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Research Publications (Food Safety)

This page tracks research articles published in national and international peer-reviewed journals. Recent articles are available ahead of print and searchable by Journal, Article Title, and Category. Research publications are tracked across six categories: Bacterial Pathogens, Chemical Contaminants, Natural Toxins, Parasites, Produce Safety, and Viruses. Articles produced by USDA Grant Funding Agencies (requires login) and FDA Grant Funding Agencies (requires login) are also tracked in Scopus.

Displaying 101 - 125 of 1778

  1. Inactivation of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium and Staphylococcus aureus in rice by radio-frequency heating

    • Journal of Food Protection
    • The objectives of this study were to determine the effect of the milling degree (MD) of Oryza sativa L. (Korean rice) on the heating rate, pathogen inactivation (Salmonella Typhimurium and Staphylococcus aureus), and color change resulting from radio-frequency (RF) heating. Rice samples inoculated with pathogens were placed in a polypropylene jar and subjected to RF heating for 0-75 s.

      • Salmonella
      • Staphylococcus aureus
      • Bacterial pathogens
  2. Transfer of Salmonella from inert food contact surfaces to wheat flour, cornmeal and NaCl.

    • Journal of Food Protection
    • Salmonella contamination in a dry processing facility frequently requires removal methods that are non-aqueous. Removal of pathogens from food processing systems with a purge of uncontaminated dry food materials has been proposed, however, little is known with the respect to efficacy. In this study, survival of Salmonella on inert contact surfaces and transfer of Salmonella from inert contact surfaces to low-moisture foods was evaluated.

      • Salmonella
      • Bacterial pathogens
  3. Microbiome population dynamics of cold smoked sockeye salmon during refrigerated storage and after culture enrichment

    • Journal of Food Protection
    • Cold smoked salmon is a ready-to-eat seafood product of high commercial importance. The processing and storage steps facilitate the introduction, growth and persistence of foodborne pathogens and spoilage bacteria. The growth of commensal bacteria during storage and once the product is opened also influence the quality and safety of cold smoked salmon.

      • Bacterial pathogens
  4. Evaluation of steam-ultrasound decontamination on naturally contaminated broilers through the analysis of Campylobacter, total viable count, and Enterobacteriaceae

    • Journal of Food Protection
    • Combined steam-ultrasound process was investigated for decontamination of freshly slaughtered broilers. Combined steam-ultrasound was delivered simultaneously through specially designed nozzles. The nozzles were installed inside of a constructed machine that allowed for continuous processing.

      • Campylobacter
      • Bacterial pathogens
  5. Thermoresistance in black yeasts is associated with halosensitivity and HPP tolerance, but not with UV tolerance or sanitizer tolerance

    • Journal of Food Protection
    • Black yeasts can survive extreme conditions in food production owing to their polyextremotolerant character. However, significant strain-to-strain variation in black yeast thermoresistance has been observed. In this study, we assessed the variability in tolerance to nonthermal interventions among a collection of food-related black yeast strains. Variation in tolerance to UV light treatment, high pressure processing, sanitizers, and osmotic pressure was observed within each species.

  6. An Analysis of Tuna Recalls in the United States, 2002 through 2020

    • Journal of Food Protection
    • This manuscript reviews 18 years of voluntary recalls for commercially sold tuna in the United States. This recall information is a valuable indicator of the failure to implement procedures for food safety. The voluntary recalls involve fresh, frozen, processed, hermetically sealed and retorted in a shelf stable pack (i.e., canned tuna), and formulated into other tuna products.

      • Listeria monocytogenes
      • Bacterial pathogens
  7. Detection of Escherichia albertii in retail oysters

    • Journal of Food Protection
    • Escherichia albertii  is an emerging foodborne pathogen. Owing to its distribution in river water,  it is important to determine the presence of  E. albertii  in aquaculture-related foods. In this study, we investigated the distribution of  E. albertii  in retail oyster samples.

      • Bacterial pathogens
  8. Perfluorooctanoic Acid (PFOA) Transport in Soil and Absorption and Distribution in Alfalfa (Medicago sativa)

    • Journal of Food Protection
    • Perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA), used as a surfactant in consumer and industrial products, is frequently found in biosolids from wastewater treatment plants. When present in biosolids applied to croplands, PFOA has potential to contaminate feed and fodder used by livestock, but the extent of PFOA transfer from soil to plants is not well characterized. A single dose of [ 14 C]-PFOA was applied to unplanted soil or soil containing growing alfalfa.

