-4337.2004.TB00060.X
Comprehensive Review of Campylobacter and Poultry Processing
TL;DR: The purpose of this article is to review Campylobacter, the infection that it causes, its association with poultry, contamination sources during processing, and intervention methods.
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Abstract: Campylobacter has been recognized as a leading bacterial cause of human gastroenteritis in the United States, with 40000 documented cases annually. Epidemiological data suggest that contaminated products of animal origin, especially poultry, contribute significantly to campylobacteriosis. Thus, reduction of contamination of raw poultry would have a large impact in reducing incidence of illness. Contamination occurs both on the farm and in poultry slaughter plants. Routine procedures on the farm such as feed withdrawal, poultry handling, and transportation practices have a documented effect on Campylobacter levels at the processing plant. At the plant, defeathering, evisceration, and carcass chillers have been documented to cross-contaminate poultry carcasses. Carcass washings and the application of processing aids have been shown to reduce populations of Campylobacter in the carcasses by log10 0.5 log10 1.5; however, populations of Campylobacter have been shown to enter a poultry processing plant at levels between log10 5 colony-forming units (CFU)/mL and log10 8 CFU/mL of carcass rinse. The purpose of this article is to review Campylobacter, the infection that it causes, its association with poultry, contamination sources during processing, and intervention methods.
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Citations
Salmonellosis Outbreaks in the United States Due to Fresh Produce: Sources and Potential Intervention Measures
TL;DR: An increasing number of salmonellosis outbreaks are occurring as a result of contaminated produce, and several produce items specifically have been identified in outbreaks, and the ability of Salmonella to attach or internalize into vegetables and fruits may be factors that make these produce items more likely to be sources of Salamba.
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Characterization of probiotic strains: An application as feed additives in poultry against Campylobacter jejuni
Cecilia Santini,Loredana Baffoni,Francesca Gaggia,Marta Granata,Rossana Gasbarri,Diana Di Gioia,Bruno Biavati +6 more
TL;DR: B. longum PCB 133, possessing interesting probiotic properties and a marked anti-Campylobacteria activity both in vitro and in vivo, is an excellent candidate for being employed as additives to feed for poultry for the reduction of food-borne campylobacteriosis in humans.
202
The Role of Environmental Reservoirs in Human Campylobacteriosis
TL;DR: The review of literature suggests that there are multiple and diverse sources for Campylobacter infection, and many environmental sources result in direct human exposure but also in contamination of the food processing industry.
Interventions to control Salmonella contamination during poultry, cattle and pig slaughter
S. Buncic,J. Sofos +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors applied water, steam and chemical solutions to poultry carcasses or parts and achieved an overall microbial reduction of 0.6-3.8 log units; antimicrobial activity of some chemicals (e.g., chlorine compounds) is reduced in the presence of organic material.
166
Campylobacter: from microbiology to prevention.
Alessio Facciolà,Romana Riso,Emanuela Avventuroso,Giuseppa Visalli,Santi Delia,Pasqualina Laganà +5 more
TL;DR: Campylobacter spp is a commensal microorganism of the gastrointestinal tract of many wild animals, farm animals and companion animals and it is responsible for zoonoses and the transmission occurs via the fecal-oral route through ingestion of contaminated food and water.
163
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TL;DR: It is demonstrated that EO water was very effective not only in reducing the populations of C. jejuni on chicken, but also could prevent cross-contamination of processing environments.
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TL;DR: Investigations of two chicken processing plants in The Netherlands have shown that large contamination with Campylobacter jejuni can exist on birds, equipment, hands of processing-line workers and in air samples from the processing facility.
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Physiological Characterization of Viable-but-Nonculturable Campylobacter jejuni Cells
TL;DR: Three strains isolated from humans with enteric campylobacteriosis were able to survive at high population levels as viable-but-nonculturable (VBNC) forms in microcosm water with notable increase in cell volume observed with the VBNC state.
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