Impact of heat treatment on the antimicrobial residues in raw goat's milk

Although antibiotics are valuable drugs for treatment of bacterial and some parasitic infections, their presence in animal products have a potential public health hazard. This study investigated antibiotic residues in goat raw milk and thermal effect on residues. Samples were collected randomly from...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Dhary A. Almashhadany
Format: Article
Language:Arabic
Published: University of Mosul, College of Veterinary Medicine 2021-04-01
Series:Iraqi Journal of Veterinary Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://vetmedmosul.com/article_168000_14d68223028aca22778256e6d786b158.pdf
id doaj-26d9958f64594c0f8703460fa687eeca
record_format Article
spelling doaj-26d9958f64594c0f8703460fa687eeca2021-07-07T05:22:47ZaraUniversity of Mosul, College of Veterinary MedicineIraqi Journal of Veterinary Sciences1607-38942071-12552021-04-0135354955310.33899/ijvs.2020.127137.1469168000Impact of heat treatment on the antimicrobial residues in raw goat's milkDhary A. Almashhadany0Department of Medical Lab Science, College of Science, Knowledge University, Erbil, IraqAlthough antibiotics are valuable drugs for treatment of bacterial and some parasitic infections, their presence in animal products have a potential public health hazard. This study investigated antibiotic residues in goat raw milk and thermal effect on residues. Samples were collected randomly from different farms and retail outlets in Erbil city from January 1<sup>st</sup> to June 30<sup>th</sup> 2019. The residues were detected by disc diffusion assay against <em>Bacillus subtilis</em> bacteria on Muller Hinton agar. The occurrence rates among milk samples was 14.9%, also these residues in the samples was 13.5% and 16.4% in farm samples and retail store samples, respectively. No significant differences were found between sampling sites (farms vs sale points). Regarding the seasonal variations, spring was found to be associated with gradual decrease in antibiotic residues frequency in milk. Boiling for 5 minutes was the most effective treatment (among pasteurization and microwave heating) that inactivated antibiotic residues in 57.7% of positive samples. Such occurrence rate of residues is alarming and require authorities to observe and validate the quality of raw milk introduced to markets for consumers. Further evaluation of antibiotic stability period in raw milk is highly recommended.https://vetmedmosul.com/article_168000_14d68223028aca22778256e6d786b158.pdfb. subtilisdisc diffusion assaywinterthermal stability
collection DOAJ
language Arabic
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dhary A. Almashhadany
spellingShingle Dhary A. Almashhadany
Impact of heat treatment on the antimicrobial residues in raw goat's milk
Iraqi Journal of Veterinary Sciences
b. subtilis
disc diffusion assay
winter
thermal stability
author_facet Dhary A. Almashhadany
author_sort Dhary A. Almashhadany
title Impact of heat treatment on the antimicrobial residues in raw goat's milk
title_short Impact of heat treatment on the antimicrobial residues in raw goat's milk
title_full Impact of heat treatment on the antimicrobial residues in raw goat's milk
title_fullStr Impact of heat treatment on the antimicrobial residues in raw goat's milk
title_full_unstemmed Impact of heat treatment on the antimicrobial residues in raw goat's milk
title_sort impact of heat treatment on the antimicrobial residues in raw goat's milk
publisher University of Mosul, College of Veterinary Medicine
series Iraqi Journal of Veterinary Sciences
issn 1607-3894
2071-1255
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Although antibiotics are valuable drugs for treatment of bacterial and some parasitic infections, their presence in animal products have a potential public health hazard. This study investigated antibiotic residues in goat raw milk and thermal effect on residues. Samples were collected randomly from different farms and retail outlets in Erbil city from January 1<sup>st</sup> to June 30<sup>th</sup> 2019. The residues were detected by disc diffusion assay against <em>Bacillus subtilis</em> bacteria on Muller Hinton agar. The occurrence rates among milk samples was 14.9%, also these residues in the samples was 13.5% and 16.4% in farm samples and retail store samples, respectively. No significant differences were found between sampling sites (farms vs sale points). Regarding the seasonal variations, spring was found to be associated with gradual decrease in antibiotic residues frequency in milk. Boiling for 5 minutes was the most effective treatment (among pasteurization and microwave heating) that inactivated antibiotic residues in 57.7% of positive samples. Such occurrence rate of residues is alarming and require authorities to observe and validate the quality of raw milk introduced to markets for consumers. Further evaluation of antibiotic stability period in raw milk is highly recommended.
topic b. subtilis
disc diffusion assay
winter
thermal stability
url https://vetmedmosul.com/article_168000_14d68223028aca22778256e6d786b158.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT dharyaalmashhadany impactofheattreatmentontheantimicrobialresiduesinrawgoatsmilk
_version_ 1721316816552198144