perspective growth, and death growth, and death of microorganisms professor thomas j. montville

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Perspective Perspective Growth, and Growth, and Death Death Of Of Microorganisms Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

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Page 1: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

PerspectivePerspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of MicroorganismsOf Microorganisms

Professor Thomas J. Montville

Page 2: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

Respecting our AncestorsRespecting our Ancestors

Earth formed 6 billion years agoEarth formed 6 billion years ago

BacteriaBacteria appear 3.5 billion years.

Dinosaurs go extinct 250 million years ago.

Humans arrive 3 million years ago.

Take home message:________________

Page 3: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

Take home message:________________

Page 4: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

Bacteria ‘R UsBacteria ‘R UsBacteria are the most predominant life

form, by number and mass.

(Take home: _______)

You are as many bacterial cells as human cells.

You are an open ecosystems.

Page 5: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

““We do not live in a sterile world.”We do not live in a sterile world.”

“There’s nothing we can do to keep a bird from pooping on that field.”

Dr. Tom Montville, News Channel 4

Page 6: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

Food Safety - Old ModelFood Safety - Old Model

Pinpoint Problem

Provide Solution

Promulgate Regulation

Punish

Page 7: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

Food Safety -RealityFood Safety -Reality

Place Event ResultFarm Lettuce near pig pen 60 E.coli O157:H7

Truck Pasteurized after raw 30,000 salmonellosis Factory Pasteurize half of input-100 listeriosis

Outlet Undercook product E.coli O157:H7 outbreak

Home Wrong storage Temp. Botulism

Who is responsible for food safety? _______________

Page 8: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

Food Safety Farm to ForkFood Safety Farm to Fork

Page 9: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville
Page 10: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

**

Tauxe, 2005. (2005 data in MMWR of April 14, 2006 are similar. )

*

Page 11: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

Questions and Answers:Questions and Answers:

Page 12: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

Modes of Microbial GrowthModes of Microbial Growth

Bacteria:

Yeast:

Molds:

Page 13: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

The bacterial growth cycle has four phases:The bacterial growth cycle has four phases:

time

log

cfu/

ml

4

8

12

lag

logarithmic or exponential

stationary

death

Page 14: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

The Miracle (or curse) of Exponential GrowthThe Miracle (or curse) of Exponential Growth

N = NN = Nooeektkt

N = Number of bacteria at any time, t

No= Initial number of bacteria

k= Rate constant, influenced strongly by temperature, also influenced

by environmental conditions

Page 15: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

In plain English, bacteria grow by doubling:In plain English, bacteria grow by doubling:

1 -> 2 -> 4 -> 8 -> 16 -> 32 -> 64 -> 128 -> 256 => 500 -> 1000 ->

One bacterium can grow to one million bacteria

in ___ doublings!

Page 16: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

Handwashing reduces NHandwashing reduces Noo((http://users.aol.com/comcontrol/comply.htm)http://users.aol.com/comcontrol/comply.htm)

(http://www.asmusa.org/pcsrc/ochsur.htm) (http://www.asmusa.org/pcsrc/ochsur.htm)

Study of handwashing in restaurants, foodservice, healthcare settings show <2 washings per day.

FDA estimates poor handwashing contributes to 80 million cases in U.S.

94 % say they wash their hands after using public toilets.

68% observed wash their hands after using public toilets.

Page 17: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

Bacteriological Survey ofBacteriological Survey of Sponges and Dishcloths Sponges and Dishcloths

(Enriquez, et al., 1997. Dairy Food Environ Sanitarian 17:20-24)(Enriquez, et al., 1997. Dairy Food Environ Sanitarian 17:20-24)

Organism Sponge Cloth

Total Coliforms 1 x 105 1 x 105

Fecal Coliforms 4 x 102 2 x 103

Salmonella 15% 20%Staphylococcus 20% 19%

Page 18: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

Restaurants, Bars, and HomesRestaurants, Bars, and HomesYepiz-Gomez, et al. J. Food Protect. Trends. 26:786-Yepiz-Gomez, et al. J. Food Protect. Trends. 26:786-

792, 2006792, 2006

Page 19: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

The ultimate comparison, Restaurants vs Homes!

