Modeling Salmonella spp. inactivation in chicken meat subjected to isothermal and non-isothermal temperature profiles.

Int J Food Microbiol

Laboratory Apther - Applied Thermophysics, Department of Food and Chemical Engineering, Santa Catarina State University - UDESC, 89870-000 Pinhalzinho, SC, Brazil. Electronic address:

Published: April 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Salmonella is a common foodborne pathogen linked to chicken meat outbreaks, making it crucial to understand how heat affects its inactivation.
  • The double Weibull model was found to be the most accurate for predicting Salmonella inactivation across 61 datasets, revealing that the bacterial population can be divided into resistant and sensitive subpopulations.
  • The study showed that the thermal sensitivity of Salmonella varies with chicken fat content, and effective inactivation times differ for various chicken parts at 60°C, useful for improving risk assessments related to Salmonella contamination.

Article Abstract

Salmonella genus has foodborne pathogen species commonly involved in many outbreaks related to the consumption of chicken meat. Many studies have aimed to model bacterial inactivation as a function of the temperature. Due to the large heterogeneity of the results, a unified description of Salmonella spp. inactivation behavior is hard to establish. In the current study, by evaluating the root mean square errors, mean absolute deviation, and Akaike and Bayesian information criteria, the double Weibull model was considered the most accurate primary model to fit 61 datasets of Salmonella inactivation in chicken meat. Results can be interpreted as if the bacterial population is divided into two subpopulations consisting of one more resistant (2.3% of the total population) and one more sensitive to thermal stress (97.7% of the total population). The thermal sensitivity of the bacteria depends on the fat content of the chicken meat. From an adapted version of the Bigelow secondary model including both temperature and fat content, 90% of the Salmonella population can be inactivated after heating at 60 °C of chicken breast, thigh muscles, wings, and skin during approximately 2.5, 5.0, 9.5, and 57.4 min, respectively. The resulting model was applied to four different non-isothermal temperature profiles regarding Salmonella growth in chicken meat. Model performance for the non-isothermal profiles was evaluated by the acceptable prediction zone concept. Results showed that >80% of the predictions fell in the acceptable prediction zone when the temperature changes smoothly at temperature rates lower than 20 °C/min. Results obtained can be used in risk assessment models regarding contamination with Salmonella spp. in chicken parts with different fat contents.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijfoodmicro.2021.109110DOI Listing

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