An international comparative study, undertaken by six laboratories to assess the performance of four selective media commonly used for the enumeration of Staphylococcus aureus in foods, revealed that Baird-Parker agar performed most satisfactorily. There was no significant difference among milk salt, tellurite polymyxin egg yolk, and kalium rhodanid - actidione - natriumazid - eigelb - pyruvat (KRANEP) agars. The type of food examined appeared to influence the performance of the media, but no specific patterns could be determined. Cultures yielding 3+ and 4+ coagulase reactions are most likely to possess thermostable nuclease activity, and are therefore most likely to be S. aureus.
Microbiological standards are proposed for ground beef sold in Canada. The proposal is based on a national survey conducted in 1974–75. The proposed standards are: aerobic colony count (35 C), ⩽ 107 for non-frozen and ⩽106 for frozen products; Escherichia coli, ⩽102; Staphylococcus aureus, ⩽102 per g; and Salmonella, absent in 25-g portions from each of five subsamples. To accomodate the variable distribution of bacteria between packages in a single lot of product, three-class plan based on a format suggested by the International Commission on Microbiological Specifications for Foods is used.
Refrigeration (4 C) of non-selective and selective enrichment broth cultures for 72 h did not markedly affect detection of Salmonella in 160 contaminated high and low moisture foods. Detection in refrigerated preenrichment (non-selective) broth cultures of poultry and high and low moisture foods was 90, 95 and 100%, respectively; homologous results for refrigerated selective enrichment broth cultures were 90, 100 and 100%. All but one of the 22 negative results were obtained with poultry and two of the six laboratories participating in poultry analysis contributed 19 of the 21 negative results. Refrigeration of broth cultures provides greater operational flexibility by increasing the number of days on which analyses can be initiated without engendering work outside a normal work week.
The Health Protection Branch, Health and Welfare Canada is considering proposals for microbiological standards for cheese. These proposals are based on a 2-year study (1974–1976) carried out by the Branch. The proposed standards per gram are: total coliforms m = 500, M = 1500, fecal coliforms m = 100, M = 500, and Staphylococcus aureus m = 100, M = 1000, for cheeses made from pasteurized milk; total coliforms m = 5000, M = 50,000, fecal coliforms m = 500, M = 1000, and S. aureus m = 1,000, M = 10,000 for cheeses made from heat treated or unpasteurized milk. The type of standard proposed will be based on a three-class acceptance plan as developed by the International Commission on Microbiological Specifications for Foods. Use of this plan in interpretation of the analytical results allows for the normal variation between analytical samples.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.