Publication | Open Access
Enterobacteriaceae associated with meats and meat handling
53
Citations
26
References
1981
Year
Packing PlantsMeat SamplesMicrobial ContaminationMeat HandlingFoodborne IllnessFood MicrobiologyMicrobiologyInfection ControlMicrobiomeFoodborne HazardMedicineMeat QualityMeat ScienceFood SafetyHealth Sciences
The source of Enterobacteriaceae on meats was shown to be associated with the meat-handling work surfaces in two packing plants studies. A total of 2,343 Enterobacteriaceae were isolated and identified from meat samples and work surfaces at the packing plants and at the retail facilities. Escherichia coli biotype I and Serratia liquefaciens were detected at all stages of meat handling, indicating that they may be present in meats throughout the meat-handling system. Enterobacter agglomerans and S. liquefaciens were the predominant Enterobacteriaceae at the retail level, but they had limited indicator potential for sanitation and hygiene, Klebsiella pneumoniae was a frequent isolate among Enterobacteriaceae from meats and meat-handling surfaces in the packing plants but not at the retail level, indicating that this organism might signal unhygienic handling of meats at the retail level.
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