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Research Publications (Food Safety)

This page tracks research articles published in national and international peer-reviewed journals. Recent articles are available ahead of print and searchable by Journal, Article Title, and Category. Research publications are tracked across six categories: Bacterial Pathogens, Chemical Contaminants, Natural Toxins, Parasites, Produce Safety, and Viruses. Articles produced by USDA Grant Funding Agencies (requires login) and FDA Grant Funding Agencies (requires login) are also tracked in Scopus.

Displaying 351 - 375 of 393

  1. Roadmap of cocoa quality and authenticity control in the industry: A review of conventional and alternative methods

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Cocoa (Theobroma cacao L.) and its derivatives are appreciated for their aroma, color, and healthy properties, and are commodities of high economic value worldwide. Wide ranges of conventional methods have been used for years to guarantee cocoa quality. Recently, however, demand for global cocoa and the requirements of sensory, functional, and safety cocoa attributes have changed.

  2. Reduced‐sodium cheeses: Implications of reducing sodium chloride on cheese quality and safety

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Sodium chloride (NaCl) universally well‐known as table salt is an ancient food additive, which is broadly used to increase the storage stability and the palatability of foods. Though, in recent decades, use of table salt in foods is a major concern among the health agencies of the world owing to ill effects of sodium (Na) that are mostly linked to hypertension and cardiovascular diseases.

  3. Fermented foods in a global age: East meets West

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Fermented foods and alcoholic beverages have long been an important part of the human diet in nearly every culture on every continent. These foods are often well‐preserved and serve as stable and significant sources of proteins, vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients. Despite these common features, however, many differences exist with respect to substrates and products and the types of microbes involved in the manufacture of fermented foods and beverages produced globally.

  4. Induction, detection, formation, and resuscitation of viable but non‐culturable state microorganisms

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • The viable but nonculturable (VBNC) state has been recognized as a strategy for bacteria to cope with stressful environments; in this state, bacteria fail to grow on routine culture medium but are actually alive and can resuscitate into a culturable state under favorable conditions. The VBNC state may pose a great threat to food safety and public health.

  5. Recent advances in heterocyclic aromatic amines: An update on food safety and hazardous control from food processing to dietary intake

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Heterocyclic aromatic amines (HAAs) as probable carcinogenic substances are mainly generated in meat products during thermal processing. Numerous studies have contributed to the analysis, formation, and mitigation of HAAs during food processing.

  6. Sorghum Grain: From Genotype, Nutrition, and Phenolic Profile to Its Health Benefits and Food Applications

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Globally, sorghum is one of the most important but least utilized staple crops. Sorghum grain is a rich source of nutrients and health‐beneficial phenolic compounds. The phenolic profile of sorghum is exceptionally unique and more abundant and diverse than other common cereal grains. The phenolic compounds in sorghum are mainly composed of phenolic acids, 3‐deoxyanthocyanidins, and condensed tannins.

  7. Antimicrobial Coatings for Food Contact Surfaces: Legal Framework, Mechanical Properties, and Potential Applications

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Food contact surfaces (FCS) in food processing facilities may become contaminated with a number of unwanted microorganisms, such as Listeria monocytogenes, Escherichia coli O157:H7, and Staphylococcus aureus. To reduce contamination and the spread of disease, these surfaces may be treated with sanitizers or have active antimicrobial components adhered to them.

      • Escherichia coli O157:H7
      • Listeria monocytogenes
      • Bacterial pathogens
      • Staphylococcus aureus
  8. Microbial Contamination of Fresh Produce: What, Where, and How?

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Promotion of healthier lifestyles has led to an increase in consumption of fresh produce. Such foodstuffs may expose consumers to increased risk of foodborne disease, as often they are not subjected to processing steps to ensure effective removal or inactivation of pathogenic microorganisms before consumption.

      • Norovirus
      • Salmonella
      • Bacterial pathogens
      • Hepatitis
      • Viruses
  9. Recent Advances in Microalgal Bioactives for Food, Feed, and Healthcare Products: Commercial Potential, Market Space, and Sustainability

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • To combat food scarcity as well as to ensure nutritional food supply for sustainable living of increasing population, microalgae are considered as innovative sources for adequate nutrition. Currently, the dried biomass, various carotenoids, phycocyanin, phycoerythrin, omega fatty acids, and enzymes are being used as food additives, food coloring agents, and food supplements.

  10. Nonthermal Plasma–Liquid Interactions in Food Processing: A Review

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Nonthermal processing methods are often preferred over conventional food processing methods to ensure nutritional quality. Nonthermal plasma (NTP) is a new field of nonthermal processing technology and seeing increased interest for application in food preservation. In food applications of NTP, liquid interactions are the most prevalent. The NTP reactivity and product storability are altered during this interaction.

  11. Food Safety Interventions to Control Listeria monocytogenes in the Fresh Apple Packing Industry: A Review

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Listeria monocytogenes, in fresh and ready‐to‐eat produce such as whole fresh apples, is of concern as there is no “kill step” in their packing process that would eliminate the pathogenic bacteria. Recent listeriosis outbreaks revealed that insufficient cleaning and sanitation practices in fresh apple packing houses may lead to contamination of fruit with L. monocytogenes.

