Abstract

BackgroundAnimal feed as a source of infection to food producing animals is much debated. In order to increase our present knowledge about possible feed transmission it is important to know that the present isolation methods for Salmonella are reliable also for feed materials.In a comparative study the ability of the standard method used for isolation of Salmonella in feed in the Nordic countries, the NMKL71 method (Nordic Committee on Food Analysis) was compared to the Modified Semisolid Rappaport Vassiliadis method (MSRV) and the international standard method (EN ISO 6579:2002). Five different feed materials were investigated, namely wheat grain, soybean meal, rape seed meal, palm kernel meal, pellets of pig feed and also scrapings from a feed mill elevator. Four different levels of the Salmonella serotypes S. Typhimurium, S. Cubana and S. Yoruba were added to each feed material, respectively. For all methods pre-enrichment in Buffered Peptone Water (BPW) were carried out followed by enrichments in the different selective media and finally plating on selective agar media.ResultsThe results obtained with all three methods showed no differences in detection levels, with an accuracy and sensitivity of 65% and 56%, respectively. However, Müller-Kauffmann tetrathionate-novobiocin broth (MKTTn), performed less well due to many false-negative results on Brilliant Green agar (BGA) plates. Compared to other feed materials palm kernel meal showed a higher detection level with all serotypes and methods tested.ConclusionThe results of this study showed that the accuracy, sensitivity and specificity of the investigated cultural methods were equivalent. However, the detection levels for different feed and feed ingredients varied considerably.

Highlights

  • Animal feed as a source of infection to food producing animals is much debated

  • All non-spiked feed materials were negative for Salmonella with the NMKL71 method, which was later confirmed by the EN ISO 6579:2002 and Modified Semisolid Rappaport Vassiliadis (MSRV) methods

  • The detection levels observed with MSRV, Müller-Kauffmann tetrathionate-novobiocin broth (MKTTn) or Rappaport-Vassiliadis with soy broth (RVS) were similar with the feed materials tested

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Summary

Introduction

Animal feed as a source of infection to food producing animals is much debated. In order to increase our present knowledge about possible feed transmission it is important to know that the present isolation methods for Salmonella are reliable for feed materials.In a comparative study the ability of the standard method used for isolation of Salmonella in feed in the Nordic countries, the NMKL71 method (Nordic Committee on Food Analysis) was compared to the Modified Semisolid Rappaport Vassiliadis method (MSRV) and the international standard method (EN ISO 6579:2002). Animal feed as a source of infection to food producing animals is much debated. The presence of Salmonella in animal feed and feed ingredients is not unusual [1] and cases of human illnesses have been reported where the source of infection were found to be contaminated animal feed [4]. Cubana in Sweden occurred in a large number of pig farms where the source of infection was traced back to a feed mill that produced pelleted pig feed, indicating the potential effects of feed contamination for further dissemination of Salmonella in the food chain [8]. It was found that the source of infection was a contaminated cooler for the pelleted feed where multiplication of Salmonella occurred in the humid and warm coatings inside the cooler

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