Page 20: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

““Reasonable” Microbiological Reasonable” Microbiological Criteria for Ready to Eat FoodsCriteria for Ready to Eat Foods

Salmonella 0/25 g

Listeria monocytogenes 0/25g

E. coli <10 cfu/g

O157:H7 “none”

Staphylococcus aureus <100 cfu/g

Clostridium perfringens <100 cfu/g

“Total” plate count <500,000 cfu/g

Page 21: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

Influence of temperatureInfluence of temperature

0

1200

1000

800600

400

200

Dou

blin

g tim

e, m

in.

10 20 30 40

Temperature, °C

330

155

20

Page 22: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

Temperature effect on growth- chickenTemperature effect on growth- chicken

time, days

log

cfu/

cm2

4

8

12

slime

odor

10° C 4.4° C 0° C

2 4 8 16

Page 23: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

THE "40-140" RULETHE "40-140" RULE

FOODS SHOULD BE HELD:

BELOW 40° F

OR

ABOVE 140°F

COROLLARY:COROLLARY: WHEN HEATING OR COOLING, BRING FOODS THROUGH THE 40-140°F REGION AS RAPIDLY

AS POSSIBLE

Page 24: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

Microbial death curve, Microbial death curve, IdealIdeal

time

log

cfu/

ml

4

8

12

0

Page 25: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

IMPLICATIONS OF LOGARITHMIC DEATH:IMPLICATIONS OF LOGARITHMIC DEATH:

1) Sterility is theoretically impossible.

2) The effectiveness of a given heat treatment is dependent on the initial microbial load, i.e. a 6D process that "works" when the initial number is 104

cfu/ml will 'fail' when the initial number is 108 cfu/ml.

3) The significance of 'fractional survivors.' In a 6D process, if you start with 1 spore per unit, one in 106 units will contain a viable spore after processing.

Page 26: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

““The perp walk”The perp walk”

Page 27: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

Sporulation and GerminationSporulation and Germination

vegetative cell

sporulation

dormancy

activation

germination

outgrowth

Page 28: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

Botulism and Temperature Abused Pot Pie Botulism and Temperature Abused Pot Pie (Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, Vol. 32, # 3, January 1983).

Patient: 56 year old diabetic woman

Symptoms: diplopia, weakness, difficulty breathing, chest pain, respiratory arrest.

Scenario: Son prepared pot pie for mother. Father brought home take-out hamburgers. Mother left pot pie out on shelf (in California, in August), and ate it two and one-half days later without reheating.

Illness: next day. Type A botulinum toxin was isolated from the left-over food and patient's serum.

Page 29: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

Bacillus cereus Bacillus cereus - food poisoning- food poisoning

Diarrheal typeDiarrheal typeOnset: > 6 hr

Range = 6 - 14 hr

Average = 9 hr

Symptoms: Diarrhea

Nausea, Cramps

Rectal tenesmus

Fever generally absent

Recovery: 20 - 36 HR

Emetic typeEmetic typeOnset: < 6 hr

Range = 0.5 - 6 Hr

Average = 2 hr

Symptoms: Vomiting,

Nausea, Cramps

Diarrhea (+)

Fever generally absent

Recovery: 8 - 10 Hr

Page 30: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

Foods associated with Foods associated with Bacillus cereus Bacillus cereus outbreaksoutbreaks

Meats and Gravies

Sauces and Puddings

Miscellaneous Vegetable Dishes

Fried Rice and Other Rice Products

Page 31: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

Many Many Bacillus thuringiensisBacillus thuringiensis isolates isolates produce "produce "Bacillus cereusBacillus cereus" "

diarrheal toxin.diarrheal toxin.

S.G. Jackson, et al., 1995. Letters Appl. Microbiol. 21:103-105.P.H. Damgaard, et al., 1996. Letters Appl. Microbiol. 23:146-150.

