Normanno G, La Salandra G, Dambrosio A, Quaglia N C, Corrente M, Parisi A, Santagada G, Firinu A, Crisetti E, Celano G V
Department of Health and Animal Welfare, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, 70010 Valenzano (Bari) Italy.
Int J Food Microbiol. 2007 Apr 20;115(3):290-6. doi: 10.1016/j.ijfoodmicro.2006.10.049. Epub 2007 Jan 16.
Staphylococcus aureus is considered to be one of the leading causes of food-borne illnesses. Milk, dairy products and meats are often contaminated with enterotoxigenic strains of this bacterium. Foodstuff contamination may occur directly from infected food-producing animals or may result from poor hygiene during production processes, or the retail and storage of foods, since humans may carry the microorganism. The number of S. aureus strains that exhibits antimicrobial-resistance properties has increased, together with the potential risk of transmitting the same properties to the human microflora via foods or inducing infections hard to be treated. This paper reports the results of a 3-year survey (2003-2005) on the occurrence of S. aureus in meat and dairy products. Of 1634 samples examined, 209 (12.8%) were contaminated with S. aureus. A total of 125 enterotoxigenic S. aureus strains were biotyped and their antimicrobial resistance pattern tested. Most of the isolated strains produced SED (33.6%), followed by SEA (18.4%), SEC (15.2%), SEB (6.4%) and belonged mainly to the Human ecovar (50.4%), followed by Ovine (23.2%), Non-Host-Specific (17.6%), Bovine (7.2%) and Poultry-like (1.6%) ecovars. Finally, the 68.8% analysed strains showed antimicrobial resistance properties at least at one of antibiotics tested. Human biotype showed antimicrobial resistance at more than one antibiotic than the other biotypes (p<0.05). The results provided evidence that the presence of enterotoxigenic and antimicrobial resistant strains of S. aureus has become remarkably widespread in foods. This calls for better control of sources of food contamination and of the spread of antimicrobial-resistance organisms.
金黄色葡萄球菌被认为是食源性疾病的主要病因之一。牛奶、乳制品和肉类常常被这种细菌的产肠毒素菌株污染。食品污染可能直接来自受感染的食用动物,也可能是由于生产过程、食品零售及储存过程中卫生条件不佳所致,因为人类也可能携带这种微生物。具有抗微生物特性的金黄色葡萄球菌菌株数量有所增加,同时存在通过食物将这些特性传播给人类微生物群或引发难以治疗的感染的潜在风险。本文报告了一项为期3年(2003 - 2005年)对肉类和乳制品中金黄色葡萄球菌发生情况的调查结果。在所检测的1634份样本中,有209份(12.8%)被金黄色葡萄球菌污染。总共对125株产肠毒素的金黄色葡萄球菌菌株进行了生物分型,并检测了它们的抗微生物耐药模式。大多数分离菌株产生SED(33.6%),其次是SEA(18.4%)、SEC(15.2%)、SEB(6.4%),主要属于人类生态型(50.4%),其次是绵羊生态型(23.2%)、非宿主特异性生态型(17.6%)、牛生态型(7.2%)和家禽样生态型(1.6%)。最后,68.8%的分析菌株至少对一种所检测的抗生素表现出抗微生物耐药特性。人类生物型比其他生物型对多种抗生素表现出抗微生物耐药性(p<0.05)。结果表明,产肠毒素和具有抗微生物耐药性的金黄色葡萄球菌菌株在食品中已非常普遍。这就要求更好地控制食品污染源以及抗微生物耐药生物的传播。