This research was carried out to determine the time/temperature exposure of Trichinella spiralis to freezing conditions necessary to destroy the infectivity of the trichinae. Experimentally infected pork was subjected to temperatures of -1 to -193°C for one sec to 182 d and the treated pork samples, which contained about 1000 larvae per gram of tissue, were subjected to rat bio-assay to determine infectivity of the larvae. A linear regression equation, log10t = 5.98 + 0.40T where t = required inactivation time in hours and T = temperature in degrees Celsius, described the exposure necessary to destroy the trichinae. The correlation for that relationship was r = 0.942. The predicted thermal death times (+7 min) at -20, -15, and -10°C were 8 min, 64 min, and 4.0 d, respectively. The predicted upper confidence limits (99%) for the thermal death times (+7 min) for exposure at -20, -15, and -10°C, were 48 min, 63 h, and 266 d, respectively. These data provide a continuum of definitive times and temperatures necessary to destroy T. spiralis by freezing and are of value to the meat industry and the regulatory agencies.
CITATION STYLE
Kotula, A. W., Sharar, A. K., Paroczay, E., Gamble, H. R., Murrell, K. D., & Douglass, L. (1990). Infectivity of trichinella spiralis from Frozen pork. Journal of Food Protection, 53(7). https://doi.org/10.4315/0362-028x-53.7.571
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