Literature DB >> 29173618

Association between bacterial survival and free chlorine concentration during commercial fresh-cut produce wash operation.

Yaguang Luo1, Bin Zhou2, Sam Van Haute3, Xiangwu Nou2, Boce Zhang2, Zi Teng3, Ellen R Turner4, Qin Wang3, Patricia D Millner2.   

Abstract

Determining the minimal effective free chlorine (FC) concentration for preventing pathogen survival and cross-contamination during produce washing is critical for developing science- and risk-based food safety practices. The correlation between dynamic FC concentrations and bacterial survival was investigated during commercial washing of chopped Romaine lettuce, shredded Iceberg lettuce, and diced cabbage as pathogen inoculation study during commercial operation is not feasible. Wash water was sampled every 30 min and assayed for organic loading, FC, and total aerobic mesophilic bacteria after chlorine neutralization. Water turbidity, chemical oxygen demand, and total dissolved solids increased significantly over time, with more rapid increases in diced cabbage water. Combined chlorine increased consistently while FC fluctuated in response to rates of chlorine dosing, product loading, and water replenishment. Total bacterial survival showed a strong correlation with real-time FC concentration. Under approximately 10 mg/L, increasing FC significantly reduced the frequency and population of surviving bacteria detected. Increasing FC further resulted in the reduction of the aerobic plate count to below the detection limit (50 CFU/100 mL), except for a few sporadic positive samples with low cell counts. This study confirms that maintaining at least 10 mg/L FC in wash water strongly reduced the likelihood of bacterial survival and thus potential cross contamination of washed produce. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  APC; COD; Chlorine; Cross-contamination; Disinfection; Fresh produce; Wash water

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2017        PMID: 29173618     DOI: 10.1016/j.fm.2017.09.013

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Food Microbiol        ISSN: 0740-0020            Impact factor:   5.516


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