Surface Decontamination of Whole Chicken Carcasses Using a Pilot-Scale Pulsed UV Light System

2011 ◽  
Vol 54 (3) ◽  
pp. 993-1000 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. M. Keklik ◽  
A. Demirci ◽  
R. G. Bock
2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nene Meltem Keklik ◽  
Ali Demirci ◽  
Randall Gray Bock

2015 ◽  
Vol 78 (12) ◽  
pp. 2247-2252 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. LE GOFF ◽  
B. HUBERT ◽  
L. FAVENNEC ◽  
I. VILLENA ◽  
J. J. BALLET ◽  
...  

Cryptosporidium spp., a significant cause of foodborne infection, have been shown to be resistant to most chemical food disinfectant agents and infective for weeks in irrigation waters and stored fresh vegetal produce. Pulsed UV light (PL) has the potential to inactivate Cryptosporidium spp. on surfaces of raw or minimally processed foods or both. The present study aimed to evaluate the efficacy of PL on viability and in vivo infectivity of Cryptosporidium parvum oocysts present on raspberries, a known source of transmission to humans of oocyst-forming apicomplexan pathogens. The skin of each of 20 raspberries was experimentally inoculated with five 10-μl spots of an oocyst suspension containing 6 × 107 oocysts per ml (Nouzilly isolate). Raspberries were irradiated by PL flashes (4 J/cm2 of total fluence). This dose did not affect colorimetric or organoleptic characteristics of fruits. After immunomagnetic separation from raspberries, oocysts were bleached and administered orally to neonatal suckling mice. Seven days after infection, mice were euthanized, and the number of oocysts in the entire small intestine was individually assessed by immunofluorescence flow cytometry. Three of 12 and 12 of 12 inoculated mice that received 10 and 100 oocysts isolated from nonirradiated raspberries, respectively, were found infected. Four of 12 and 2 of 12 inoculated mice that received 103 and 104 oocysts from irradiated raspberries, respectively, were found infected. Oocyst counts were lower in animals inoculated with 103 and 104 oocysts from irradiated raspberries (92 ± 144 and 38 ± 82, respectively) than in animals infected with 100 oocysts from nonirradiated raspberries (35,785 ± 66,221, P = 0.008). PL irradiation achieved oocyst reductions of 2 and 3 log for an inoculum of 103 and 104 oocysts, respectively. The present pilot-scale evaluation suggests that PL is an effective mode of decontamination for raspberries and prompts further applicability studies in industrial contexts.


2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (10) ◽  
pp. 1870 ◽  
Author(s):  
Todor Bogdanov ◽  
Ivan Tsonev ◽  
Plamena Marinova ◽  
Evgenia Benova ◽  
Krasimir Rusanov ◽  
...  

Demand for food quality and extended freshness without the use of harmful chemicals has become a major topic over the last decade. New technologies are using UV light, strong electric field, ozone and other reactive agents to decontaminate food surfaces. The low-power non-equilibrium (cold) atmospheric pressure operating plasmas effectively combines all the qualities mentioned above and thus, due to their synergetic influence, promising results in fruit surface decontamination can be obtained. The present paper focuses on the applicability of the recently developed microwave surface wave sustained plasma torch for the treatment of selected small fruit. Optical emission spectroscopy is used for the determination of plasma active particles (radicals, UV light) and plasma parameters during the fruit treatment. The infrared camera images confirm low and fully applicable heating of the treated surface that ensures no fruit quality changes. The detailed study shows that the efficiency of the microbial decontamination of selected fruits naturally contaminated by microorganisms is strongly dependent on the fruit surface shape. The decontamination of the rough strawberry surface seems inefficient using the current configuration, but for smooth berries promising results were obtained. Finally, antioxidant activity measurements demonstrate no changes due to plasma treatment. The results confirm that the MW surface wave sustained discharge is applicable to fruit surface decontamination.


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