| Literature DB >> 29805286 |
Xinjie Song1, Hui Teng2, Lei Chen2, Myunghee Kim1.
Abstract
Cronobacter species have been associated with disease outbreaks and sporadic infections, particularly in premature and immunocompromised infants. Cronobacter species can cause foodborne infections such as neonatal meningitis, septicaemia and necrotising enterocolitis. Accordingly, there is an urgent need to control and monitor the Cronobacter species in food, especially in powdered infant formula (PIF) and other baby foods. Therefore, in this review, the isolation and prevalence of Cronobacter species in infant food including PIF and the recent advance of detection methods are discussed for the better understanding on the current research status of Cronobacter species.Entities:
Keywords: Cronobacter species; detection; isolation; powdered infant formula; prevalence
Year: 2018 PMID: 29805286 PMCID: PMC5960834 DOI: 10.5851/kosfa.2018.38.2.376
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Korean J Food Sci Anim Resour ISSN: 1225-8563 Impact factor: 2.622
Outbreaks and cases of infections
| Location | Year | Cease/Death | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| St. Albans, England | 1958 | 2/2 | |
| Denmark | 1965 | 1/None | |
| Macon, GA, USA | 1979 | 1/Not mentioned | |
| Indianapolis, IN, USA | 1981 | 1/None | |
| The Netherlands | 1983 | 8/None | |
| Athens, Greece | 1985 | 1/Not mentioned | |
| Reykjavik, Iceland | 1986-1987 | 3/1 | |
| Boston, MA, and New Orleans, LA, USA | 1987 | 2/Not mentioned | |
| Memphis, TN, USA | 1988 | 4/Not mentioned | |
| Baltimore, MD, USA | 1990 | 1/Not mentioned | |
| Cincinnati, OH, USA | 1990 | 1/Not mentioned | |
| Israel | 1993, 1995, 1997,1998 | 4/Not mentioned | |
| Boston, MA, USA | 1995/1996 | 5/4 | |
| Belgium | 1998 | 12/2 | |
| Winston Salem, NC, USA | 2000 | 1/None | |
| Israel | 1997-2000 | 5/None | |
| Knoxville, TN, USA | 2001 | 10/1 | |
| Tennessee, USA | 2002 | 1/1 | |
| Wisconsin, USA | 2002 | 1/Not mentioned | CDC unpublished data, |
| USA | 2003 | 6/Not mentioned | CDC unpublished data; |
| France | 2004 | 2/Not mentioned | |
| USA | 2004 | 2/Not mentioned | CDC unpublished data; |
| USA | 2005 | 2/Not mentioned | CDC unpublished data; |
| Canada | 2007 | 2/Not mentioned | |
| New Mexico, USA | 2008 | 2/None | |
| Queretaro, Mexico | 2010 | 2/None | |
| Florida, Illinois, Missouri, and Oklahoma, USA | 2011 | 4/2 | |
| Not mentioned | 2012 | 1/None | |
| China | 2017 | 2/1 |
Prevalence of Cronobacter in powdered infant formula
| Year | Location | Positive rate (%) | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2006 | Republic of Korea | 20 | |
| 2006 | Jordan | 18 | |
| 2011 | China | 4 | |
| 2012 | China | 1.1 | |
| 2012 | Republic of Korea | 18.6 | |
| 2014 | China | 0 | |
| 2014 | China | 11.5 | |
| 2016 | Abidjan, Cote d’lvorie | 12 |
Detection methods for Cronobacter species
| Techniques | Specificity | Detection time | Detection limits | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Culture based detection methods | ||||
| Selective media | 5-7 days | 1 CFU/ 100 g | ||
| Selective media and fluorescent | 24 h | Not mentioned | ||
| PCR based detection methods | ||||
| Real-time PCR, selective agar | Within 2 days | 1 CFU/ 100 g | ||
| Conventional PCR | 1 h | Not mentioned | ||
| PCR-based detection | Less than 24 h | 1 CFU/ 100 g | ||
| Duplex PCR, immobilization | 2-3 h | 3 CFU/g | ||
| Duplex PCR, electrophoresis-laser induced fluorescence detector | 2-3 h | 1.6 CFU/mL | ||
| TaqMan real-time PCR | 1 day | 1 CFU/mL | ||
| Immunological detection methods | ||||
| INC-ELISA | 36 h | 1 cell/25 g | ||
| Sandwich ELISA | Within 2 days | 6.3×104 CFU/mL without enrichment | ||
| Sandwich ELISA and indirect enzyme-linked ELISA | Within 2 days | 104 CFU/mL, 1 CFU/ mL with enrichment | ||
| Fluorescence-based liposome immunoassay | 13 h | 6.3×104 CFU/mL | ||
| Immunochromatographic strip | genus | 16 h | 10 cell/ 10 g | |
| Immuno-blotting analysis, cross-priming amplification | 60-70 min with pre-enrichment | 100 CFU/100 g | ||
| Biosensor based detection methods | ||||
| Silica-coated magnetic nanoparticles, immunochromatographic strip | 15 min | 106 CFU/mL | ||
| Immunomagnetic nanoparticles, immunuliposome | 2 h and 30 min | 3.3×103 CFU/mL | ||
| Cationic-magnetic-beads, selective media | 24 h | 1-5 CFU/500 g | ||
| Probe-magnetic-bead, real-time qPCR | Less than 4 h | 103 CFU/mL in artificially contaminated PIF | ||
| Biofunctionalized magnetic nanoparticles, nuclear magnetic resonance | 2 h | 10 cells/10 g | ||
| Other detection methods | ||||
| MALDI-TOF MS | 46 h | Less than 10 cells/100 g | ||
| RNA hybridisation assay, lateral flow | 29 h | 100 CFU/mL | ||