Abstract
A chloramphenicol resistant strain of S. typhi which caused a very large epidemic of typhoid fever in Mexico in 1972-73 survived in opened bottles of one carbonated drink with a pH of 4.6 for two weeks and in another such drink with a pH of 5.1 for six months. Bottled beverages are potential sources of large outbreaks of enteric disease, and deserve the same type of standards sand monitoring as comparable fluids such as milk.
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CITATION STYLE
Gonzalez-Cortes, A., Gangarosa, E. J., Parrilla, C., Martin, W. T., Espinosa-Ayala, A. M., Ruiz, L., … Hernandez-Arreortua, H. (1982). Bottled beverages and typhoid fever: the Mexican epidemic of 1972-73. American Journal of Public Health, 72(8), 844–845. https://doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.72.8.844
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