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. 1972 Jan;23(1):78–81. doi: 10.1128/am.23.1.78-81.1972

Twenty-Four-Hour Immunofluorescence Technique for the Detection of Salmonellae in Nonfat Dry Milk

R H Reamer 1, R E Hargrove 1
PMCID: PMC380280  PMID: 4551044

Abstract

A detection procedure was developed in which a newly devised lysine-iron medium was used as a one-step selective and enrichment medium for detection of salmonellae by the fluorescent-antibody technique. Incubation was conducted in two steps: initially at 30 C for 5 hr to resuscitate sublethally stressed cells, followed by incubation at 39 C for 17 hr. Twenty-seven strains of salmonellae from groups A-I were utilized in the development of this procedure which was sensitive enough to detect one Salmonella bacterium in 100 g of nonfat dry milk.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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