T. Kleiss et al., STAPHYLOCOCCI IN A WHEY POWDER PLANT ENVIRONMENT - AN ECOLOGICAL SURVEY AS A CONTRIBUTION TO HACCP STUDIES, Food control, 5(3), 1994, pp. 196-199
One of the necessary steps in a HA CCP study is the listing of all pot
ential hazards associated with a certain production line. Staphylococc
i may be listed as such when their presence in the final product is un
acceptable for public health reasons. Moreover, opportunities for grow
th in the line or line environment and possibilities for recontaminati
on of the product after an effective heat treatment can also be regard
ed as potential hazards. As insufficient data concerning the presence
of staphylococci in the environment of a spray dryer of a dairy plant
were available, the line environment of a whey powder plant was examin
ed. A total of 358 samples (Rodac plates, Biotest air agar strips, swa
bs and residues) were taken at various places and analysed. Staphyloco
ccus aureus was found in four samples and in only two of four main are
as sampled. S. saprophyticus and S. xylosus were predominant in 'open'
areas. In the 'closed', dry area, where personnel entrance and other
circulation was restricted, S. haemolyticus was the most frequently is
olated species. Before the study was started, the product was incident
ally found to be contaminated with a few S. aureus of a specific phage
type, which was not related to any isolate found in the line or the l
ine environment. Moreover, the S. aureus isolates, which were isolated
8 months later from a site previously found to be contaminated, were
of different phage types. In hygienically operated whey powder lines,
staphylococci should not be of much concern. An in-depth HA CCP study
should, however, be carried out to determine whether critical control
points exist and how they could be controlled.