Faster Detection of Enterobacter Sakazakii in Infant Formula
go back to news archives | Increasingly there is concern in the food industry about the occurrence of Enterobacter sakazakii infections in neonates who have been fed milk-based powdered infant formula. To assist food laboratories in the testing of these products, Thermo Scientific have introduced Thermo Scientific Chromogenic Enterobacter sakazakii Agar (Druggan-Forsythe-Iversen (DFI) formulation) that allows recovery and detection of E. sakazakii in just 3 days - 2 days faster than by conventional methods. |
Enterobacter sakazakii is a Gram-negative rod-shaped bacterium within the family Enterobacteriaceae. The organism was previously called "yellow-pigmented Enterobacter cloacae " until 1980 when it was renamed Enterobacter sakazakii.[1] Urmenyi and Franklin reported the first two known cases of meningitis caused by E. sakazakii in 1961. Subsequently, cases of meningitis, septicaemia, and necrotizing enterocolitis due to E. sakazakii have been reported worldwide. |
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Posted on March 11, 2004