Page 32: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

Staphylococcus aureusStaphylococcus aureusFOOD POISONING SYNDROME

onset: 0.5 to 6 hours

recovery: 24 to 72 hrs

major symptoms: vomiting, diarrhea

other symptoms: nausea, salivation,

cramps, retching,

prostration

Page 33: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

Staphylococcus aureus Staphylococcus aureus Case StudyCase StudyFlight from Tokyo to Copenhagen via Anchorage

196 of 343 passengers, 1 of 20 crew

food eaten:

1 h post Anchorage, snack, served to all

5.5 h post Anchorage, steak dinner, crew

5.6 h post Anchorage, cheese omelet w/ ham

passengers only

onset: 0.5 to 5.5 h after breakfast, average 2.5 h

symptoms:

diarrhea (88%), vomiting (82%)

cramps (74%), nausea (68%)

Page 34: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

Staphylococcus aureus Staphylococcus aureus InvestigationInvestigation

Isolated SED-producing S. aureus from fecal swabs of 5 patients and from left over omelet and ham.

Isolated SED from omelet and ham. Breakfast prepared day before flight, held at room

temperature for 6 h during preparation Held 14.5 h at 10°C prior to the flight. Held at room temperature during the flight, then heated. Isolated SED-producing S. aureus from inflamed lesion

on the hand of the cook who had made the breakfast.

Page 35: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

1989- STAPHYLOCOCCAL FOOD POISONING1989- STAPHYLOCOCCAL FOOD POISONING

Staphylococcal Enterotoxin Found

In Canned Mushrooms From

Peoples Republic of China

4 Outbreaks, > 100 Cases

English, et al., Dec. 1990, Food Technol. p. 74

Page 36: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

centralized agriculture:

local farm plant export

2 to 4 hours

free market agriculture:

local farm brokers plant export

weeks in PVC bags

S. aureus is poor competitor with aerobic

spoilage organisms, but competes well under

anaerobic conditions.

O2 respiratory demand = 3,160 cc/kg/h

PVC permeability = 21 cc/h

Page 37: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

centralized agriculture:

local farm plant export

2 to 4 hours

free market agriculture:

local farm brokers plant export

weeks in PVC bags

S. aureus is poor competitor with aerobic

spoilage organisms, but competes well under

anaerobic conditions.

O2 respiratory demand = 3,160 cc/kg/h

PVC permeability = 21 cc/h

Page 38: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

Why do "new" pathogens emerge?Why do "new" pathogens emerge?(Lynton Cox, Food Technol. 43(12)52-59, 1989)

1. CHANGES IN EATING HABITS, fresh, organic2. CHANGES IN AWARENESS , computer databases3. CHANGES IN DEMOGRAPHICS larger sensitive populations4. CHANGES IN PRIMARY FOOD PRODUCTION scale of operation, global production5. CHANGES IN FOOD PROCESSING

TECHNOLOGY. MA, chill, vacuum packaging6. CHANGES IN HANDLING AND PREPARATION home refrigeration, microwave7. CHANGES IN THE MICROORGANISMS, plasmids

Page 39: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

Bad News on RefrigerationBad News on Refrigeration

Hutton, et al., 1991, J Food Safety 11:255-267

15 CITY - 100 SUPERMARKET STUDY OF REFRIGERATOR CASES

90% OVER 40°F

20% OVER 50°F

Woodburn, J. Am. Diet. Assoc. 87:322-326

21% OF HOME REFRIGERATORS OVER 50°F

Page 40: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

Listeria monocytogenes-Listeria monocytogenes-disease syndromes

1. Low grade "flu-like" infection - not serious, except in pregnant woman (who abort).

Up to 16% women carry L. monocytogenes without illness. (Larmont and Postlethwaite, 1986, J. Infection 13:187-193.)

2. Listeric meningitis- headache, drowsiness, coma. 50%

fatality rate. If very young and old are excluded, this drops to 30%.

3. Perinatal infection - 0.15% to 2.0% of all perinatal mortality.

4. Encephalitis

5. Psychosis

6. Infectious mononucleosis

7. Septicemia

Page 41: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

Los Angeles Mexican Soft Cheese Los Angeles Mexican Soft Cheese - 93 Perinatal cases:

19 Still births

10 Postnatal deaths

- 49 Adult cases:

18 Deaths

- Linked with Mexican soft cheese

- Same phage type isolated from cases

and processing plant

- Plant's milk throughput

exceeded capacity of pasteurizer

- Cheese was alkaline phosphate positive

Page 42: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

Sporadic ListeriosisSporadic ListeriosisSchwartz, et al., 1988, Lancet 779-782Schwartz, et al., 1988, Lancet 779-782

• CDC population study of 34 million people yields 154 cases with 28%fatality.

