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Prevalensi campylobacter jejuni pada karkas ayam dan pengembangan uji deteksinya

dc.contributor.advisorSudarwanto, Mirnawati
dc.contributor.advisorSetiyaningsih, Surachmi
dc.contributor.advisorKusumaningrum, Harsi Dewantari
dc.contributor.authorAndriani
dc.date.accessioned2013-03-06T07:26:11Z
dc.date.available2013-03-06T07:26:11Z
dc.date.issued2012
dc.identifier.urihttp://repository.ipb.ac.id/handle/123456789/61089
dc.description.abstractChicken meat and eggs are the main source of animal protein in Indonesia because they are relative cheaper than cattle products. Campylobacter jejuni is a foodborne zoonotic pathogen predominantly found in chicken carcasses. C. jejuni causes gastroenteritis in humans, had a very low infectious dose that is easy to cause infection in humans. The study was aimed to (1) rapidly detect C. jejuni contamination in chicken carcass (2) determine the prevalence of contamination and quantitative analyse of the risk of thermophilic Campylobacter sp. when mishandling consume. (3) produce immune sera against the local isolates that can be used as a reagent for ELISA. A total of 298 chicken carcass samples sold in modern and traditional markets in the area of Jakarta, West Java (Bogor and Sukabumi) and Central Java (Kudus and Demak) were collected and attempted for isolation following ISO/ DIS 10272-1994 protocol, identification using biochemical API Campy, and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay using hipO, glyA, fla, and 23S rRNA primer sets for species identification. The result is chicken carcasses sold in the sampling area both traditional markets and supermarkets are contaminated with C. jejuni and C. coli. Prevalence of Campylobacter sp. contamination on chicken carcasses was isolated by conventional (19.8%) and PCR (41.6%). The contamination rate of Campylobacter sp. on chicken carcasses sold in supermarkets, markedly 14.09% is higher than in traditional markets 5.70%. It is also confirmed that the prevalence for contamination of C. jejuni was higher than C. coli. Prevalence of C. jejuni contamination that sold in traditional markets 88.23% was higher than C. coli 11.76%. The prevalence of C. jejuni contamination in carcasses sold in swalayan was 78.57%. These were higher than contamination of C. coli that was identified by conventional methods 21.42%. Flagella and whole cell antigen purification from a local isolate of C. jejuni (C1) was done by glycine extraction and produced flagellar protein of 31 kDa. Animal immunization against flagellar protein extract induced higher specific antibody titers in chicken than rabbits and sheep. A probability model describing variability but not uncertainty was developed in beta-poisson model. The result is microorganism reduction 2 log cfu/gram and the output sof the model was the probability of illness per handling if the roasted chicken mishandled is 4 for 1 000 humans.en
dc.publisherIPB (Bogor Agricultural University)
dc.subjectchicken carcassesen
dc.subjectCampylobacter jejunien
dc.subjectantigensen
dc.subjectantibodyen
dc.titlePrevalence of campylobacter jejuni from chicken carcasses and developing detection method.en
dc.titlePrevalensi campylobacter jejuni pada karkas ayam dan pengembangan uji deteksinya


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