  9. Food traceability systems, consumers’ risk perception, and purchase intention: Evidence from the “4-label-1-Q” approach in Taiwan

    • Journal of Food Protection
    • Many food safety issues have occurred in Taiwan during the past decade. Therefore, in 2016, the Taiwan government proposed the “Five rings of food safety” policy to comprehensively protect consumer food supply. Among these policies, the “4-labels-1-Q” approach was adopted to ensure the selection of “retrospective foods” with traceable labels.

  10. Phenotypic and Genotypic Characterization of Salmonella spp. Isolated from Foods Involved in Human Salmonellosis Outbreaks in Minas Gerais State, Brazil

    • Journal of Food Protection
    • Salmonella spp. is one of the primary pathogens that cause foodborne diseases worldwide. In the present study, we deeply characterized Salmonella spp. originated from foods related to human salmonellosis outbreaks in Minas Gerais – Brazil, from 2003 to 2017. In this regard, the serotyping, antimicrobial susceptibility, virulence genes and genetic polymorphism determined by rep-PCR were performed in 70 Salmonella spp. isolates. Thirteen serotypes of Salmonella spp. were identified, and S.

      • Salmonella
      • Bacterial pathogens
  11. Risk assessment of pesticide residues in Chinese litchis

    • Journal of Food Protection
    • The presence of pesticide residues in fruit has been of extensive concern worldwide. In this paper, pesticide residues in litchi samples in China and their dietary exposure risks were evaluated. Fifty-seven pesticides in 150 litchi samples were measured by GC and UPLC/MS-MS. Seventeen different pesticides were detected and 70.7% of samples contained one or more pesticide residues.

      • Pesticide residues
      • Chemical contaminants
  12. Diversity and antibiotic resistance profiles of Listeria monocytogenes serogroups in different food products from Transylvania Region, Central Romania

    • Journal of Food Protection
    • The aim of this study was to assess the presence and antimicrobial susceptibility profile of the molecularly serogrouped Listeria monocytogenes isolates in different animal origin food products, collected from a county situated in the historical region of Transylvania, Central Romania. A total of 7.7% (17/221) of the screened samples were positive for L.

      • Listeria monocytogenes
      • Bacterial pathogens
  13. Persistence of Listeria innocua on Fresh Apples During Long-Term Controlled Atmosphere Cold Storage with Postharvest Fungal Decay

    • Journal of Food Protection
    • Recent apple-related recall and outbreak events have exposed a need for better food safety controls along the supply chain. Following harvest apples can be stored under a controlled atmosphere for up to one year after harvest before packing and distribution, making the crop susceptible to many opportunities for contamination that increase the quantity of postharvest losses. Botrytis cinerea (BC) and Penicillium expansum (PE) cause significant rot-associated losses to the apple industry.

      • Listeria monocytogenes
      • Bacterial pathogens
      • Produce Safety
      • Post Harvest
  14. A comprehensive risk pathway of the qualitative likelihood of human exposure to SARS-CoV-2 from the food chain

    • Journal of Food Protection
    • A group of experts from all Canadian federal food safety partners was formed to monitor the potential issues relating to SARS-CoV-2 food contamination, to gather and consider all of the relevant evidence and to determine the impact for Canadian food safety.

      • Viruses
      • COVID-19
  15. Prevalence of Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli and Salmonella in native pecan orchards as influenced by waiting periods between grazing and harvest

    • Journal of Food Protection
    • Animals (grazing, working, or intrusion) in produce production areas may present a potential contamination source of foodborne pathogens on produce. Cattle grazing on native pecan production orchards, a common practice in the Southern United States, provides a great opportunity to study the impact of grazing practice and waiting periods on contamination rates of foodborne pathogens of tree nuts. Therefore, the objective of this study was to determine the prevalence of Salmonella spp.

      • Salmonella
      • Bacterial pathogens
  16. Research Note Consumption of Raw Flour in the United States: Results from the 2019 FDA Food Safety and Nutrition Survey

    • Journal of Food Protection
    • Several outbreaks of shigatoxin-producing E. coli (STEC) in the past decade linked to flour and flour-associated products have raised concerns that the consumption of raw flour represents a public health risk as a vehicle for foodborne pathogens. The extent to which consumers know and understand they should not consume raw flour is unclear. In the fall of 2019, the U.S.

