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- Title
- Spread of Escherichia coli O157:H7 during flume washing and drying of fresh-cut romaine lettuce
- Creator
- Wang, Siyi (Of Michigan State University)
- Date
- 2016
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Description
-
ABSTRACTSPREAD OF ESCHERICHIA COLI O157:H7 DURING FLUME WASHING AND DRYING OF FRESH-CUT ROMAINE LETTUCE By Siyi WangThe microbiological safety of leafy greens remains a concern as evidenced from recent outbreaks. This study assessed the spread of E. coli O157:H7 during washing and drying of fresh-cut romaine lettuce. Radicchio was spot-inoculated at 10-1, 101 and 103 CFU/leaf and mixed with uninoculated romaine lettuce to obtain 5 kg batches with inoculated vs uninoculated ratios of 0.5:100,...
Show moreABSTRACTSPREAD OF ESCHERICHIA COLI O157:H7 DURING FLUME WASHING AND DRYING OF FRESH-CUT ROMAINE LETTUCE By Siyi WangThe microbiological safety of leafy greens remains a concern as evidenced from recent outbreaks. This study assessed the spread of E. coli O157:H7 during washing and drying of fresh-cut romaine lettuce. Radicchio was spot-inoculated at 10-1, 101 and 103 CFU/leaf and mixed with uninoculated romaine lettuce to obtain 5 kg batches with inoculated vs uninoculated ratios of 0.5:100, 1:100, 5:100 and 10:100. After 90 s of sanitizer-free flume washing followed by shaker table and centrifugal dryer, the radicchio was removed and the lettuce was divided into 225 g samples to test presence/absence of E. coli O157:H7 using a GeneQuence assay. Based on triplicate trials, lower inoculation levels led to decreased E. coli O157:H7 transfer to romaine lettuce (P < 0.05). All lettuce samples yielded E. coli O157:H7 when radicchio was inoculated at 103 CFU/leaf. At 101 CFU/leaf, the percentage of positive samples decreased from 96.8% to 93.7%, 81.0% and 63.5% while at 10-1 CFU/leaf, 22.2%, 6.3%, 4.8% and 6.3% were positive at 10:100, 5:100, 1:100 and 0.5:100 ratios. Within each inoculation level, there were no significant differences (P>0.05) among four product ratios. These findings are critical to predict the extent of cross-contamination under realistic conditions and will provide important data for improving exposure assessment in risk assessments for leafy greens.
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