Affiliation:
1. Food Sciences Laboratory, U.S. Army Natick Development Center, Natick, Massachusetts 01760, and Center for Disease Control, Atlanta, Georgia 30333
Abstract
An inoculated, irradiated beef pack (1,240 cans) study was conducted for the determination of microbiological safety for unrestricted human consumption. Each can contained a mixture of 10
6
spores of each of 10 strains of
Clostridium botulinum
(5 type A and 5 type B), or a total of 10
7
spores/can. The cans were irradiated to various doses (100 cans/dose) with
60
Co gamma rays at -30 � 10 C, incubated at 30 � 2 C for 6 months, and examined for swelling, toxicity, and recoverable botulinal cells. The minimal experimental sterilizing dose based on nonswollen, nontoxic sterile cans was 2.2 < experimental sterilizing dose ≤ 2.6 Mrad. Using recoverable cells as the most stringent criterion of spoilage, and assuming the conventional simple exponential (without an initial shoulder) rate of spore kill, the “12D” dose was 3.7 Mrad when estimated on the basis of a mixture of 10 strains totaling 10
7
spores/can, and 4.3 Mrad if it is assumed that each can of beef contained 10
6
spores of a single most resistant strain and all of these spores were of identical resistances. However, an analysis of the data by extreme value statistics indicated with 90% confidence that the spore death rate was not a simple exponential but might be a shifted exponential (with an initial shoulder), Weibull, lognormal, or normal, with a “12D” equivalent of about 3.0 Mrad regardless of the initial spore density per can. There was an apparent antagonism between the irradiated type A and B strains in the cans. Some of the cans contained type B toxin but did not include type B viable cells. Other cans had a mixture of type A and B toxins, but a large number of these cans did not yield recoverable type B cells. However, type A viable cells could always be demonstrated in those cans containing type A toxin.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine
Reference52 articles.
1. Boticinogeny and actions of the bacteriocin;Anastasio K. L.;J. Bacteriol.,1971
2. Anderson A. W. D. A. Corlett Jr. and K. L. Krabbenkoft. 1967. The effects of additives on radiation-resistance of Cl. botulinum in meat p. 87-97. In Microbiological problems in food preservation by irradiation. International Atomic Energy Agency Vienna.
3. Radiation sterilization of prototype military foods. II. Cured ham;Anellis A.;Appl. Microbiol.,1967
4. Radiation sterilization of prototype military foods. III. Pork loin;Anellis A.;Appl. Microbiol.,1969
5. Production of types A and B spores of Clostridium botulinum by the biphasic method: effect on spore population, radiation resistance, and toxigenicity;Anellis A.;Appl. Microbiol.,1972
Cited by
4 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献