scholarly journals Experimental Evidence of a Heat-Resistant Gastro-Intestinal Irritant produced by Bacilli of the Salmonella Group

1933 ◽  
Vol 33 (2) ◽  
pp. 233-244 ◽  
Author(s):  
William G. Savage

The Salmonella group contains the organisms which are mainly responsible for outbreaks of food poisoning and the possibility of the production by these strains of bodies which are toxic, or which act as gastro-intestinal irritants, when administered by the oral route, is of practical as well as theoretical interest. This is especially the case if it can be shown that these irritant substances are heat resistant.

1966 ◽  
Vol 64 (3) ◽  
pp. 367-374 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ross G. A. Sutton

A method of doing viable counts of Cl. welchii has been described that gives reproducible results from faeces. By this method counts were carried out on the faeces of persons in the general population, and those associated with an outbreak of food poisoning due to Cl. welchii. There was a significant increase in viable count in those with symptoms of food poisoning. Owing to many variables, single viable counts do not appear to be useful in the laboratory diagnosis of food poisoning, but the detection of heat-resistant spores, by direct culture after boiling, may be of some use. More work must be carried out to substantiate this point.


2018 ◽  
Vol 93 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Y Nguyen ◽  
Palmy R. Jesudhasan ◽  
Elizabeth R. Aguilera ◽  
Julie K. Pfeiffer

ABSTRACTEnteric viruses, including poliovirus, are spread by the fecal-oral route. In order to persist and transmit to a new host, enteric virus particles must remain stable once they are in the environment. Environmental stressors such as heat and disinfectants can inactivate virus particles and prevent viral transmission. It has been previously demonstrated that bacteria or bacterial surface glycans can enhance poliovirus virion stability and limit inactivation from heat or bleach. While investigating the mechanisms underlying bacterially enhanced virion thermal stability, we identified and characterized a poliovirus (PV) mutant with increased resistance to heat inactivation. The M132V mutant harbors a single amino acid change in the VP1 capsid coding that is sufficient to confer heat resistance but not bleach resistance. Although the M132V virus was stable in the absence of bacteria or feces at most temperatures, M132V virus was stabilized by feces at very high temperatures. M132V PV had reduced specific infectivity and RNA uncoating compared with those of wild-type (WT) PV, but viral yields in HeLa cells were similar. In orally inoculated mice, M132V had a slight fitness cost since fecal titers were lower and 12.5% of fecal viruses reverted to the WT. Overall, this work sheds light on factors that influence virion stability and fitness.IMPORTANCEViruses spread by the fecal-oral route need to maintain viability in the environment to ensure transmission. Previous work indicated that bacteria and bacterial surface polysaccharides can stabilize viral particles and enhance transmission. To explore factors that influence viral particle stability, we isolated a mutant poliovirus that is heat resistant. This mutant virus does not require feces for stability at most temperatures but can be stabilized by feces at very high temperatures. Even though the mutant virus is heat resistant, it is susceptible to inactivation by treatment with bleach. This work provides insight into how viral particles maintain infectivity in the environment.


1938 ◽  
Vol 38 (5) ◽  
pp. 623-637 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. C. Minett

1. Feeding tests on monkeys (Macacus rhesus), dogs and cats are unsatisfactory for detecting the presence of enterotoxin, owing to the variable susceptibility of these animals by the oral route.2. Using Dolman's method, in which the material is injected intra-peritoneally into kittens, the production of enterotoxin has been demonstrated by: (a) sixteen out of thirty-eight strains of Staph. aureus, isolated from cases of acute or chronic mastitis or from normal udder milk; (b) four out of five strains of Bact. coli, mostly from calves with “white scours”. No enterotoxin was obtained from fifteen strains of Str. agalactiae from mastitis in cows.3. The formation of enterotoxin under natural conditions has been observed: (a) In udder milk seeded with Staph. aureus or naturally contaminated with that organism and stored at atmospheric temperatures (18 and 22°C.). The substance remains active in cheese prepared from such milk. (b) In layer cake made with cream naturally contaminated with Staph. aureus.4. A small outbreak of poisoning due to potted meat paste was shown to be caused by a non-haemolytic Staphylococcus.5. A few feeding experiments on man with milk or cream, in which food-poisoning staphylococci had grown, were negative, but on one occasion a Staphylococcus from a case of mastitis yielded a culture filtrate which caused symptoms of food poisoning.6. Enterotoxin has the following properties. It is resistant to heat (95°C., 30 min.), to low concentrations of formalin sufficient to destroy the haemolytic toxin, to acid (pH 5·0), and to rennet, but is destroyed by trypsin.It diffuses freely into the culture medium but only slightly through collodion. It is antigenic. Its properties are such that enterotoxin can be classed as a bacterial exotoxin.


