1969
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2621.1969.tb14369.x
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Comparison of Sterile and Inoculated Beef Tissue

Abstract: SUMMARY— A surgical isolator technique was developed for obtaining sterile muscle tissue from a beef carcass. This tissue was compared during refrigerated storage with a general inoculum tissue sample, a low level general inoculum sample, a sample inoculated with Pseudomonas and an Achromobacter sample. Protein fractionation revealed a decrease in sarcoplasmic protein for all treatments during storage. An initial rise, followed by a relatively constant value in the myofibrillar fraction, was also observed for … Show more

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Cited by 31 publications
(12 citation statements)
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References 19 publications
(15 reference statements)
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“…Sterile meat has been obtained routinely by the use of surgical aseptic techniques for the slaughter of animals and excision of tissue (Zender et al 1958;Ockerman et al 1969;Hasegawa et al 1970). Using similar techniques without extreme precautions during excision, lightly contaminated samples (30 bacteria/g) were obtained (Borton et al 1968).…”
Section: Reported Occurrence Of Intrinsic Bacteriamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Sterile meat has been obtained routinely by the use of surgical aseptic techniques for the slaughter of animals and excision of tissue (Zender et al 1958;Ockerman et al 1969;Hasegawa et al 1970). Using similar techniques without extreme precautions during excision, lightly contaminated samples (30 bacteria/g) were obtained (Borton et al 1968).…”
Section: Reported Occurrence Of Intrinsic Bacteriamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…THE INCIDENCE of bacteria in the deep tissues of healthy animals post mortem has been a controversial subject for at least 70 years (Corry 1978). Several investigators have repeatedly obtained large quantities of sterile muscle from carcasses (Zender et al 1958;Ockerman et al 1969;Gardner & Carson 1967) whereas others have isolated bacteria reIativeIy frequently from similar material (Narayan 1966;Narayan & Takacs 1966;Pusztai 1970;Nowicki 1976). Much of this uncertainty undoubtedly stems from the practical difficulty of removing samples of internal tissue large enough to detect low numbers of bacteria without introducing contaminants from the abundant micro-flora of the surface.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…total non-protein nitrogen (e.g. Ockerman et al 1969), total volatile nitrogen (e.g. Turner, 1960;Pearson, 1968a,c), total a-amino groups (e.g.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%