Microbial toxins in dairy products
by
 
Tamime, A. Y., editor.

Title
Microbial toxins in dairy products

Author
Tamime, A. Y., editor.

ISBN
9781118823095
 
9781118823651
 
9781118823149

Physical Description
1 online resource.

Series
Society of Dairy Technology series

Contents
Microbial toxins? An overview / R. Early & A.Y. Tamime -- Incidence in dairy product / M.L.Y. Wan, H. El-Nezami, and N. Shah -- Bacterial toxins / J.W. Austin -- Biogenic amines in dairy products / V. Ladero, D.M. Linares, M. Perez, B. del Rio, M. Fernández and M.A. Alvarez -- Routes of contamination? Up-to the farm gate / R. Early -- Routes of contamination? Post-farm gate to retailing / R. Early -- Techniques of detection, quantification and control? Bacterial toxins / L. Ramchandran, A. Warnakulasuriya, O. Donkor, and T. Vasiljevic -- Techniques of detection, quantification and control? Mould toxins / O. Donkor, L. Ramchandran, and T. Vasiljevic -- Approaches to assess the risks/modelling of microbial growth and toxins production and limitations and prospects for improvement / N. Murru, M. Mercogliano, M.-L. Cortesi, F. Leroy, and R. Condoleo -- Regulatory measures for microbial toxins / M. Hickey.

Abstract
Food-borne diseases, including those via dairy products, have been recognised as major threats to human health. The causes associated with dairy food-borne disease are the use of raw milk in the manufacture of dairy products, faulty processing conditions during the heat treatment of milk, post-processing contamination, failure in due diligence and an unhygienic water supply. Dairy food-borne diseases affecting human health are associated with certain strains of bacteria belonging to the genera of Clostridium, Bacillus, Escherichia, Staphylococcus and Listeria, which are capable of producing toxins, plus moulds that can produce mycotoxins such as aflatoxins, sterigmatocytin and ochratoxin. Microbial Toxins in Dairy Products reviews the latest scientific knowledge and developments for detecting and studying the presence of these toxins in dairy products, updating the analytical techniques required to examine bacterial and mould toxins and the potential for contamination of milk as it passes along the food chain, i.e. from 'farm-to-fork'. This comprehensive and accessible collection of techniques will help dairy processors, food scientists, technologists, researchers and students to further minimise the incidences of dairy food-borne illnesses in humans.

Local Note
John Wiley and Sons

Subject Term
Dairy microbiology.
 
Microbial toxins.
 
Dairy Products -- microbiology
 
Bacterial Toxins -- toxicity
 
Dairy Products -- toxicity
 
Produits laitiers -- Microbiologie.
 
Toxines microbiennes.
 
SCIENCE -- Life Sciences -- Biology.
 
SCIENCE -- Life Sciences -- Microbiology.
 
Dairy microbiology
 
Microbial toxins

Added Author
Tamime, A. Y.,

Electronic Access
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/book/10.1002/9781118823095


LibraryMaterial TypeItem BarcodeShelf Number[[missing key: search.ChildField.HOLDING]]Status
Online LibraryE-Book593092-1001QR121Wiley E-Kitap Koleksiyonu