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This book series focuses on current progress in the broad field of medical microbiology, and covers both basic and applied topics related to the study of microbes, their interactions with human and animals, and emerging issues relevant for public health. Original research and review articles present and discuss multidisciplinary findings and developments on various aspects of microbiology, infectious diseases, and their diagnosis, treatment and prevention. The book series publishes review and original research contributions, short reports as well as guest edited thematic book volumes. All contributions will be published online first and collected in book volumes. There are no publication costs. Advances in Microbiology, Infectious Diseases and Public Health is a subseries of Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology, which has been publishing significant contributions in the field for over 30 years and is indexed in Medline, Scopus, EMBASE, BIOSIS, Biological Abstracts, CSA, Biological Sciences and Living Resources (ASFA-1), and Biological Sciences. 2020 Impact Factor: 2.622. 5 Year Impact Factor: 3.049; Cite Score: 3.9; Eigenfactor Score: 0.03583; Article Influence Score: 0.602.
Bacterial diseases. --- Medical microbiology. --- Mycoses. --- Fungal diseases --- Fungal infections --- Fungous diseases --- Mycosis --- Mycotic diseases --- Mycotic infections --- Medical mycology --- Bacterial infections --- Communicable diseases --- Medical bacteriology --- Pathogenic bacteria --- Biofilms. --- Microbial populations. --- Microbiology --- Medical Microbiology. --- Microbial Communities. --- Microbiology Techniques. --- Technique. --- Populations, Microbial --- Population biology --- Microbial aggregation --- Microbial ecology --- Microbiologia mèdica --- Salut pública --- Malalties infeccioses
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Foodborne pathogens represent a major burden on society as they are the cause of high numbers of illnesses, hospitalizations, and deaths each year. In addition to their detrimental impact on human health, these microorganisms, which include pathogenic bacteria, viruses, fungi, and a range of parasites, also represent a significant economic cost to food companies in the implementation and constant oversight of food hygiene and safety programs, product recalls, and potential litigation if outbreaks occur. Advancing our current knowledge of the food processing chain and its vulnerabilities to the many factors related to foodborne pathogens (e.g., their stress response, survival and persistence in processing environments, acquisition of virulence factors and antimicrobial drug resistance) is paramount to the development of effective strategies for early detection and control of pathogens, thereby improving food safety.This Special Issue compiled original research articles contributing to a better understanding of the impact of all aspects of foodborne pathogens on food safety.
Research & information: general --- Biology, life sciences --- Microbiology (non-medical) --- Listeria monocytogenes --- growth potential --- ready-to-eat --- iceberg lettuce --- rocket --- spinach --- rucola --- arugula --- antimicrobial blue light --- pathogenic bacteria --- food-borne bacteria --- endogenous photosensitizers --- porphyrins --- food safety --- food handling --- food hygiene --- Salmonella --- Salmonellosis --- foodborne illness --- whole papaya --- Salmonella Typhimurium --- survival --- aqueous chlorine dioxide --- malic acid --- shelf-life --- Listeria spp. --- prevalence --- detection --- monitoring --- smear --- benzalkonium chloride --- thymol --- ampicillin --- sublethal antimicrobial exposure --- gene expression --- stress response --- virulence --- foodborne pathogen --- salmonellosis --- chicken --- antibiotic resistance --- microbial contamination --- multidrug-resistant bacteria --- milk alternatives --- Salmonella Enteritidis --- egg white --- AcrD --- stress resistance --- cell invasion --- pathogenic mechanism --- foodborne bacteria --- in vitro cell models --- organoids --- enteroids --- Bacillus cereus group --- chromogenic media --- performance testing --- toxin gene profiling --- panC sequencing --- food-borne salmonellosis --- multi-drug resistance --- invasion genes bacterial virulence --- poultry bio-mapping --- chemical interventions --- Salmonella enumeration --- Campylobacter enumeration --- bacteriophage --- endolysin --- amidase --- bionanoparticles --- BNPs --- enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli --- yogurt --- quantitative microbial risk assessment
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Foodborne pathogens represent a major burden on society as they are the cause of high numbers of illnesses, hospitalizations, and deaths each year. In addition to their detrimental impact on human health, these microorganisms, which include pathogenic bacteria, viruses, fungi, and a range of parasites, also represent a significant economic cost to food companies in the implementation and constant oversight of food hygiene and safety programs, product recalls, and potential litigation if outbreaks occur. Advancing our current knowledge of the food processing chain and its vulnerabilities to the many factors related to foodborne pathogens (e.g., their stress response, survival and persistence in processing environments, acquisition of virulence factors and antimicrobial drug resistance) is paramount to the development of effective strategies for early detection and control of pathogens, thereby improving food safety.This Special Issue compiled original research articles contributing to a better understanding of the impact of all aspects of foodborne pathogens on food safety.
