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dc.contributor.advisorDr. Mir Rowshan Akter
dc.contributor.authorPARVIN, MARSHIA
dc.date.accessioned2022-04-22T04:39:23Z
dc.date.available2022-04-22T04:39:23Z
dc.date.issued2013-12
dc.identifier.urihttp://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/468
dc.descriptionButter and cheese is highly vulnerable to bacterial contamination and hence is easily perishable. Butter, cheese and other dairy products is important source of food borne pathogens and numerous epidemiological reports have implicated inadequate heat treated milk by products as the major factors responsible for illnesses caused by food borne pathogens. So it is necessary. that this product to be obtained as cleanest possible , that it would be the finest condition and not to harm the consumers health. Cross contamination with pathogenic microorganisms can gain asses to butter and cheese during packaging, In cheese, wide range of microorganism is frequently reported. Their majority is destroyed during pasteurization but some like Pseudomonas flurescens can produce exogenous proteolytic and lipolytic enzymes which are thermo stable and capable to alternate the pasteurized milk. Pathogens that have been involved in food borne outbreals associated with the consumption of milk by products include Listeria monocytogenes, Salmonella spp., Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus. The presence of these pathogenic bacteria in butter and cheese emerged major public health concerns, especially for these individual Tassew (2007).en_US
dc.description.abstractThe present study was conducted to identify the organisms in butter and cheese manufactured by different plants namely Milk vita and Quality sold in retail stores in Dinajpur town, Bangladesh. ‘the samples were analyzed to determine the hygienic status of butter and cheeses and also for the total viable count, presence of gram positive and gram negative pathogenic bacteria. Two butter and two cheese samples each of are popular varieties were collected from different retail stores of Dinajpur city. The bacteriological analyses were done at the Microbiology Laboratory of Hajee Mohammad Danesh Science and Technology University, Dinajpur. During July to December — 2013. Total viable count (TVC) was performed according to the American Public Health Association, using plate count agar medium for TVC and Eosine methylene blue (EMB) agar media for total E. coli count and Staphylococcus agar no. 110 for total Staphylococcus count. The average TVC for Milk vita butter 3.28 x 10°CFU/gm (log 5.5) was lower than local butter 5.45 x 10° CFU/gm (log 6.7) and average TVC for Quality cheese 4.5 x 10° CFU/gm(log 5.7) was lower than local cheese 5.14 x 10°CFU/gm (log 6.7). It was apparent from the present study that the bacterial load of butter and cheese samples of the different manufactures were within the acceptable limit of public health safety, since the count was well below the acceptable limit. It was found that the highest extent of bacterial contamination and proliferation of viable bacteria occurred in local butter and local cheese. The average E. coli counts obtained from the study was in Milk vita butter 8.26 x 10° (log 3.8), in local butter 6.25 x 10° (log 5.7), in Quality cheese 5.65 x 10° (log 4.7), in Local cheese5.5 x 10° (log 5.8). The presence of numbers of E. coli in local butter and cheese was little bit high indicate the poor hygienic practices during manufacture, post process contamination and unsatisfactory transportation. ‘Statistically the E. coli were more closely related to total viable counts than the staphylococcal counts in the samples of Milk vita butter 2.68 x 10° CFU/gm (log 3.4), Local butter 3.15x 10* CFU/gm (log 4.5), Quality cheese 4.46 x 10° CFU/gm (log 3.6) and Local cheese 1.19 x 10* CFU/gm (log 4.0) were respectively. The results demonstrated that Milk vita butter and Quality cheese are of superior quality product in respect of sanitary condition.en_US
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.subjectCollection of butter and cheese sampleen_US
dc.subjectEnumeration of total viable count (TVC)en_US
dc.subjectEnumeration of total E. coli count (TEC)en_US
dc.subjectEnumeration of total Staphylococcal Count (TSC)en_US
dc.titleIDENTIFICATION OF BACTERIA AND THEIR LOADS ISOLATED FROM DIFFERENT BRANDS OF BUTTER AND CHEESEen_US
dc.typeThesisen_US


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