Abstract
Antimicrobial compounds are used in animal husbandry to prevent and treat bacterial diseases and as illegal growth-promoting agents. Due to the excessive and inappropriate use of antibiotics, the antibiotic residues in milk can cause allergic reactions and antibiotic resistance. A rapid biochip-based method for the multi-analyte screening of 6 families of antibiotic residues (quinolones, ceftiofur, florfenicol, streptomycin, tylosin, and tetracyclines) in milk was validated based on Commission Decision 2002/657 and the European guidance for screening methods for veterinary medicinal products. This methodology allows the 6 antibiotic families to be detected simultaneously, increasing the screening capacity and reducing costs in test settings. The method's applicability was shown by screening 38 UHT cow milk samples taken from Tehran province, IR Iran. The results showed that the positive threshold T was above Fm, and the CCβ was below the European Commission's Maximum Residue Limit (MRL) (100 ppb for ceftiofur and tetracycline and 50 ppb for tylosin in milk). Norfloxacin was detected in about 8% of the samples and tylosin in 2.63%. The total antibiotic concentration in UHT cow milk samples was lower than the European Commission's MRL. This study showed that the biochip technique is valid for screening tylosin, ceftiofur, streptomycin, tetracycline, norfloxacin, and florfenicol in milk. It was found that the method was easy, quick, and capable of detecting 6 families of antibiotic residues simultaneously from a single milk sample without sample preparation.
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