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Evaluation of potassium-clavulanate-supplemented modified charcoal-cefoperazone-deoxycholate agar for enumeration of Campylobacter in chicken carcass rinse.
J Food Sci. 2014 May; 79(5):M923-6.JF

Abstract

Potassium-clavulanate-supplemented modified charcoal-cefoperazone-deoxycholate agar (C-mCCDA) that was described in our previous study was compared with original mCCDA for the enumeration of Campylobacter in pure culture and chicken carcass rinse. The quantitative detection of viable Campylobacter cells from a pure culture, plated on C-mCCDA, is statistically similar (P > 0.05) to mCCDA. In total, 120 chickens were rinsed using 400 mL buffered peptone water. The rinses were inoculated onto C-mCCDA and mCCDA followed by incubation at 42 °C for 48 h. There was no statistical difference between C-mCCDA (45 of 120 plates; mean count, 145.5 CFU/mL) and normal mCCDA (46 of 120 plates; mean count, 160.8 CFU/mL) in the isolation rate and recovery of Campylobacter (P > 0.05) from chicken carcass rinse. The Pearson correlation coefficient value for the number of Campylobacter cells recovered in the 2 media was 0.942. However, the selectivity was much better on C-mCCDA than on mCCDA plates (P < 0.05). Significantly fewer C-mCCDA plates (33 out of 120 plates; mean count, 1.9 CFU/mL) were contaminated with non-Campylobacter cells than the normal mCCDA plates (67 out of 120 plates; mean count, 27.1 CFU/mL). The C-mCCDA may provide improved results for enumeration of Campylobacter in chicken meat alternative to mCCDA with its increased selectivity the modified agar possess.

Authors+Show Affiliations

KU Center for Food Safety, College of Veterinary Medicine, Konkuk Univ, Seoul, The Republic of Korea.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Comparative Study
Evaluation Study
Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

24787901

Citation

Chon, Jung-Whan, et al. "Evaluation of Potassium-clavulanate-supplemented Modified Charcoal-cefoperazone-deoxycholate Agar for Enumeration of Campylobacter in Chicken Carcass Rinse." Journal of Food Science, vol. 79, no. 5, 2014, pp. M923-6.
Chon JW, Kim HS, Kim H, et al. Evaluation of potassium-clavulanate-supplemented modified charcoal-cefoperazone-deoxycholate agar for enumeration of Campylobacter in chicken carcass rinse. J Food Sci. 2014;79(5):M923-6.
Chon, J. W., Kim, H. S., Kim, H., Oh, D. H., & Seo, K. H. (2014). Evaluation of potassium-clavulanate-supplemented modified charcoal-cefoperazone-deoxycholate agar for enumeration of Campylobacter in chicken carcass rinse. Journal of Food Science, 79(5), M923-6. https://doi.org/10.1111/1750-3841.12388
Chon JW, et al. Evaluation of Potassium-clavulanate-supplemented Modified Charcoal-cefoperazone-deoxycholate Agar for Enumeration of Campylobacter in Chicken Carcass Rinse. J Food Sci. 2014;79(5):M923-6. PubMed PMID: 24787901.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Evaluation of potassium-clavulanate-supplemented modified charcoal-cefoperazone-deoxycholate agar for enumeration of Campylobacter in chicken carcass rinse. AU - Chon,Jung-Whan, AU - Kim,Hong-Seok, AU - Kim,Hyunsook, AU - Oh,Deog-Hwan, AU - Seo,Kun-Ho, Y1 - 2014/05/01/ PY - 2013/09/27/received PY - 2013/12/23/accepted PY - 2014/5/3/entrez PY - 2014/5/3/pubmed PY - 2015/10/2/medline KW - C-mCCDA KW - Campylobacter KW - chicken carcass rinse KW - contaminants KW - enumeration SP - M923 EP - 6 JF - Journal of food science JO - J Food Sci VL - 79 IS - 5 N2 - Potassium-clavulanate-supplemented modified charcoal-cefoperazone-deoxycholate agar (C-mCCDA) that was described in our previous study was compared with original mCCDA for the enumeration of Campylobacter in pure culture and chicken carcass rinse. The quantitative detection of viable Campylobacter cells from a pure culture, plated on C-mCCDA, is statistically similar (P > 0.05) to mCCDA. In total, 120 chickens were rinsed using 400 mL buffered peptone water. The rinses were inoculated onto C-mCCDA and mCCDA followed by incubation at 42 °C for 48 h. There was no statistical difference between C-mCCDA (45 of 120 plates; mean count, 145.5 CFU/mL) and normal mCCDA (46 of 120 plates; mean count, 160.8 CFU/mL) in the isolation rate and recovery of Campylobacter (P > 0.05) from chicken carcass rinse. The Pearson correlation coefficient value for the number of Campylobacter cells recovered in the 2 media was 0.942. However, the selectivity was much better on C-mCCDA than on mCCDA plates (P < 0.05). Significantly fewer C-mCCDA plates (33 out of 120 plates; mean count, 1.9 CFU/mL) were contaminated with non-Campylobacter cells than the normal mCCDA plates (67 out of 120 plates; mean count, 27.1 CFU/mL). The C-mCCDA may provide improved results for enumeration of Campylobacter in chicken meat alternative to mCCDA with its increased selectivity the modified agar possess. SN - 1750-3841 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/24787901/Evaluation_of_potassium_clavulanate_supplemented_modified_charcoal_cefoperazone_deoxycholate_agar_for_enumeration_of_Campylobacter_in_chicken_carcass_rinse_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -