Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4367847 | International Journal of Food Microbiology | 2012 | 4 Pages |
Bovine intestines, bladders and oesophagus are used for the production of natural casings (“beef casings”) as edible sausage containers. Derived from cattle experimentally infected with FMDV (initial dosage 104 TCID50/mL, strain A Iran 97), these beef casings were treated with sodium chloride (NaCl) or phosphate supplemented salt (P-salt). In addition, different in-vitro experiments using beef casings were done on a small scale with other FMDV strains (A Turkey 06, C-Oberbayern and O1 Manisa) as “proof of principle”.Based on the combined results of the in-vivo and in-vitro experiments, it can be concluded that the storage period of 30 days at 20 °C in NaCl is sufficiently effective to inactivate a possible contamination with FMDV in beef casings and that the usage of P-salt does not clearly enhance the inactivation of FMDV infectivity.Storage of salted beef casings at about 20 °C for 30 days is already part of the Standard Operating Procedures (included in HACCP) of the international casing industry and can therefore be considered as a protective measure for the international trade in natural casings.
► 30-day storage at 20 °C in NaCl is sufficient to inactivate FMD virus in beef casings. ► Bovine intestines yield very low FMD virus titres after experimental infection. ► FMD virus inactivation in beef casings is temperature dependent. ► P-salt does not clearly enhance the inactivation of FMDV infectivity.