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HYGIENIZATION OF INDIAN CHICKEN MEAT BY IONIZING RADIATION
Authors:A S KAMAT  M D ALUR  D P NERKAR  P M NAIR
Affiliation:Food Technology and Enzyme Engineering Division Bhabha Atomic Research Centre Trombay, Bombay 400 085, India
Abstract:Both fresh and frozen chicken meat were evaluated for microbiological status by screening for total bacterial counts and for the presence of pathogens like Enterobacteria , Bacillus cereus, coagulase positive Staphylococci and Salmonella spp. Most of the samples exhibited heavy bacterial contamination (1.2 × 105 - 2.6 × 106/g), mainly with Staphylococcus spp. (1.5 × 104 - 2.8 × 105/g). All the chicken samples also showed the presence of Salmonellae (3 × 101 - 2.1 × 102/g). Among the different serotypes observed in chickens . S. typhimurium was common in fresh as well as frozen chicken. Radicidation at 2 kGy at cryogenic conditions (?40°C) was efficient in eliminating the natural pathogenic contamination of the poultry . Salmonella spp. viz. S. seftenberg and S. typhimurium differed in radiation sensitivity, the D10 values in phosphate buffer (pH 7.2) being 0.25 kGy and 0.12 kGy, respectively. Chicken homogenate (10%) offered approximately 2-fold protection to these cells. Chicken samples artificially inoculated with a heavy inoculum (108 cells/g) of these 2 serotypes required higher gamma radiation doses of 4–5 kGy. The findings suggested that a dose of 2 kGy is adequate for normally contaminated chicken samples, but for the heavily contaminated chicken a dose of 4–5 kGy, depending upon the predominating Salmonella serotype present, is required .
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