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Chapter 20: Vibrio spp.

Updated: 07/18/2007

Potential Food Safety Hazard Contents

Vibrio spp. Contents
The genus Vibrio includes Gram-negative, oxidase-positive (except two species), rod or curved rod-shaped facultative anaerobes. Many Vibrio spp. are pathogenic to humans and have been implicated in food-borne disease. Vibrio spp. other than V. cholerae and V. mimicus do not grow in media that lack added sodium chloride, and are referred to as "halophilic" (Elliot et al., 1998)

Association of Vibrio spp. with different clinical syndromesa,b.

 

Clinical Syndrome

Species

Gastroenteritis

Wound

Infection

Ear

Infection

Primary

Septicemia

Secondary

Septicemia

V. cholerae O1

+++

+

     

V. cholerae non-O1

+++

++

+

+

+

V. mimicus

++

 

+

   

V. fluvialis

++

       

V. parahaemolyticus

+++

+

+

 

+

V. alginolyticus

(+)

++

++

+

 

V. cincinnatiensis

     

+

 

V. hollisae

++

   

+

 

V. vulnificus

+

++

 

++

++

V. furnissii

(+)

       

V. damsela

 

++

     

V. metschnikovii

(+)

   

(+)

 

V. carchariae

 

+

     
a+++ = frequently reported, ++ = less common (6-100 reports); + = rare (1-5 reports), and (+) = association is unclear.
bTable taken from Pavia et al. (1989).

Vibrio cholerae Contents
V. cholerae was first described as the cause of cholera by Pacini in 1854. Pathogenic V. cholerae produces a heat-sensitive enterotoxin that causes the characteristic cholera symptoms, including "rice water stool." The species comprises several somatic (O) antigen groups, including O-group-1, which is associated with classical and El Tor biotypes. V. cholerae Ol may have several serotypes, including Inaba, Ogawa, and Hikojima. V. cholerae non-O1 (referred to in older literature as nonagglutinable or NAG vibrios) also can cause gastrointestinal disease, though typically less severe than that caused by V. cholerae O1 (Yamamoto et al., 1983). Serotype O139 is an exception, and produces classic cholera symptoms. This serotype was first identified in 1992 (CWG, 1933) as the cause of a new epidemic of cholera in India and Bangladesh. Non-O1 V. cholerae is found more readily in estuarin! e waters and seafood in the United States than is the Ol serogroup; however, the 0139 serogroup has not yet been found here. Because this species can grow in media lacking sodium chloride, it is not considered a halophilic Vibrio, although traces of sodium ion are required for growth. The standard FDA method for recovery of V. cholerae is qualitative (presence/absence). Testing V. cholerae O1 and non-O1 isolates for production of cholera toxin is recommended.

Some diarrheal and otitis isolates, once thought to be atypical V. cholerae non-O1 (sucrose-negative), are now recognized as a separate species, V. mimicus (Davis et al., 1981; Shantera et al., 1983). Members of the species may produce cholera-like enterotoxins. V. mimicus can be identified by biochemical procedures used for the identification of V. cholerae (Elliot et al., 1998).

Vibrio parahaemolyticus Contents
V. parahaemolyticus is a halophilic bacterium found naturally in estuarine waters and animals. It was first described as the cause of gastroenteritis in Japan (Fujino et al., 1951) and was first found in the United States by Baross and Liston (1968) in the estuarine waters of Puget Sound. It has a worldwide distribution in estuarine and coastal environments and has been isolated from many species of fish, shellfish, and crustaceans. V. parahaemolyticus has been implicated in numerous outbreaks of seafood-borne gastroenteritis in the United States. Between 1971 and 1978, crab, oyster, shrimp, and lobster were implicated in 14 outbreaks, which may have resulted from the consumption of raw or insufficiently heated seafood or properly cooked seafood contaminated after cooking. The FDA method of enumeration uses an MPN format (Elliott et al., 1998).

Vibrio vulnificus Contents
V. vulnificus is a halophilic bacterium found in the estuarine environment and is similar phenotypically to V. parahaemolyticus (Oliver, 1989). The species was first described as "lactose-positive" because most strains ferment lactose and are o-nitrophenyl-b -D-galactosidase (ONPG) positive. It causes food-borne and wound disease, either of which may progress to rapidly fatal septicemia in individuals with liver disease (cirrhosis) or other underlying illnesses such as diabetes. Raw oysters are the major source of food-borne disease caused by V. vulnificus. The FDA method of enumeration uses an MPN series confirmed by biochemical testing or an immunological test, such as the ELISA, with monoclonal antibody to a species-specific intracellular antigen (Elliott et al., 1998).