      • Bacterial pathogens
  17. Impact of Interventions on the Survival of Salmonella enterica I 4,[5],12:I:- in Pork

    • Journal of Food Protection
    • A mixed culture of different isolates of Salmonella serovar I 4,[5], 12:i:- was compared to a mixed culture of reference Salmonella serovars as well as non-pathogenic Escherichia coli surrogates.. The two groups of Salmonella were compared for their resistance to commonly used pork carcass interventions, survival in ground pork and thermal resistance in ground pork.

      • Salmonella
      • Bacterial pathogens
  18. The influence of organic load and free chlorine on Salmonella cross-contamination of tomatoes in a model flume system

    • Journal of Food Protection
    • The process of washing tomatoes in dump (flume) tanks has been identified as a potential source of cross-contamination.

      • Salmonella
      • Bacterial pathogens
  19. Concentrations and human health risk of organochlorines in farmed freshwater aquatic products: fish ponds around the Changsha, China

    • Journal of Food Protection
    • The present study was conducted to reveal the concentrations and patterns of organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) in seven species of freshwater aquatic products ( procambarus clarkii, ctenopharyngodon idellus, parabramis pekinensis, hypophthalmichthys molitrix, cyprinus carpioio, aristichthys nobilis, carassius auratus ) collected from freshwater aquaculture farms around Changsha, China.

      • Pesticide residues
      • Chemical contaminants
  20. Microbiological Quality and Levels of Heavy Metals in Slipper Oyster (Crassostrea iredalei) Cultured in Major Growing Areas in Capiz Province, Western Visayas, Philippines: Compliance with International Shellfish Safety and Sanitation Standards

    • Journal of Food Protection
    • The increasing demand for slipper oyster ( Crassostrea iredalei ) has propelled farmers to expand oyster cultivation areas in the Philippines, chiefly for local consumption and feasibly for export overseas. Being filter feeders, oysters can accumulate pathogens from their surrounding waters, which can cause foodborne diseases once consumed. Monitoring oyster farming areas for microbiological quality and levels of heavy metals is therefore crucial.

      • Salmonella
      • Vibrio
      • Bacterial pathogens
  21. A rapid, sensitive, specific and visual detection of Salmonella in retail meats using the loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP), targeting the invA gene

    • Journal of Food Protection
    • Salmonella is one of the major pathogenic bacteria causing food-borne diseases. The rapid detection of Salmonella in food is of great significance to food safety. In this study, the loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) method was developed and the primers were designed targeting the invA gene of Salmonella.

      • Salmonella
      • Bacterial pathogens
  22. Rapid and Visualized Detection of Virulence-Related Genes of Vibrio cholerae in Water and Aquatic Products by Loop-Mediated Isothermal Amplification

    • Journal of Food Protection
    • Vibrio cholerae  can cause pandemic cholera in humans. The bacterium resides in aquatic environments worldwide. Continuous testing of V.

      • Vibrio
      • Bacterial pathogens
  23. Comparison of Statistical Methods for Identifying Risk Factors for Salmonella Contamination of Whole Chicken Carcasses

    • Journal of Food Protection
    • The complexity of the food system makes analyzing microbiological data from food studies challenging since many of the assumptions (e.g., linear relationship between independent and dependent variable, independence of observations) made by common analytical approaches (e.g., ANOVA) are violated. Further, repeated sampling within establishments introduces longitudinal correlation that must be accounted for during analyses.

      • Salmonella
      • Bacterial pathogens
  24. Efficacy and Quality Attributes of Antimicrobial Agents Application via a Commercial Electrostatic Spray Cabinet to Inactivate Salmonella on Chicken Thigh Meat

    • Journal of Food Protection
    • Salmonella is a foodborne pathogen associated with poultry meat. This study aimed to determine the efficiency and quality attributes of two antimicrobial agents to reduce Salmonella on raw chicken meat when applied individually and in combination using an electrostatic spray cabinet.

      • Salmonella
      • Bacterial pathogens
  25. Nanoemulsified carvacrol as a novel washing treatment reduces Escherichia coli O157:H7 on spinach and lettuce

    • Journal of Food Protection
    • Fresh produce continues to be the main source of foodborne illness outbreaks in the United States implicating bacterial pathogens such as Escherichia coli O157:H7 (EHEC). The efficacy of nanoemulsified carvacrol (NCR) as a washing treatment in reducing EHEC on fresh produce was investigated. Fresh baby spinach, Romaine lettuce, and Iceberg lettuce leaves (2.5 cm diameter cores) were spot-inoculated with a five-strain cocktail of nalidixic acid resistant EHEC at ~ 6 log CFU/cm 2 .

      • Escherichia coli O157:H7
      • Bacterial pathogens