Accelerated immunofluorescence procedure for the detection of Salmonella in foods and animal by-products.
- 1 November 1969
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 18 (5) , 708-13
Abstract
An accelerated, direct immunofluorescent-antibody procedure was developed for the detection of Salmonella in food products. This method includes pre-enrichment and selective enrichment but eliminates many of the washing and smear treatments present in existing methods. Commercially available fluorescein-conjugated somatic antiserum was used in comparing this method with conventional culture, biochemical, and serological procedures. The 894 samples tested represented 39 different products. The fluorescent-antibody procedure detected Salmonella in 216 test samples as compared to 205 positives recovered by using the standard culture procedures. In no instance did the fluorescent-antibody procedure fail to detect a Salmonella positive which had been detected by the standard procedure. With a three-tube, most-probable-number procedure, the fluorescent-antibody method was able to detect Salmonella at a level of 0.036 organism per g. In addition to being a more rapid method for the detection of Salmonella, it has proven to be comparable to conventional culture procedures.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Further Evaluation of a Rapid Immunofluorescence Technique for Detecting Salmonellae in Meat and PoultryJournal of Applied Bacteriology, 1965
- A rapid immunofluorescence technique for detecting salmonellae in raw meatEpidemiology and Infection, 1964