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Research Project: MICROBIAL MODELING AND BIOINFORMATICS FOR FOOD SAFETY AND SECURITY

Location: Residue Chemistry and Predictive Microbiology

Title: Predictive model for growth of Clostridium perfringens during cooling of cooked ground chicken

Authors
item Juneja, Vijay
item Marks, Harry - FSIS
item Thippareddi, Harshavardhan - UNIV. OF NEBRASKA

Submitted to: Innovative Food Science and Emerging Technologies
Publication Type: Peer Reviewed Journal
Publication Acceptance Date: January 20, 2009
Publication Date: April 1, 2009
Citation: Juneja, V.K., Marks, H., Thippareddi, H. 2009. Predictive model for growth of Clostridium perfringens during cooling of cooked ground chicken. Innovative Food Science and Emerging Technologies. 10:260-266.

Interpretive Summary: One of the most common types of food poisoning in the United States is caused by the bacterium, Clostridium perfringens. Illnesses have been traditionally associated with inadequate cooling practices in retail food service operations. Thus, there was a need to determine the time and temperature for cooked uncured meat products to remain pathogen-free and provide vital data for performing risk assessment on cooked meat. We developed a model that can be used to predict the growth of C. perfringens at temperatures relevant to the cooling of cooked products. The predictive model will be of immediate use to the retail food service operations and regulatory agencies to aid with the disposition of products subject to cooling deviations and therefore, ensure the safety of the cooked foods.

Technical Abstract: Traditional methodologies for development of microbial growth models under dynamic temperature conditions do not take into account the organism’s prior history. Such models were shown to be inadequate in predicting growth of the organisms under dynamic conditions commonly encountered in the food industry. The objective of the current research was to develop a predictive model for C. perfringens spore germination and outgrowth in cooked chicken products during cooling by incorporating a function to describe the prior history of the microbial cell in the secondary model. Incorporating an assumption that growth kinetics depends in an explicit way on the cells’ history provide accurate estimates of growth or inactivation. Cooked, ground chicken was inoculated with C. perfringens spores and vacuum packaged. For the isothermal experiments, all samples were incubated in a constant temperature water baths stabilized at selected temperatures between 10 - 51C and sampled periodically. The samples were cooled from 54.4 to 27C and subsequently from 27 to 4C at different time periods (cooling rates) for dynamic cooling experiments. For a temperature decline from 54.4C to 27C in 1.5 h, the standard model predicted a log10 relative growth of about 1.15, with a standard error (SE) of about 0.065 log10, while the mean of observed results for two replicates was 0.47 log10. For the same temperature decline in 3 h, the predicted log10 relative growth was about. 3.3 log10 (with a SE of about 0.07), and the mean of the observed log10 relative growths were 2.7 log10. However, for a selected memory model, an estimate of log10 relative growth for the above cooling scenario was 0.76 log10, within 0.3 log10 of the observed mean. For other cooling scenarios this memory model provided predictions within 0.3 log10 of the mean observed log10 growth values. These findings point to an improvement of predictions obtained by memory models over those obtained by the standard model.

   

 
Project Team
Juneja, Vijay
Hwang, Cheng-An - Andy
Huang, Lihan
 
Publications
   Publications
 
Related National Programs
  Food Safety, (animal and plant products) (108)
 
 
Last Modified: 05/25/2013
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