• 82 cases matched with 239 controls reveals statistical link to uncooked hot dogs, undercooked chicken.

• Home refrigerator study

Page 43: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

Risk for ListeriosisRisk for ListeriosisSouthwick & Purich, New Eng. J. Med. 334:770, 1996Southwick & Purich, New Eng. J. Med. 334:770, 1996

•General Population•Over 70 years old•Pregnant•H.I.V. positive

0.7 cases /100,000

3 times higher

17 times higher

100 - 300 times higher

Page 44: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

There is a zero tolerance for L. There is a zero tolerance for L. monocytogenes in r-t-e foods, monocytogenes in r-t-e foods,

but no 100% accurate for but no 100% accurate for detecting it.detecting it.

Page 45: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

1998/99 “Sara Lee” Outbreak1998/99 “Sara Lee” Outbreak(Bil Mar, Ball Park franks)

79 illnesses in 17 states12 deaths, three miscarages35 million pounds of product recalledRecall costs (to Sara Lee) $50-70 million Stock price falls from $55 to $25Oscar Mayer (Unit of Philip Morris) also has January recall of deli

meats due to illness report

These are the “big boys,”

what of the “mom & pops”?

Page 46: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

SalmonellaSalmonella

Page 47: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

SalmonellaSalmonella spp. spp.

Increasing antimicrobial resistance.

Large and dispersed outbreaks.

Habitat intestinal tract of animals.

49% of animal feed contaminated.

15-25% of poultry contaminated.

Page 48: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville
Page 49: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

S. enteritidisS. enteritidis

Colonizes ovaries.

Internal contamination of egg.

May penetrate egg shell during cooling.

Capable of multiplication at 10-15 C in egg yolk or albumen.

Generally low numbers recovered.

Low % contaminated samples.

Page 50: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

S. enteritidisS. enteritidisOutbreak 1994, 224,000 persons in U.S.

develop S. enteritidis gastroenteritis after they ate ice cream.

Contamination was linked to transport of pasteurized ice cream premix in tanker trailers that had previously carried nonpasteurized liquid eggs.

SOP violations:British Airways Outbreak

Casino case

Page 51: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

CONTROLCONTROL

Cook eggs thoroughly (Pass a Law)

Avoid cross-contamination

Employ proper refrigeration

Regulate employees CONTROL ON THE FARM

Page 52: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

CampylobacterCampylobacter

Campylobacteriosis more common than salmonellosis.

Higher morbidity, lower mortality.

Infective dose can be small.

30-70% of all chickens infected.

Page 53: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville
Page 54: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

E. coliE. coli O157:H7 O157:H7

Page 55: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

E. coliE. coli O157:H7 O157:H7

DiseaseOnset 5 to 7d following ingestion

Hemorrhagic colitisBlood in stools

Severe abdominal pain

Some vomiting

No fever

Page 56: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

E. coli O157:H7• Disease

– Hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS)• Blood clots block tubules in kidney resulting in

accumulation of waste products• Renal failure in children

– Thrombotic thrombocytopenic Purpura (TTP)• Decrease number of platelets• Spontaneous hemorrhages beneath the skin• Blood clotting in brain

Page 57: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville
Page 58: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

At least hamburgers get cooked!

Page 59: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

FACTORS CONTRIBUTING TO OUTBREAKS, U.S.FACTORS CONTRIBUTING TO OUTBREAKS, U.S.(Snyder, J. Food Service Systems 6:107-139, 1991)(Snyder, J. Food Service Systems 6:107-139, 1991)

Contributory factor Percent1. Improper cooling 43.72. <12 between preparing and eating 22.63. Colonized person handling implicated food 18.14. Incorporating raw food/ingredient into foods that received no further cooking 15.85. Inadequate cooking/canning/heat processing 15.56. Improper hot handling 13.37. Inadequate reheating 10.68. Obtaining food from unsafe source 10.09. Cross contamination 5.410. Improper cleaning of equipment/utensils 5.4

Page 60: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville

Questions?Questions?Answers?Answers?

Comments?Comments?

Page 61: Perspective Growth, and Death Growth, and Death Of Microorganisms Professor Thomas J. Montville