Guest guest Posted December 28, 2003 Report Share Posted December 28, 2003 NOTMILK - 100 Percent of Swiss Cheese is Infected with Listeria Greetings Members: Be sure to follow the links here for additional documentation. Taken from the daily news letter of " Notmilk.com " In yesterday's notmilk column, I reported the case of a current cheese recall due to Listeria contamination. <http://health.notmilk/message/1498> In that column, you read that Listeria monocytogenes can cause serious and sometimes fatal infections in young children, frail or elderly people, pregnant women, and individuals with weakened immune systems. Listeria infections can also cause miscarriages A few readers of the column were angry. One dairy farmer suggested that the incidence of Listeria is so small as to be almost nonexistant. He suggested that one out of every one million packages of dairy products contain live Listeria. In order to check out this claim, a bit of research was necessary. One of the many tasks I assign myself each day is to spend some time (sometimes a few hours) searching and reading Medline abstracts. There is no way any one person can read every study published in every scientific journal. I located the revealing summary of a recently published study in a French journal, referenced as Rev Epidemiol Sante Publique. 2003, Oct;51(5):493-503. A group of scientists (Schaffner, et. al.) measured the level of exisiting Listeria bacteria in Swiss cheese samples and came up with astonishing results. Every sample tested contained traces of live Listeria. These researchers discovered that the processing of Swiss cheese leads to a probability of contamination. In their words: " Elevated bacterial concentrations are mainly due to cases of mastitis involving Listeria monocytogenes. " Depending upon the level of heat treatment, various samples tested resulted in anywhere from one to ten Listeria monocytogenes per portion of cheese. The authors conclude: " Based on the presented data and estimations, it is concluded that the consumption of traditionally/artisanal manufactured Swiss Emmental hard cheese presents an extremely low, but existent risk, especially for people with a deficient or diminished immune system. " What this all means is that all Swiss cheese contains detectable levels of live Listeria. Depending upon storage (loading dock, truck, warehouse, supermarket, your home), those bacteria have the opportunity to multiply. What are the odds of you being infected with Listeria? Russian Roulette, anybody? Robert Cohen http://www.notmilk.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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