Evaluation of an experimental sodium chlorate product, with and without nitroethane, on Salmonella in cull dairy cattle
2012
Krueger, N. A. | Edrington, T. S. | Farrow, R. L. | Hagevoort, R. | Anderson, R. C. | Loneragan, G. H. | Callaway, T. R. | Nisbet, D. J.
Ruminant animals are natural reservoirs for Salmonella. These bacteria can reduce nitrate to nitrite through the membrane bound enzyme nitrate reductase which also has the ability to reduce chlorate to the cytotoxic end-product chlorite. An experimental product containing sodium chlorate (ECP) has been investigated in recent years as a pre-harvest food safety strategy to reduce Salmonella. The addition of nitroethane has been shown to enhance the effectiveness of ECP. The objective of this research was to determine if feeding ECP, with and without nitroethane, is effective in reducing naturally occurring populations of Salmonella in cull dairy cattle on a commercial dairy prior to slaughter. Twelve cull dairy cows, dosed for two consecutive days with either 140 mg of ECP containing 30% sodium chlorate /kg BW/d or with 70 mg of the ECP plus 160 mg nitroethane /kg BW/d, were sampled 48 h post initial dose at 12 h intervals for Salmonella via fecal samples. Upon completion of the 48 h sampling animals were necropsied and gastrointestinal tissue and luminal content samples taken for bacterial enumeration. The data presented herein support the use of chlorate as a pre-harvest intervention strategy for reducing Salmonella in cull dairy cows prior to entering the food chain can serve as an effective means of reducing these bacteria.
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