330 Introduction to Human Nutrition
Table 14.2
Characteristics of food-borne bacterial infections
Bacteria
Comment
Food-borne illness
(a) Min. temp (b) Opt. temp (c) Min. pH
a
(d) Min. A
bw
Heat resistance
(a) Gram stain(b) Aerobic/
anaerobic
(a) Source(b) Associated foods
b
(a) Onset(b) Duration
(a) Symptoms(b) Infectious dose
Bacillus cereus
(diarrheal)
Vegetative cells are inactivated
by normal cooking temperatures; however, spores are quite heat resistant. The diarrheal enterotoxin is produced when spores germinate in the small intestine after consumption of contaminated food
(a) 8–16 h(b) 12–14 h
(a) Abdominal pain and
diarrhea
(b)
>^10
5 cells
(a) 10°C(b) 30–35°C(c) 4.3(d) 0.95
Heat-sensitive, but
forms heat-resistant spores (D
121
=
0.03–2.35 min)
(a) Gram positive(b) Facultative
anaerobe
(a) Soil and dust(b) Meat, milk,
vegetables, fi sh and soups
Clostridium
perfringens
Illness results from
consumption of food containing high numbers of cells (
>^10
6 /g) followed by
enterotoxin production in the large intestine. When contaminated food is cooked, sporulation is induced. As the food cools, the spores germinate and vegetative cells continue to multiply, unless the food is cooled quickly and stored under refrigerated conditions
(a) 12–18 h
(can be 8–22 h)
(b) 24 h
(a) Diarrhea and severe
abdominal pain
(b)
>^10
6 cells/g
(a) 15°C(b) 43–45°C(c) 5.0(d) 0.95
Heat-sensitive, but
forms heat-resistant spores (D
= 1.3–2.8 min) 95
(a) Gram positive(b) Obligate
anaerobe
(a) Soil and animal
feces
(b) Meat, poultry,
gravy, dried and precooked foods