In this study the occurrence of visible anisakid larvae in semi-preserved anchovy products sold on the Italian market was investigated. Totally, 107 ready to eat products (33 salted-ripened, 49 in oil and 25 marinated) were sampled. Each sample was digested, then the digested material was observed under natural and UV light. Parasites were counted, collected and microscopically identified to genus level. A representative subset was molecularly identified using the cox2 gene. At least one visible Anisakis sp. larva was found in 54.2% of the total 107 products analysed. Totally 1283 dead larvae were collected. Anisakis sp. larvae were found in all the 33 salted products and 1139 (88.8%) larvae were collected, with a range of 1-105 parasites per product. Larval density per gram was 0.13. Anisakis sp. larvae were found in 49.0% of the products in oil and 143 (11.1%) larvae were isolated, with a range of 0- 28 and a density of 0.03. Only 1 larva was found in the 25 marinated products (4.0%), the density was 0.00. A highly significant difference between all the product categories in respect of number of larvae per product, frequency of products contaminated by at least one larva and larval density per gram was found. Within the subset of larvae molecularly analysed (n=122), 92 larvae (75.4%) were identified as A. pegreffii and 30 (24.6%) as A. simplex. This study showed that semipreserved anchovy products heavily contaminated with Anisakis spp. larvae reach the market. Beyond the negligible risk for anisakidosis, the presence of dead visible parasites may cause immediate rejection in consumers. In addition, the potential risk related to allergic reactions in sensitized individuals needs to be further assessed. In order to avoid commercialization of obviously contaminated products , fresh anchovies' batches intended for the production of such products should be accurately selected by the processing industry applying inspection methods

Anisakis spp. larvae in different kinds of ready to eat products made of anchovies (Engraulis encrasicolus) sold in Italian supermarkets.

Daniele Nucera;
2018-01-01

Abstract

In this study the occurrence of visible anisakid larvae in semi-preserved anchovy products sold on the Italian market was investigated. Totally, 107 ready to eat products (33 salted-ripened, 49 in oil and 25 marinated) were sampled. Each sample was digested, then the digested material was observed under natural and UV light. Parasites were counted, collected and microscopically identified to genus level. A representative subset was molecularly identified using the cox2 gene. At least one visible Anisakis sp. larva was found in 54.2% of the total 107 products analysed. Totally 1283 dead larvae were collected. Anisakis sp. larvae were found in all the 33 salted products and 1139 (88.8%) larvae were collected, with a range of 1-105 parasites per product. Larval density per gram was 0.13. Anisakis sp. larvae were found in 49.0% of the products in oil and 143 (11.1%) larvae were isolated, with a range of 0- 28 and a density of 0.03. Only 1 larva was found in the 25 marinated products (4.0%), the density was 0.00. A highly significant difference between all the product categories in respect of number of larvae per product, frequency of products contaminated by at least one larva and larval density per gram was found. Within the subset of larvae molecularly analysed (n=122), 92 larvae (75.4%) were identified as A. pegreffii and 30 (24.6%) as A. simplex. This study showed that semipreserved anchovy products heavily contaminated with Anisakis spp. larvae reach the market. Beyond the negligible risk for anisakidosis, the presence of dead visible parasites may cause immediate rejection in consumers. In addition, the potential risk related to allergic reactions in sensitized individuals needs to be further assessed. In order to avoid commercialization of obviously contaminated products , fresh anchovies' batches intended for the production of such products should be accurately selected by the processing industry applying inspection methods
2018
268
-
10
18
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0168160517305615
Anisakid larvae, anchovies, Engraulis encrasicolus, artificial digestion, contamination, semi-preserved seafood products, Italy
Lisa Guardone; Daniele Nucera; Laura B Lodola; Lara Tinacci; PierLuigi Acutis; Alessandra Guidi; Andrea Armani
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2318/1669808
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