Research & information: general --- Biology, life sciences --- Microbiology (non-medical) --- Listeria monocytogenes --- growth potential --- ready-to-eat --- iceberg lettuce --- rocket --- spinach --- rucola --- arugula --- antimicrobial blue light --- pathogenic bacteria --- food-borne bacteria --- endogenous photosensitizers --- porphyrins --- food safety --- food handling --- food hygiene --- Salmonella --- Salmonellosis --- foodborne illness --- whole papaya --- Salmonella Typhimurium --- survival --- aqueous chlorine dioxide --- malic acid --- shelf-life --- Listeria spp. --- prevalence --- detection --- monitoring --- smear --- benzalkonium chloride --- thymol --- ampicillin --- sublethal antimicrobial exposure --- gene expression --- stress response --- virulence --- foodborne pathogen --- salmonellosis --- chicken --- antibiotic resistance --- microbial contamination --- multidrug-resistant bacteria --- milk alternatives --- Salmonella Enteritidis --- egg white --- AcrD --- stress resistance --- cell invasion --- pathogenic mechanism --- foodborne bacteria --- in vitro cell models --- organoids --- enteroids --- Bacillus cereus group --- chromogenic media --- performance testing --- toxin gene profiling --- panC sequencing --- food-borne salmonellosis --- multi-drug resistance --- invasion genes bacterial virulence --- poultry bio-mapping --- chemical interventions --- Salmonella enumeration --- Campylobacter enumeration --- bacteriophage --- endolysin --- amidase --- bionanoparticles --- BNPs --- enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli --- yogurt --- quantitative microbial risk assessment
Choose an application
Foodborne pathogens represent a major burden on society as they are the cause of high numbers of illnesses, hospitalizations, and deaths each year. In addition to their detrimental impact on human health, these microorganisms, which include pathogenic bacteria, viruses, fungi, and a range of parasites, also represent a significant economic cost to food companies in the implementation and constant oversight of food hygiene and safety programs, product recalls, and potential litigation if outbreaks occur. Advancing our current knowledge of the food processing chain and its vulnerabilities to the many factors related to foodborne pathogens (e.g., their stress response, survival and persistence in processing environments, acquisition of virulence factors and antimicrobial drug resistance) is paramount to the development of effective strategies for early detection and control of pathogens, thereby improving food safety.This Special Issue compiled original research articles contributing to a better understanding of the impact of all aspects of foodborne pathogens on food safety.
Listeria monocytogenes --- growth potential --- ready-to-eat --- iceberg lettuce --- rocket --- spinach --- rucola --- arugula --- antimicrobial blue light --- pathogenic bacteria --- food-borne bacteria --- endogenous photosensitizers --- porphyrins --- food safety --- food handling --- food hygiene --- Salmonella --- Salmonellosis --- foodborne illness --- whole papaya --- Salmonella Typhimurium --- survival --- aqueous chlorine dioxide --- malic acid --- shelf-life --- Listeria spp. --- prevalence --- detection --- monitoring --- smear --- benzalkonium chloride --- thymol --- ampicillin --- sublethal antimicrobial exposure --- gene expression --- stress response --- virulence --- foodborne pathogen --- salmonellosis --- chicken --- antibiotic resistance --- microbial contamination --- multidrug-resistant bacteria --- milk alternatives --- Salmonella Enteritidis --- egg white --- AcrD --- stress resistance --- cell invasion --- pathogenic mechanism --- foodborne bacteria --- in vitro cell models --- organoids --- enteroids --- Bacillus cereus group --- chromogenic media --- performance testing --- toxin gene profiling --- panC sequencing --- food-borne salmonellosis --- multi-drug resistance --- invasion genes bacterial virulence --- poultry bio-mapping --- chemical interventions --- Salmonella enumeration --- Campylobacter enumeration --- bacteriophage --- endolysin --- amidase --- bionanoparticles --- BNPs --- enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli --- yogurt --- quantitative microbial risk assessment
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