Using Laser Fingerprinting To Identify Salmonella

egg, laser technology, food safety
A simple laser scan could quickly identify pathogens in food and in the environment.
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(ISNS) -- Bacteria from the genus Salmonella are a major cause of food poisoning. About 40,000 cases of salmonella food poisoning are reported in the United States every year, but according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, about one million people are actually infected with the bacterium every year. Researchers have now developed a new, more rapid technology to identify food that has been contaminated with Salmonella.

Checking for Salmonella in food is now routinely done all over the world, and detection of the bacteria often results in food recalls from stores. Several methods exist to detect Salmonella, the most important of which are the polymerase chain reaction tests. They usually involve biochemical tests on bacteria obtained from food rinses -- water obtained by shaking the food in a sterile bag that contains sterilized water -- or from cultures grown on agar plates -- glass plates covered with a layer of nutrients for bacteria. The bacteria form colonies: small, round spots of multiplying bacteria. Then these colonies are subjected to biochemical tests, a process that can require 72 hours for their identification.

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