Affiliation:
1. Danish Institute for Fisheries Research, Department of Seafood Research, c/o Technical University of Denmark, Søltofts Plads, Building 221, DK-2800 Kgs. Lyngby, Denmark
Abstract
Two outbreaks and a single case of histamine fish poisoning associated with cold-smoked tuna (CST) were reported in Denmark during 2004. The bacteria most likely responsible for histamine formation in CST implicated in histamine fish poisoning was identified for the first time in this study. Product characteristics and profiles of biogenic amines in the implicated products were also recorded. In the single poisoning case, psychrotolerant Morganella morganii–like bacteria most likely was responsible for the histamine production in CST with 2.2% ± 0.6% NaCl in the water phase (WPS). In outbreak 1, Photo-bacterium phosphoreum most likely formed the histamine in CST with 1.3% ± 0.1% WPS. In outbreak 2, which involved 10 persons, the bacteria responsible for histamine formation could not be determined. The measured concentrations of WPS were very low compared with those of randomly collected commercial samples of CST and cold-smoked blue marlin (4.1 to 12.7% WPS). Challenge tests at 5°C with psychrotolerant M. morganii and P. phosphoreum in CST with 4.4% WPS revealed growth and toxic histamine formation by the psychrotolerant M. morganii–like bacteria but not by P. phosphoreum. In a storage trial with naturally contaminated CST containing 6.9% WPS, lactic acid bacteria dominated the microbiota, and no significant histamine formation was observed during the shelf life of about 40 days at 5°C and of about 16 days at 10°C. To prevent toxic histamine formation, CST should be produced with >5% WPS and distributed with a declared 5°C shelf life of 3 to 4 weeks or less.
Publisher
International Association for Food Protection
Subject
Microbiology,Food Science
Cited by
81 articles.
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