93 research outputs found

    La Bioconservació en productes carnis

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    Els bacteris làctics formen part de la microbiota natural de diversos aliments, són considerats segurs i tenen una llarga història d'ús, casual o intencionat. Les bacteriocines produïdes per aquests bacteris poden representar un paper important, com a obstacles addicionals, en la conservació i seguretat dels productes carnis, principalment contra Listeria monocytogenes.Lactic acid bacteria have a long history of safe use in foods as indigenous natural microflora in several food products. Bacteriocinogenic starter cultures and/or their bacteriocins can act as extra hurdles to food pathogens, thus enhancing preservation and wholesomeness of meat products against Listeria monocytogenes

    Negligencia en el diagnóstico prenatal

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    Negligència en el diagnòstic prenatal

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    El criterio de la continuidad frente a la guarda conjunta

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    ¿Madres? Pueden ser más de una

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    Modeling the combined effects of enterocins A and B, lactate, and EDTA on the growth of Salmonella at different temperatures

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    The effects of enterocins A and B (produced by Enterococcus faecium CTC492), lactate, and ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) on the growth of Salmonella were modeled together with temperature using the response surface methodology. Six serovars of Salmonella enterica were inoculated (ca. 103 cells/ml) in brain-heart infusion broth with different levels of the studied factors and then incubated at different temperatures. The results showed that while Salmonella growth was affected by all the factors, temperature was the most important factor influencing the time to detection of the pathogen. All factors, including temperature, showed significant two-way interactions. The presence of enterocins A and B, lactate, and EDTA had an inhibitory effect that was enhanced at suboptimal temperatures for growth, thus delaying the time to detection. Moderate-low concentrations of lactate and EDTA increased the inhibitory effect of enterocins A and B. The effectiveness of these bacteriocins was not further enhanced by high concentrations of lactate (>3.6%) or EDTA(>200 mg/l). The mathematical model obtained from these analyses provides a useful tool to assess the effects of natural antimicrobials and their interactions with other growth-related factors on the growth response of Salmonella. The results can be applied to determine the most effective combination of hurdles to be used in the preservation of food products. [Int Microbiol 2008; 11(1):11-16

    Assessment of the bioprotective potential of lactic acid bacteria against Listeria monocytogenes on vacuum-packed cold-smoked salmon stored at 8 °C

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    Smoked salmon is a highly appreciated delicatessen product. Nevertheless, this ready-to-eat (RTE) product is considered at risk for Listeria monocytogenes, due to both the prevalence and growth potential of this bacteria on the product. Biopreservation may be considered a mild and natural effective strategy for minimizing this risk. In this study, we evaluated the following three potential bioprotective lactic acid bacterial strains against L. monocytogenes in three smoked salmon types with different physicochemical characteristics, primarily fat, moisture, phenol and acid acetic content: two bacteriocin-like producers that were isolated from smoked salmon and identified as Lactobacillus curvatus and Carnobacterium maltaromaticum and a recognized bioprotective bacteriocin producer from meat origin, Lactobacillus sakei CTC494. L. sakei CTC494 inhibited the growth of L. monocytogenes after 21 days of storage at 8 °C in all the products tested, whereas L. curvatus CTC1742 only limited the growth of the pathogen (<2 log increase). The effectiveness of C. maltaromaticum CTC1741 was dependent on the product type; this strain limited the growth of the pathogen in only one smoked salmon type. These results suggest that the meat-borne starter culture, L. sakei CTC494, may potentially be used as a bioprotective culture to improve the food safety of cold-smoked salmon.info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersio

    Modeling and designing a Listeria monocytogenes control strategy for dry-cured ham taking advantage of water activity and storage temperature

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    Dry-cured ham is a shelf-stable product that can be contaminated with Listeria monocytogenes due to post-processing operations, compromising the compliance of zero tolerance policies (e.g. US Listeria rule). The present study quantifies the behavior of L. monocytogenes in sliced Spanish dry-cured ham of different water activity (aw) during storage at different temperatures. Inactivation kinetics were estimated by fitting primary models to the experimental data. The effect of temperature and aw on kinetic parameters was characterized through secondary polynomial models. L. monocytogenes viability decreased in all the assayed conditions, confirming that dry-cured ham is not only listeriostatic but listericidal. The fastest and highest reductions were observed at 25 °C, with 1 Log reduction after 6 and 9 days in Iberian and Serrano ham respectively. The work provides scientifically-based data and models to design a low-cost control measure based on a corrective storage as a post-lethality treatment to enhance the accomplishment of zero-tolerance requirements.info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersio
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