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1.
Foods ; 10(9)2021 Aug 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34574086

ABSTRACT

Most Austrian dairies and cheese manufacturers participated in a Listeria monitoring program, which was established after the first reports of dairy product-associated listeriosis outbreaks more than thirty years ago. Within the Listeria monitoring program, up to 800 mL of product-associated liquids such as cheese smear or brine are processed in a semi-quantitative approach to increase epidemiological sensitivity. A sampling strategy within cheese production, which detects environmental contamination before it results in problematic food contamination, has benefits for food safety management. The liquid-based sampling strategy was implemented by both industrial cheese makers and small-scale dairies located in the mountainous region of Western Austria. This report considers more than 12,000 Listeria spp. examinations of liquid-based samples in the 2009 to 2018 timeframe. Overall, the occurrence of L. monocytogenes in smear liquid samples was 1.29% and 1.55% (n = 5043 and n = 7194 tested samples) for small and industrial cheese enterprises, respectively. The liquid-based sampling strategy for Listeria monitoring at the plant level appears to be superior to solid surface monitoring. Cheese smear liquids seem to have good utility as an index of the contamination of cheese up to that point in production. A modelling or validation process should be performed for the new semi-quantitative approach to estimate the true impact of the method in terms of reducing Listeria contamination at the cheese plant level.

2.
J Dairy Sci ; 97(10): 6036-45, 2014 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25129496

ABSTRACT

A membrane filtration technique developed for counting butyric acid bacteria in cow milk was further developed for analysis of goat milk. Reduction of the sample volume, prolongation of incubation time after addition of proteolytic enzyme and detergent, and a novel step of ultrasonic treatment during incubation allowed filtration of goat milk even in the case of somatic cell counts (SCC) exceeding 10(6)/mL. However, filterability was impaired in milk from goats in late lactation. In total, spore counts were assessed in 329 farm bulk goat milk samples. Membrane filtration technique counts were lower than numbers revealed by the classic most probable number technique. Thus, method-specific thresholds for milk to evaluate the risk of late blowing have to be set. As expected, the spore counts of milk samples from suppliers not feeding silage were significantly lower than the spore counts of milk samples from suppliers using silage feeds. Not only were counts different, the clostridial spore population also varied significantly. By using 16S rRNA gene PCR and gene sequencing, 342 strains from 15 clostridial species were identified. The most common Clostridium species were Clostridium tyrobutyricum (40.4%), Clostridium sporogenes (38.3%), Clostridium bifermentans (7.6%), and Clostridium perfringens (5.3%). The 2 most frequently occurring species C. tyrobutyricum and C. sporogenes accounted for 84.7% of the isolates derived from samples of suppliers feeding silage (n=288). In contrast, in samples from suppliers without silage feeding (n=55), these species were detected in only 45.5% of the isolates.


Subject(s)
Clostridium/isolation & purification , Filtration/veterinary , Milk/microbiology , Animals , Bacterial Load/veterinary , Butyric Acid/metabolism , Clostridium/cytology , Clostridium/genetics , Colony Count, Microbial/veterinary , DNA, Bacterial/chemistry , DNA, Bacterial/genetics , DNA, Ribosomal/chemistry , DNA, Ribosomal/genetics , Female , Filtration/methods , Goats , Lactation , Polymerase Chain Reaction/veterinary , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/genetics , Silage , Sonication/veterinary , Spores, Bacterial/cytology
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