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Avinash Pagdhune ◽  
Kundan Kunal ◽  
Kanubhai Amrutlal Patel ◽  
Aswin Bhailalbhai Patel ◽  
SukhDev Mishra ◽  
...  

Introduction: Morbidity and mortality associated with pesticide poisoning is a major public health issue, especially in lower and middle income countries, including India. Timely understanding of poisoning trends is required for improved prevention. The objective of the present study was to analyze the trend of poisoning cases in Ahmedabad, India in the period of 2015-2017.Methods: Detailed history, including demographic data, risk factors, poisoning history, agents involved, and occupational influence were collected for poisoning cases reported to the Poison Information Centre in Ahmedabad. Cholinesterase activity and HPTLC method for detection of sanguinarine in urine were used to investigate the agents of poisoning. Non-parametric tests,  such as Chi-square test and Mann-Whitney U Test were applied to test statistical significance between the groups. All statistical analysis was carried out using IBM SPSS Statistics for Windows, Version 26.0. Armonk, NY: IBM Corp.Results: A total 1373 poisoning cases were investigated. The incidence and fatality rate was found to be higher in males compared to females (M/F ratio 1.89:1). About 91.62% of the poisoning were through the oral route. Erythrocyte cholinesterase activity assay results indicated that 41.29% of the cases were due to organophosphorus/carbamate poisoning. Insecticides were found to be the agent of poisoning in 26.29% cases, and 11.07% of all the cases were agricultural workers. Poisoning with medications, household pesticides and chemicals were also reported. Few cases of food poisoning with sanguinarine were detected.Conclusion: The data presented here suggest that pesticides used for agriculture are the major source of poisonings. Implementation of usage guidelines, educating farmers and vulnerable population, and finding novel alternatives for highly toxic chemicals may be helpful in decreasing the number of poisoning cases. 


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y Nguyen ◽  
Palmy R. Jesudhasan ◽  
Elizabeth R. Aguilera ◽  
Julie K. Pfeiffer

ABSTRACTEnteric viruses, including poliovirus, are spread by the fecal-oral route. In order to persist and transmit to a new host, enteric virus particles must remain stable once they are in the environment. Environmental stressors such as heat and disinfectants can inactivate virus particles and prevent viral transmission. It has been previously demonstrated that bacteria or bacterial surface glycans can enhance poliovirus virion stability and limit inactivation from heat or bleach. While investigating the mechanisms underlying bacterial-enhanced virion thermal stability, we identified and characterized a poliovirus mutant with increased resistance to heat inactivation. This poliovirus mutant, M132V, harbors a single amino acid change in the VP1 capsid-coding that is sufficient to confer heat resistance. M132V was comparable to wild-type virus for replicationin vitro, as well as for replication and pathogenesis in orally-inoculated mice. Although the M132V virus was stable in the absence of bacteria or feces at most temperatures, M132V virus was stabilized by feces at very high temperatures. Additionally, the M132V virus does not have enhanced stability during bleach treatment, suggesting that thermal and bleach inactivation mechanisms are separable. Our results suggest that different mechanisms underlie virion stabilization by bacteria and the M132V mutation. Overall, this work sheds light on factors that influence virion stability.IMPORTANCEViruses spread by the fecal-oral route need to maintain viability in the environment to ensure transmission. Previous work indicated that bacteria and bacterial surface polysaccharides can stabilize viral particles and enhance transmission. To explore factors that influence viral particle stability, we isolated a mutant poliovirus that is heat resistant. This mutant virus does not require feces for stability at most temperatures, but can be stabilized by feces at very high temperatures. Even though the mutant virus is heat resistant, it is susceptible to inactivation by treatment with bleach. This work provides insight into how viral particles maintain infectivity in the environment.


