Antimicrobial Resistance in the Food Chain: A Review
Federal Agency for Food Chain Safety · Ghent University · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Antimicrobial resistant zoonotic pathogens present on food constitute a direct risk to public health. Antimicrobial resistance genes in commensal or pathogenic strains form an indirect risk to public health, as they increase the gene pool from which pathogenic bacteria can pick up resistance traits. Food can be contaminated with antimicrobial resistant bacteria and/or antimicrobial resistance genes in several ways. A first way is the presence of antibiotic resistant bacteria on food selected by the use of antibiotics during agricultural production. A second route is the possible presence of resistance genes in bacteria that are intentionally added during the processing of food (starter cultures, probiotics,…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 23.12
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 159
Authors
15Topics & keywords
- Antimicrobial
- Antibiotic resistance
- Bacteria
- Biology
- Food chain
- Microbiology
- Antibiotics
- Pathogenic bacteria
- Zero hunger