Microbial profile of common spices and spice blends used in Tamale, Ghana

Abstract Background The main purpose of using spice to grill meat is to add aroma, colour, flavour, taste and pungency. However, the purpose is sometime befitted when spice is contaminated with pathogenic bacteria that result in foodborne illnesses and toxicological effect. Results The study was nec...

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Main Authors: Noel Bakobie, Amponsah Samuel Addae, Abudu Ballu Duwiejuah, Samuel Jerry Cobbina, Solomon Miniyila
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-05-01
Series:International Journal of Food Contamination
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40550-017-0055-9
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spelling doaj-570d44fb67314e3eb9c942cfa535afb02020-11-24T21:14:33ZengBMCInternational Journal of Food Contamination2196-28042017-05-01411510.1186/s40550-017-0055-9Microbial profile of common spices and spice blends used in Tamale, GhanaNoel Bakobie0Amponsah Samuel Addae1Abudu Ballu Duwiejuah2Samuel Jerry Cobbina3Solomon Miniyila4Department of Ecotourism and Environmental Management, Faculty of Natural Resources and Environment, University for Development StudiesDepartment of Ecotourism and Environmental Management, Faculty of Natural Resources and Environment, University for Development StudiesDepartment of Ecotourism and Environmental Management, Faculty of Natural Resources and Environment, University for Development StudiesDepartment of Ecotourism and Environmental Management, Faculty of Natural Resources and Environment, University for Development StudiesGhana Integrated Water Sanitation and Hygiene World VisionAbstract Background The main purpose of using spice to grill meat is to add aroma, colour, flavour, taste and pungency. However, the purpose is sometime befitted when spice is contaminated with pathogenic bacteria that result in foodborne illnesses and toxicological effect. Results The study was necessitated by paucity information on handling practices and microbial load common spices used for grilling meat, Ghana. A total of twenty spice samples were collected from five popular and widely patronised joints in the Tamale in Ghana. Detection and identification of potential pathogens was carried out following standard procedures. E. coli count ranged from 0 to 3.14 log10 cfu/ ml with a mean of 1.17 ± 1.07 log10 cfu/ ml. Contamination level for Salmonella spp ranged between 0 and 0.9 log10 cfu/ ml with a mean of 0.38 ± 0.31 log10 cfu/ ml. Coliform bacteria were present in almost all the spices sampled. Faecal coliform and E. coli presence was an indication of contamination by fresh faecal matter. The possible sources of spice contamination include storage equipment, handling, unhygienic surroundings, vehicular transmission, atmospheric particles and air-microbes. Conclusions There is a possible risk to public health associated with consumption of spicy meat from the selected joints. There is the need to maintain good sanitary practice and hygienic quality during production stages of spice in order to avoid or reduce prevalence of food borne illnesses in Tamale and Ghana as a whole.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40550-017-0055-9Contaminationfoodborne illnesspathogenic bacteriaspiceGhana
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Noel Bakobie
Amponsah Samuel Addae
Abudu Ballu Duwiejuah
Samuel Jerry Cobbina
Solomon Miniyila
spellingShingle Noel Bakobie
Amponsah Samuel Addae
Abudu Ballu Duwiejuah
Samuel Jerry Cobbina
Solomon Miniyila
Microbial profile of common spices and spice blends used in Tamale, Ghana
International Journal of Food Contamination
Contamination
foodborne illness
pathogenic bacteria
spice
Ghana
author_facet Noel Bakobie
Amponsah Samuel Addae
Abudu Ballu Duwiejuah
Samuel Jerry Cobbina
Solomon Miniyila
author_sort Noel Bakobie
title Microbial profile of common spices and spice blends used in Tamale, Ghana
title_short Microbial profile of common spices and spice blends used in Tamale, Ghana
title_full Microbial profile of common spices and spice blends used in Tamale, Ghana
title_fullStr Microbial profile of common spices and spice blends used in Tamale, Ghana
title_full_unstemmed Microbial profile of common spices and spice blends used in Tamale, Ghana
title_sort microbial profile of common spices and spice blends used in tamale, ghana
publisher BMC
series International Journal of Food Contamination
issn 2196-2804
publishDate 2017-05-01
description Abstract Background The main purpose of using spice to grill meat is to add aroma, colour, flavour, taste and pungency. However, the purpose is sometime befitted when spice is contaminated with pathogenic bacteria that result in foodborne illnesses and toxicological effect. Results The study was necessitated by paucity information on handling practices and microbial load common spices used for grilling meat, Ghana. A total of twenty spice samples were collected from five popular and widely patronised joints in the Tamale in Ghana. Detection and identification of potential pathogens was carried out following standard procedures. E. coli count ranged from 0 to 3.14 log10 cfu/ ml with a mean of 1.17 ± 1.07 log10 cfu/ ml. Contamination level for Salmonella spp ranged between 0 and 0.9 log10 cfu/ ml with a mean of 0.38 ± 0.31 log10 cfu/ ml. Coliform bacteria were present in almost all the spices sampled. Faecal coliform and E. coli presence was an indication of contamination by fresh faecal matter. The possible sources of spice contamination include storage equipment, handling, unhygienic surroundings, vehicular transmission, atmospheric particles and air-microbes. Conclusions There is a possible risk to public health associated with consumption of spicy meat from the selected joints. There is the need to maintain good sanitary practice and hygienic quality during production stages of spice in order to avoid or reduce prevalence of food borne illnesses in Tamale and Ghana as a whole.
topic Contamination
foodborne illness
pathogenic bacteria
spice
Ghana
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40550-017-0055-9
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