1962 ◽  
Vol 60 (2) ◽  
pp. 259-278 ◽  
Author(s):  
Betty C. Hobbs ◽  
J. M. Ritchie ◽  
Ellen D. Ritchie

1. A bacteriological laboratory was provided in the medical departments of two passenger ships—a modern luxury liner cruising in the Mediterranean for 1 month and an older vessel, now out of commission, on a 3 months round voyage through the tropics. Galley hygiene in relation to gastro-enteritis was investigated on both ships.2. 125 samples of water and iced water were examined. Samples of water chlorinated on the ships were usually satisfactory. Many port waters sampled from the barge or hosepipe were contaminated—some mildly, some profusely. A fault in an ice-making machine led to pollution of ice used for various purposes. Swimming-bath water was usually mildly polluted only; occasionally in the tropics when the baths were very popular the count rose to 1600 Esch. coli per 100 ml.3. Thirty-five samples of milk, ice-cream and churn washings were examined. English liquid pasteurized milk stored in the cold gave satisfactory results, but the rehydrated dried milk used exclusively on the round voyage through the tropics and swabs from the apparatus used in its preparation were contaminated with Esch. coli. Ice-cream samples from ship I gave satisfactory results, and of two samples of ice-cream powder examined on ship II one was satisfactory and the other gave a poor result. Occasional churns which had been superficially cleaned but not sterilized had a high general and Esch. coli count.4. 189 samples of food were examined, twenty-two for general and coliform counts only. Results were variable according to foodstuff and atmospheric temperature. Some cold cooked meatstuffs gave low counts and absence of coliform bacilli in 1/10 g.; others had plate counts of 300,000 to 25 million per gram with Esch. coli in 1/1000 dilution, e.g. crayfish ready for the table. Salmonellae were not found in any samples but occasionally small numbers of coagulase-positive staphylococci and non-haemolytic Cl. welchii were isolated.5. Sixteen samples of imitation cream and washings from savoy bags were examined. Samples from freshly opened cans of cream gave satisfactory results. In whipped cream and in cream from cakes and sweets, Esch. coli was found in 1/1000 dilutions, and rinsings from savoy bags in use gave probable numbers of Esch. coli of 18,000 + / 100 ml. Counts were still high after the bags had been washed and dried and they were far from sterile even after ‘boiling’ and drying.6. Twenty-three samples of wash water from salad vegetables and fruit had high counts of Esch. coli. After these articles had been washed in water containing 80 p.p.m. sodium hypochiorite, coliform organisms were not found in 100 ml. of water. Potassium permanganate was considered to be of doubtful value. The results of laboratory experiments to confirm the concentration of hypochiorite and time necessary to destroy Esch. coli on lettuce and watercress are shown in Tables 3 and 4.7. Results from forty-four samples of wash and rinse waters from dish-washing machines and one bowl showed that the temperatures were often too low; with temperatures above 50° C. coliform bacilli were absent in 1 ml. quantities, but waters at temperatures below 42° C. gave probable Esch. coli counts of 1800 + / 100 ml. The bacteriological condition of the crockery and cutlery varied according to the wash and rinse waters. Rinses from metal dish covers gave poor results, with 1800+ Esch. coli per 100 ml. of rinse and occasionally Cl. welchii and coagulase-positive staphylococci. Wash and rinse waters, with temperatures of 35°ndash;42° C. used for pots and pans gave probable Esch. coli counts of 1800 + /100 ml.8. Rinse waters from twenty cloths used in the galleys, pantries and dining rooms were nearly all heavily contaminated with Esch. coli, with probable numbers of 18,000 + /100 ml.; these counts were reduced to negligible figures by soaking the cloths in chloride of lime.9. Swabs were taken from thirty-eight cutting-boards and twenty-six surfaces of sinks, shelves and miscellaneous articles. Many boards were heavily contaminated, the probable number of Esch. coli being 18,000 + /100 ml. of diluent; lecithinase-positive clostridia were found also. The boards could be sterilized by brushing with a stout wire brush followed by chlorination.Other surfaces, and swabs from various knives in the kitchen, including the blade of the slicing machine, frequently gave high counts of Esch. coli.10. 329 swabs from nostrils and fingers of saloon and galley staffs yielded one cutlure of coagulase-positive staphylococci from 111 nasal swabs and three cultures of coagulase-positive staphylococci and seven of Esch. coli from 218 finger swabs from twenty-seven men.11. Twenty-eight faecal specimens were examined from fifty-four cases of gastro-enteritis reported on the Mediterranean cruises; salmonellae were not found, but heat-resistant Cl. welchii was isolated from six samples (21%), and the clinical picture was that of Cl. welchii food poisoning.12. 121 faeces samples from 137 patients with gastro-enteritis were examined chiefly for salmonellae and coagulase-positive staphylococci on the outward leg of the round voyage through the tropics. Salm. typhimurium was isolated from a clinical case and Cl. welchii from one typical case of food poisoning. On the return journey all samples were examined also for Cl. welchii; of thirty-five stool samples from thirty-five patients, six (17%) yielded lecithinase-positive clostridia; salmonellae were not found.13. Heat-resistant strains of Cl. welchii were also isolated from two chopping-boards, a knife, cold beef, brawn, two wiping cloths, a dish cover, two samples of pie and corned beef.


