1963
DOI: 10.2307/4592031
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Quantitative Detection of Staphylococcal Enterotoxin B in Food by Gel-Diffusion Methods

Abstract: RECOVERY of coagulase-positive Staphylo¬ coccus aureus from food implicated in a foodpoisoning outbreak is only circumstantial evi¬ dence that the correct etiological agent has been found. Even the determination by animal studies that the strain isolated is capable of pro¬ ducing enterotoxin does not prove that it did so in the food. Positive proof depends on dem¬ onstration of the enterotoxin in the food itself.

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Cited by 51 publications
(46 citation statements)
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“…HA-inhibition, passive HA, and the quantitative precipitin test have not been used with food samples. It seemed that these procedures would be less influenced by the presence of the nonspecific substances that affect immunodiffusion; thus, the lengthy procedures described for processing food extracts could be eliminated (4,14). In addition, HA should permit the detection of smaller amounts of enterotoxin than do the other methods without the necessity of concentrating the food extracts.…”
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confidence: 99%
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“…HA-inhibition, passive HA, and the quantitative precipitin test have not been used with food samples. It seemed that these procedures would be less influenced by the presence of the nonspecific substances that affect immunodiffusion; thus, the lengthy procedures described for processing food extracts could be eliminated (4,14). In addition, HA should permit the detection of smaller amounts of enterotoxin than do the other methods without the necessity of concentrating the food extracts.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The data in Table 2 were obtained with frozen foods that had been thawed but not cooked before homogenization and the addition of enterotoxin; Table 3 shows results obtained with cooked products. It was difficult to clarify the liquid separated from the homogenates of the uncooked tuna or custard pies so that it was not possible (4,13,14). The mean end point for about 30 HA tests with purified enterotoxin was 0.0015 ,ug per ml (or 0.0007 ug, the actual amount in the 0.5-ml volume of the test).…”
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confidence: 99%
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