      • Listeria monocytogenes
      • Bacterial pathogens
  12. Effect of Dietary Red Meat on Colorectal Cancer Risk—A Review

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Heme iron overload has been implicated as the main cause of the increased risk of cancer due to the consumption of red meat. However, fish and shellfish, teas, and spices contain up to five times more iron than red meat. There is insufficient evidence that iron intake in dietary red meat is the primary causal factor for colorectal cancer.

      • Chemical contaminants
  13. Recovery of High Value‐Added Nutrients from Fruit and Vegetable Industrial Wastewater

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • The industrial processing water of fruit and vegetables has raised serious environmental concerns due to the presence of many important bioactive compounds being disposed in the wastewater. Bioactive compounds have great potential for the food industry to optimize their process and to recover these compounds in order to develop value‐added products and to reduce environmental impacts.

  14. A Comprehensive Review on Food Applications of Terahertz Spectroscopy and Imaging

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Food product safety is a public health concern. Most of the food safety analytical and detection methods are expensive, labor intensive, and time consuming. A safe, rapid, reliable, and nondestructive detection method is needed to assure consumers that food products are safe to consume. Terahertz (THz) radiation, which has properties of both microwave and infrared, can penetrate and interact with many commonly used materials.

  15. Peanut Allergy: Characteristics and Approaches for Mitigation

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Peanut allergy has garnered significant attention because of the high sensitization rate, increase in allergy, and severity of the reaction. Sufficiently reliable therapies and efficient mitigating techniques to combat peanut allergy are still lacking. Current management relies on avoiding peanuts and nuts and seeds with homologous proteins, although adverse events mostly occur with accidental ingestion.

  16. Cold Plasma‐Mediated Treatments for Shelf Life Extension of Fresh Produce: A Review of Recent Research Developments

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Fresh produce, like fruits and vegetables, are important sources of nutrients and health‐promoting compounds. However, incidences of foodborne outbreaks associated with fresh produce often occur; it is thus important to develop and expand decay‐control technologies that can not only maintain the quality but can also control the biological hazards in postharvest, processing, and storage to extend their shelf life.

  17. Development of Nanozymes for Food Quality and Safety Detection: Principles and Recent Applications

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • The public concerns about agrifood safety call for innovative and reformative analytical techniques to meet the inspection requirements of high sensitivity, specificity, and reproducibility. Enzyme‐mimetic nanomaterials or nanozymes, which combine enzyme‐like properties with nanoscale features, emerge as an excellent tool for quality and safety detection in the agrifood sector, due to not only their robust capacity in detection but also their attraction in future‐oriented exploitations.

  18. Texture Modification Technologies and Their Opportunities for the Production of Dysphagia Foods: A Review

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Dysphagia or swallowing difficulty is a common morbidity experienced by those who have suffered a stroke or those undergone such treatments as head and neck surgeries. Dysphagic patients require special foods that are easier to swallow.

  19. Natural Antifungal Peptides/Proteins as Model for Novel Food Preservatives

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • A large range of ingredients for food and food products are subject to fungal contamination, which is a major cause of destruction of crops, exposure of animals and humans to invasive mycotoxins, and food spoilage. The resistance of fungal species to common preservation methods highlights the necessity of new ways to increase the shelf life of raw material for food and food products.

  20. The Evolution and Cultural Framing of Food Safety Management Systems—Where From and Where Next?

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • The aim of this paper is to review the development of food safety management systems (FSMS) from their origins in the 1950s to the present. The food safety challenges in modern food supply systems are explored and it is argued that there is a need for a more holistic thinking approach to food safety management.

  21. Application of Deep Learning in Food: A Review

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Deep learning has been proved to be an advanced technology for big data analysis with a large number of successful cases in image processing, speech recognition, object detection, and so on. Recently, it has also been introduced in food science and engineering. To our knowledge, this review is the first in the food domain.

  22. Lactic Acid Bacteria as Antifungal and Anti‐Mycotoxigenic Agents: A Comprehensive Review

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Fungal contamination of food and animal feed, especially by mycotoxigenic fungi, is not only a global food quality concern for food manufacturers, but it also poses serious health concerns because of the production of a variety of mycotoxins, some of which present considerable food safety challenges.

      • Natural toxins
      • Aflatoxins
      • Mycotoxins
  23. Decontamination of Microorganisms and Pesticides from Fresh Fruits and Vegetables: A Comprehensive Review from Common Household Processes to Modern Techniques

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Abstract

      • Listeria monocytogenes
      • Pesticide residues
      • Bacterial pathogens
      • Chemical contaminants
  24. Pre‐ and Postharvest Strategies to Minimize Mycotoxin Contamination in the Rice Food Chain

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Rice is part of many people's diet around the world, being the main energy source in some regions. Although fewer reports exist on the occurrence of mycotoxins in rice compared to other cereals, fungal contamination and the associated production of toxic metabolites, even at lower occurrence levels compared to other crops, are of concern because of the high consumption of rice in many countries.

  25. Perspectives and Trends in the Application of Photodynamic Inactivation for Microbiological Food Safety

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Photodynamic inactivation is a phenomenon that has the potential to cause microbial inactivation using visible light. It works on the principle that photosensitizers within the microbial cell can be activated using specific wavelengths to trigger a series of cytotoxic reactions. In the last few years, efforts to apply this intervention technology for food safety have been on the rise. This review article offers a detailed commentary on this research.