Other Vibrio species Contents
Other halophilic Vibrio spp., including V. fluvialis, V. hollisae, V. alginolyticus, V. furnissii, and V. metschnikovii, have been associated with gastroenteritis and are present in estuarine environments along with other pathogenic and nonpathogenic species of Vibrio. V. cincinnatiensis, V. damsela, and V. carchariae have not been associated with gastroenteritis, but on rare occasions are pathogenic to humans (Table 20-1). V. anguillarum, V. damsela, and V. carchariae are pathogenic to fish. Biochemical testing is required for taxonomic speciation (Elliott et al., 1998).
Control Measures Contents
Hazards from Vibrio can be prevented by cooking seafood thoroughly and by preventing cross-contamination once the seafood is cooked. Freezing is ineffective in killing the bacteria (Ward et al., 1997).

If V. parahaemolyticus has produced the heat-stable Kanagawa hemolysin, some cooking procedures may not destroy the hemolysin (Bradshaw et al., 1984).

The risk of V. vulnificus infection can also be reduced by rapidly refrigerating oysters from the Gulf Coast during warm-weather months. Individuals in the "high risk" groups should not consume raw molluscan shellfish (Ward et al., 1997).

Guidelines Contents
FDA Guidelines Contents
FDA guidelines for Vibrio in fish.

ICMSF Recommended Microbial Limits Contents
Recommended microbiological limits for V. parahaemolyticus in fish (ICMSF, 1986).
Product 
n1
c2
Bacteria/gram or/cm2
m3
M4
Fresh and frozen fish and cold-smoked fish
5
2
102
103
Frozen raw crustaceans
5
1
102
103
Frozen cooked crustaceans
5
1
102
103
Cooked, chilled, and frozen crabmeat
10
1
102
103
Fresh and frozen bivalve molluscs
10
1
102
103
1Number of representative sample units.
2Maximum number of acceptable sample units with bacterial counts between m and M.
3Maximum recommended bacterial counts for good quality products.
4Maximum recommended bacterial counts for marginally acceptable quality products.

Plate counts below "m" are considered good quality. Plate counts between "m" and "M" are considered marginally acceptable quality, but can be accepted if the number of samples does not exceed "c." Plate counts at or above "M" are considered unacceptable quality (ICMSF, 1986).

Growth Contents
Limiting conditions for V. cholerae
, V. parahaemolyticus, and V. vulnificus growth.

Heat Resistance Contents
Heat resistance of V. cholerae.
Temp. 
D-Value
Medium 
Reference
(ºC)
(ºF)
(min.)
   
48.9
120
9.17
Shrimp homogenate
Hinton and Grodner, 1985
49
120.2
8.15
Crabmeat
Shultz et al., 1984
54
129.2
5.02
Crabmeat
Shultz et al., 1984
54.4
129.9
0.43
Shrimp homogenate
Hinton and Grodner, 1985
60
140
2.65
Crabmeat
Shultz et al., 1984
60
140
0.39
Shrimp homogenate
Hinton and Grodner, 1985
65.5
149.9
0.32
Shrimp homogenate
Hinton and Grodner, 1985
66
150.8
1.60
Crabmeat
Shultz et al., 1984
66
150.8
1.22
Crayfish homogenate
Grodner and Hinton, 1985
71
159.8
0.30
Crabmeat
Shultz et al., 1984
71
159.8
0.30
Crayfish homogenate
Grodner and Hinton, 1985
71.1
160
0.31
Shrimp homogenate
Hinton and Grodner, 1985
76.7
170.1
0.30
Shrimp homogenate
Hinton and Grodner, 1985
77
170.6
0.27
Crayfish homogenate
Grodner and Hinton, 1985
82
179.6
0.27
Crayfish homogenate
Grodner and Hinton, 1985
82.2
180
0.28
Shrimp homogenate
Hinton and Grodner, 1985

Heat resistance of V. parahaemolyticus.

Temp.
D-Value
Medium
Reference
(ºC)
(ºF)
(min.)
   
