Foodborne Pathogen and Disease
Foodborne Pathogens
a biological infectious agent
(Microorganism) that causes Foodborne illness
to host (referred to as food poisoning) is any
illness resulting from the consumption of contami
nated food.
Foodborne Pathogens:
• Foodborne pathogens are the leading causes of illness and death in less developed countries killing approximately 1.8 million people annually.
• In developed countries foodborne pathogens are
responsible for millions of cases of infectious gastrointestinal diseases each year, costing billions of dollars in medical care and lost productivity.
• New foodborne pathogens and foodborne diseases are likely to emerge driven by factors such as pathogen evolution, changes in agricultural and food manufacturing practices, and changes to the human host status.
• There are growing concerns that terrorists could use pathogens to contaminate food and water supplies in attempts to incapacitate thousands of people and disrupt economic growth.
Pathogenic microorganisms 1. Intoxication :
- Staphylococcus aureus- Clostridium botulinum- Bacillus cereus
2. Infection : - Salmonella
- Clostridium perfringens- Vibrio- Phathogenic E.coli
Staphylococcus aureus
• Gram positive coccus (producing an exotoxin)
Source of contamination of food
- nose and skin of humans and animals
- high level in people with
- skin infection
- heavily colonised skin disease
TAXONOMY
• Contamination by food handler
• Eliminated by pasteurization
• Microwave decreases counts
• Fat/ sugar/ salt protects the organism
• Usually about 106 / g needed to produce
sufficient toxin
• Generally low numbers are allowed in food
GROWTH REQUIREMENTS
* Temperature range
7 - 48 o C (optimum 37 oC)
* pH range
4 - 9.8 (optimum 6 - 7)
* Facultative anaerobe
• Range is more limited than growth range
optimum temperature 40 – 45 o C
Aw above 0.85
REQUIREMENTS FOR TOXIN PRODUCTION
Staphylococcal Exotoxin(Enterotoxin / Neurotoxin)
* Resistant to proteolytic enzymes
e.g. trypsin in the gut
* Resistant to heat
Mechanism of Activity
• Toxin (exotoxin) is performed and ingested in
food
• Stimulates neural receptors in the
gastrointestinal tract
• Vomiting within approx 4 hours (1-6 hours) after
ingestion of toxin
• The toxin can also induce diarrhea, nausea,
headache
Examples of foods implicated in outbreaks
• Salted meats• Cold cooked meats• Poultry• Custard• Cream filled bakery products (whipped cream)• Mayonnaise• egg
PREVENTION
• Inadequate in refrigeration
• Food prepared in advance
• Poor personal hygiene
• Moderate cooking or heat processing
• Holding food in warmer
SO…
* Control post-process contamination
* Control temperature abuse (cooking/ holding/ refrigeration)
* Handle food correctly
* Good quality raw material
MOST OUTBREAK ASSOCIATED WITH ONE OR MORE OF :
Salmonella
• Enterobacteriaceae• Gram Negative, Short Rod • Non spore forming• Peritrichous flagella
TAXONOMY
RESERVIOR
• Intestinal of domestic and wild animal• Water, Sewage, Environment
GROWTH REQUIREMENTS
* Temperature range optimum 37 oC
42 oC used for selective enrichment
* pH range 4 - 9
* Facultative anaerobe
Found in many foods :
• Contamination directly or indirectly with animal or human feaces
- Raw/Undercooked eggs- Uncooked meat- Raw milk and milk products- Poultry and poultry products- Skim milk powder- Ice-cream- Mayonnaise- Chocolate- Cantaloupes
Clinical
• Diarrhoea
• Vomiting
• Antibiotics minimal effect
• Organism may be excreted for weeks
• Some outbrakes have shown very low infective dose causing death in infants, elderly and immunosuppressed.
PREVENTION• Correct food hygiene – direct or indirect
feacal contamination• Correct food processing – heating /
cooling / storing.• Correct personal hygiene to control
secondary spread• Food handlers should have consecutive
negative feacal cultures before returning to work with food.
Indicator Microorganisms
Coliform• is the name of a test for the Enterobacteriaceae family.
• - commonly used bacterial indicator of sanitary quality of foods and water.
• - They are defined as rod shaped Gram-negative - non spore forming organisms.
• Some genus can ferment lactose with the production of acid andgas - when incubated at 35 37°C.
• abundant in the feces - of warm blooded animals, but can also be fo und in the aquatic environment, in soil and on vegetation.
• they are easy to culture and their presence is used to indicate that other pathogenic organisms of fecal origin may be present. Fecal p
athogens include bacteria , viruses ,or protozoa and many multicell ular parasites
• M ember of the coliform group• Gram Negative, rod and Non-sporulating• Facultative anaerobic• ferment lactose at 44°C in the fecal colif
orm test• When cultured on an EMB plate, a positive result for E . coli is M etallic sh een colonies on a dark purple media.
Escherichia coli
Reference
Adams, M.R. and Moss, M.O., Food Microbiology, 2008