2016
DOI: 10.1111/1471-0307.12315
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Occurrence, heat and antibiotic resistance profile of Bacillus cereus isolated from raw cow and processed milk in Mezam Division, Cameroon

Abstract: Bacillus cereus is the aetiologic agent of two distinct forms of food poisoning: the diarrhoeal and emetic syndromes. Little data exist on the prevalence of B. cereus in raw milk and milk products sold in Cameroonian towns. This study was aimed at investigating the occurrence, heat and antibiotic resistance of B. cereus isolated from raw milk and selected milk products in Mezam division, Cameroon. Bacillus cereus was isolated by inoculating samples onto mannitol‐egg yolk‐polymyxin B agar. Isolates were charact… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…To minimize the broader risk to consumers and to enhance microbial food safety, the described approach merits extending to brown rice and the rice products mentioned earlier, as well as to other food categories, including meat and dairy products, pasta, soups, dehydrated potatoes, and infant foods (King, Whyte, & Hudson, ; Rønning, Asp, & Granum, ; Soni et al, ). Moreover, future studies should also determine if these peels, and possibly others such as those derived from olives, pomegranates, and tomatoes, could control spore germination of both nonresistant and antibiotic‐resistant B. cereus (Friedman, ; Tatsinkou Fossi, Tatah Kihla Akoachere, Nchanji, & Wanji, ). It would also be of interest to determine if other virulent sporulating pathogenic foodborne and medical bacteria that include Clostridium botulinum , Clostridium difficile , and Clostridium perfringens would also be susceptible to the highly bioactive organic and nonorganic apple and orange peel powders that effectively controlled germination and outgrowth of B. cereus spores.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To minimize the broader risk to consumers and to enhance microbial food safety, the described approach merits extending to brown rice and the rice products mentioned earlier, as well as to other food categories, including meat and dairy products, pasta, soups, dehydrated potatoes, and infant foods (King, Whyte, & Hudson, ; Rønning, Asp, & Granum, ; Soni et al, ). Moreover, future studies should also determine if these peels, and possibly others such as those derived from olives, pomegranates, and tomatoes, could control spore germination of both nonresistant and antibiotic‐resistant B. cereus (Friedman, ; Tatsinkou Fossi, Tatah Kihla Akoachere, Nchanji, & Wanji, ). It would also be of interest to determine if other virulent sporulating pathogenic foodborne and medical bacteria that include Clostridium botulinum , Clostridium difficile , and Clostridium perfringens would also be susceptible to the highly bioactive organic and nonorganic apple and orange peel powders that effectively controlled germination and outgrowth of B. cereus spores.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the prolonged use of antibiotics in these regions has been indexed as the main cause of the occurrence of bacterial strains resistant to antibiotics. The emergence of antibiotic resistant strains is a major public health problem (Tatsinkou et al, 2016). The exploitation of the inhibitory activity of the lactic bacteria appeared in recent years as an alternative treatment and even prevention of some foodborne toxiinfection (Mezaini et al, 2009;Obi et al, 2015;Khalid, 2011).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The high sensitivity to chloramphenicol, ciprofloxacin, co‐trimoxazole, gentamicin, meropenem, streptomycin, tetracycline and vancomycin (Table 2) in this study was similar to the available literature (Tatsinkou Fossi et al . 2017; Alanber et al . 2020; Radmehr et al .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A high prevalence of resistant Bacillus species from dairy samples has been reported, including resistance to ampicillin, cephalothin, ceftriaxone, oxacillin, penicillin and trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole (Tatsinkou Fossi et al . 2017; Radmehr et al . 2020; Zhao et al .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%