47
116.6
65.1
7.5% NaCl
Beuchat and Worthington, 1976
49
120.0
0.82
Clam homogenate
Delmore and Chrisley, 1979
51
123.8
0.66
Clam homogenate
Delmore and Chrisley, 1979
53
127.4
0.40
Clam homogenate
Delmore and Chrisley, 1979
55
131
0.29
Clam homogenate
Delmore and Chrisley, 1979

Heat resistance of V. vulnificus.

Temp. 
D-Value
Medium
Reference
(ºC)
(ºF)
(min.)
   
47
116.6
2.40
Buffered saline
Cook and Ruple, 1992
50
122
1.15
Buffered saline
Cook and Ruple, 1992

Analytical Procedures Contents
Compendium of Analytical Methods (HC)  
Food sampling and preparation of sample homogenate (USFDA) Contents
Definition of Terms (HC Appendix A); Collection of samples (HC Appendix B); Supplement to All Methods in the HC Compendium: General Microbiological Guidance (HC Appendix I)  (Supplement to HC Appendix I: A. General Microbiological Guidance on Pre-warming of Broths in All Qualitative Methods in the Compendium) Contents
V. cholerae, V. parahaemolyticus, V. vulnificus, and other Vibrio species (USFDA) Contents
Detection of enterotoxigenic Vibrio cholerae in foods by the polymerase chain reaction (USFDA) Contents
Detection of Halophilic Vibrio Species in Seafood (HC MFLP-37) Contents
The isolation and identification of Vibrio cholerae 01 and non-01 from foods (HC MFLP-72) (pdf file) Contents
The isolation and enumeration of Vibrio vulnificus from fish and seafoods (HC MFLP-73) (pdf file) Contents
Other analytical procedures Contents
  • Vibrio cholerae in oysters: Elevated temperature enrichment method (AOAC, 1995a).
  • Vibrio vulnificus: Gas chromatographic identification method by microbial fatty acid profile (AOAC, 1995b).
  • V. vulnificus in oysters: DNA probe (DePaola et al., 1997).

Commercial Test Products Contents
Commercial test products for V. cholerae.

Test Kit

Analytical Technique

Approx. Total Test Time1

Supplier

CHECK 3 Vibrio sp.

Chemical, visual detection

4-18 h

Contamination Sciences LLC 
Contact: Robert Steinhauser 
4230 East Towne Blvd., Suite 191 
Madison, WI  53704 
Phone: 608/825-6125 
E-mail:
bsteinha@contam-sci.com
Web: www.contam-sci.com

Chromogenic Vibrio
[Presumptive differentiation of V. parahaemolyticus and  V. vulnificus]
Chromogenic media

48 h

Biomedix
Contact: Claver Bundac
1105 #F North Golden Springs Dr.
Diamond Bar, CA 91765
Phone: 800/674-8648 #4282; 909/396-0244  
E-mail: cb4biomedx@aol.com

ISO-GRID Method 
[For Vibrio parahaemolyticus count using VSP agar]

Membrane filtration with selective and differential culture medium using sucrose fermentation

24 h

QA Life Sciences, Inc. 
6645 Nancy Ridge Dr. 
San Diego, CA  92121 
Phone: 800/788-4446; 858/622-0560 
E-mail: bugsy@qalife.com

VET-RPLA TD920
[Used to identify V. cholerae enterotoxin]

Reversed passive latex agglutination

24 h (bacterial culture)

Oxoid, Inc.
Contact: Jim Bell
217 Colonnade Rd.
Nepean, Ontario K2E 7K3
Canada
Phone: 613/226-1318
E-mail:
jbell@oxoid.ca

1Includes enrichment

References Contents

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AOAC. 1995a. Vibrio cholerae in oysters: Elevated temperature enrichment method. Sec. 17.11.01, Method 988.20. In Official Methods of Analysis of AOAC International, 16th ed., P.A. Cunniff (Ed.), p. 106B-108. AOAC International, Gaithersburg, MD.

AOAC. 1995b. Vibrio vulnificus: Gas chromatographic identification method by microbial fatty acid profile. Sec. 17.11.02, Method 994.06. In Official Methods of Analysis of AOAC International, 16th ed., P.A. Cunniff (Ed.), p. 108-108B. AOAC International, Gaithersburg, MD.

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