2011 ◽  
Vol 2011 ◽  
pp. 1-16 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cristi L. Galindo ◽  
Jason A. Rosenzweig ◽  
Michelle L. Kirtley ◽  
Ashok K. Chopra

Yersiniosis is a food-borne illness that has become more prevalent in recent years due to human transmission via the fecal-oral route and prevalence in farm animals. Yersiniosis is primarily caused byYersinia enterocoliticaand less frequently byYersinia pseudotuberculosis. Infection is usually characterized by a self-limiting acute infection beginning in the intestine and spreading to the mesenteric lymph nodes. However, more serious infections and chronic conditions can also occur, particularly in immunocompromised individuals.Y. enterocoliticaandY. pseudotuberculosisare both heterogeneous organisms that vary considerably in their degrees of pathogenicity, although some generalizations can be ascribed to pathogenic variants. Adhesion molecules and a type III secretion system are critical for the establishment and progression of infection. Additionally, host innate and adaptive immune responses are both required for yersiniae clearance. Despite the ubiquity of entericYersiniaspecies and their association as important causes of food poisoning world-wide, few national enteric pathogen surveillance programs include the yersiniae as notifiable pathogens. Moreover, no standard exists whereby identification and reporting systems can be effectively compared and global trends developed. This review discusses yersinial virulence factors, mechanisms of infection, and host responses in addition to the current state of surveillance, detection, and prevention of yersiniosis.


1956 ◽  
Vol 19 (8) ◽  
pp. 209-212 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. C. Webster ◽  
W. B. Esselen

Thermal death times of food poisoning types of organisms as represented by Salmonella enteritidis, Micrococcus pyogenes var. aureus, and Streptococcus faecalis in poultry stufing were investigated. The thermal destruction characteristics of these organisms are described in terms of z and F140 values. Streptococcus faecalis was considerably more heat resistant than the other two organisms studies. The data obtained indicate that roasting procedures for stuffed poultry, based on the attainment of a center stuffing temperature of 165°F., should be adequate to destroy such organisms if present in the stuffing.


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