Survivability of Clostridioides difficile spores in fermented pork summer sausage during refrigerated storage
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Published:2022-01-27
Issue:
Volume:
Page:162-167
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ISSN:2231-0916
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Container-title:Veterinary World
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Vet World
Author:
Flock Genevieve1ORCID, Yin Hsin-Bai2ORCID, Chen Chi-Hung2ORCID, Pellissery Abraham Joseph3ORCID, Venkitanarayanan Kumar3ORCID
Affiliation:
1. Combat Capabilities Development Command Soldier Center, Soldier Sustainment Directorate, Combat Feeding Division, Natick 01760, Massachusetts, United States. 2. Department of Agriculture, USDA Agricultural Research Service, Beltsville, Maryland 20705, United States. 3. Department of Animal Science, University of Connecticut, College of Agriculture Health and Natural Resources, Mansfield 06269, Connecticut, United States.
Abstract
Background and Aim: Clostridioides difficile is a spore-forming pathogen that causes serious enteric disease in humans. Strains have been isolated from food animals and meat, including pork, which suggest a potential for foodborne transmission. Pork summer sausage is a popular fermented meat product, which is consumed cooked or cooked to a lower internal temperature due to acidification of the product. The effect of acidity and cooking on the viability of C. difficile spores in a fermented meat product has not been determined. Therefore, the aim was to study the survivability of C. difficile spores in fermented pork summer sausage.
Materials and Methods: Fermented pork sausages were prepared according to a commercial recipe with or without starter culture and C. difficile spores followed by fermentation at 37°C for ∼12 h under 85% relative humidity until pH 5.0 was reached and further processed as cooked (>57°C) or uncooked (≤57°C) and stored at 4°C. C. difficile spores in sausages were enumerated at 1 h following inoculation and on days 0, 1, 7, 14, 21, 30, 60, and 90 of storage.
Results: It was observed that C. difficile spore viability in control unfermented treatment was significantly different on day 0 from the fermented, fermented cooked, and control unfermented cooked treatments (p<0.05); however, there was no significant difference among the latter three treatment groups throughout 90 days of storage (p>0.05). On day 90 of storage, the unfermented control sausages yielded ∼4.0 log colony-forming unit (CFU)/g of C. difficile spores compared to ∼3.5 log CFU/g recovered from fermented samples and the unfermented cooked control samples identifying spore viability in all treatment groups.
Conclusion: C. difficile spores were found to survive the acidity and cooking of fermented pork summer sausage and storage at 4°C for 3 months, thereby highlighting the need for effective intervention strategies to reduce the risk of C. difficile contamination in pork products.
Publisher
Veterinary World
Subject
General Veterinary
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