4.7 Article

Chlorine dioxide and chlorine effectiveness to prevent Escherichia coli O157:H7 and Salmonella cross-contamination on fresh-cut Red Chard

Journal

FOOD CONTROL
Volume 23, Issue 2, Pages 325-332

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodcont.2011.07.022

Keywords

Food safety; Sanitizers; Baby leaves; Microbial quality; Rapid detection kits

Funding

  1. California Leafy Greens Research Program
  2. Spanish Ministry for Education and Science [AGL 2007-63861/ALI]
  3. Fundacion Seneca de la Region de Murcia (Spain)
  4. CSIC

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Washing procedures applied to fresh produce have the potential to reduce contamination from the surface of the product. However, the wash water may also serve as a source of contamination or has great potential to result in cross-contamination. The objective of this study was to evaluate process handling cross-contamination potential and pathogen removal of initially low numbers of attached cells of Salmonella and Escherichia coli O157:H7 during the washing-disinfection, rinsing, and de-watering steps of fresh-cut Red Chard baby leaves as affected by NaClO and ClO2. The efficacy and stability of liquid ClO2 applied to the water as the disinfectant treatment was also evaluated. Non-inoculated leaves were mixed with inoculated leaves (about 3-5% of total weight) and processed as a unit. After processing, no confirmed colonies on selective media were recovered from the non-inoculated leaves and qPCR was used for detection below the limit of quantitative recovery. ClO2 substantially prevented E. coli O157:H7 cross-contamination but was not effective for the inoculated Salmonella. Large populations of Salmonella were recovered from centrifugation discharge effluent water whereas no colonies were detected from water in contact with inoculated leaves collected from preceding washing unit operations. At an industrial level, this represents a potential risk of cross-contamination to product and equipment at the step immediately prior to packaging. These results suggest that the centrifugation effluent water could be used as a potential sample point to evaluate lot contamination and cross-contamination in the processing chain, even at low levels of pathogens, as were used in this study, undetectable by conventional sampling methods. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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