| Literature DB >> 24368430 |
Anna Sophie Fahrion1, Lanu Jamir, Kenivole Richa, Sonuwara Begum, Vilatuo Rutsa, Simon Ao, Varijaksha P Padmakumar, Ram Pratim Deka, Delia Grace.
Abstract
Pork occupies an important place in the diet of the population of Nagaland, one of the North East Indian states. We carried out a pilot study along the pork meat production chain, from live animal to end consumer. The goal was to obtain information about the presence of selected food borne hazards in pork in order to assess the risk deriving from these hazards to the health of the local consumers and make recommendations for improving food safety. A secondary objective was to evaluate the utility of risk-based approaches to food safety in an informal food system. We investigated samples from pigs and pork sourced at slaughter in urban and rural environments, and at retail, to assess a selection of food-borne hazards. In addition, consumer exposure was characterized using information about hygiene and practices related to handling and preparing pork. A qualitative hazard characterization, exposure assessment and hazard characterization for three representative hazards or hazard proxies, namely Enterobacteriaceae, T. solium cysticercosis and antibiotic residues, is presented. Several important potential food-borne pathogens are reported for the first time including Listeria spp. and Brucella suis. This descriptive pilot study is the first risk-based assessment of food safety in Nagaland. We also characterise possible interventions to be addressed by policy makers, and supply data to inform future risk assessments.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24368430 PMCID: PMC3924451 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph110100403
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Situation map of North East India, Nagaland and Kohima, Nagaland’s capital.
Outcomes of diagnostic testing of slaughter pigs and retail pork carried from Kohima, Nagaland: Hazards and classification based on reference values.
| Hazard /indicator | Diagnostic testing method | Quality categories 1 | % samples per categories | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Himedia HiTouchTM Flexi Plate Agar plate culture | 89/91 (97.8%) | 24.7% | ||
| 52.8% | ||||
| 20.2% | ||||
| 2.25% | ||||
| Himedia HiTouchTM Flexi Plate Selective agar plate culture | 88/91 (94.5%) | 5.7% | ||
| 5.7% | ||||
| 88.6% | ||||
| Petrifilm® selective culture system | 36/91 (39.6%) | 97.7% | ||
| 2.3% | ||||
| Petrifilm® selective culture system | 9/19 (47.4%) | 10.5% | ||
| 36.8% | ||||
| Premi® Test (DSM) 2 | 4/88 (4.5%) |
| 4.5% | |
| Lingual palpation post mortem; occasional findings in meat samples | 7/80 (8.8%) (palpation]) |
| 8.8% | |
| 2/91 (2.2%) (found when cutting meat) | 2.2% | |||
| Brucella IgG flow assay | 3/53 (5.6%) |
| 5.6% | |
| Sedimentation | 18/88 (20.6%) |
|
Notes: 1 References for categories: Regulation (EC) 2073/2005 on microbiological criteria for foodstuffs: Chapter 1. Food Safety Criteria (Listeria), Chapter 2 Process hygiene criteria (aerobic counts, Enterobacteriaceae); Mataragas et al. (2010) Int. J Food Microbiol (Listeria); Public Health Laboratory Service Guidelines for the microbiological quality at the point of sale. PHLS ACFDP Working group. Communicable diseases and public health, Sept 2000. (UK); Bell (CH) Guidelines for fresh meat (Staphylococcus aureus). 2 Premi®Test allows screening meat for the residues of β-lactams, Cephalosporines, Macrolides, Tetracyclines, Sulphonamides, Aminoglycosides, Quinolones, Amphenicoles and Polypeptides. Premi®Test is based on the inhibition of the growth of Bacillus stearothermophilus.
Three selected hazards found in pork in Kohima, Nagaland, displayed in a qualitative risk assessment framework.
| Hazard identification & characterization | Exposure assessment | Risk characterization | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bacteria of this group representing hazards for human health include | In the questionnaire survey, pork consumers from Nagaland indicated that boiling of meat was the common method of preparing meat (98%). Ninety-eight % of questionnaire respondents cook pork between 30 and 190 min. This means that pork is generally well cooked which will kill Enterobacteriaceae. However there are chances for cross contamination, which is most problematic for hazards where the infectious dose is very low: notably pathogenic | Because of thorough cooking, we consider the risk of ingestion of harmful Enterobacteriaceae from cooked pork was | |
| Infection with the larval stage (cysticerci) of the tapeworm
| Proof of highly frequent presence of the parasite was found manifold within this study: through lingual palpation and detection of viable cysticerci in meat. Also, 57% of consumers reported white, rice grain like cysts in the meat they purchased. Based on this, prevalence of | The risk of ingestion of viable cysticerci from cooked meat has to be considered | |
| Antibiotic residues favour the development of antibiotic resistance in bacteria and can cause allergies in sensitive persons who consume meat containing residues. Prevalence of such incidents is low when searching the literature for case descriptions; but this can only be stated with a high level of uncertainty. | Of the pork samples tested in this study, 4.5% were positive and thus contained traces of antibiotic residues. Good hygiene practices and heat treatment do not eliminate the residues and thus, the consumer is not able to influence or mitigate this risk. | We considered the risk of ingestion of antibiotic residues in pork with a direct impact on consumer’s health (anaphylactic reaction) as |
Figure 2Bacterial plate counts from pork sampled directly following slaughter (D) and retail pork samples taken in the early morning (E), mid-morning (H), and after noon (L) carried out to estimate the burden of contamination in Kohima, Nagaland. (a) Total aerobic bacteria; (b) Enterobacteriaceae (coliform bacteria); (c) Listeria spp.