Álvaro Bisol Serafini
Universidade Federal de Goiás
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Álvaro Bisol Serafini.
Brazilian Journal of Microbiology | 2006
Débora Cabral Machado; Carla Marques Maia; Isabel Dias Carvalho; Natan Fontoura da Silva; Maria Cláudia Dantas Porfírio Borges André; Álvaro Bisol Serafini
An attempt was made to evaluate microbiological quality of horticultural crops grown organically. Three species of vegetables were used, lettuce (Lactuva sativa), radish (Raphanus sativus) and spinach (Tetragonia expansa), grown organically, in fertile soil. Six different treatments were applied: mineral fertilizer, chicken, cow, and pig manure, chicken litter and cow manure, in association with a liquid foliar biofertilizer. These crops were handled according to correct agronomic practices for growing crops organically for commercial purposes. Samples were examined for the Most Probable Number (MPN/g/mL) of total and fecal coliforms and to detect the presence of Escherichia coli and Salmonella spp. All analyzed samples were considered acceptable for consumption, as Salmonella spp. was not detected. However, 63.3%, 50.0%, and 23.3% of the samples of lettuce, radish and spinach, respectively, contained >102 total coliforms/g of product. None of the samples of spinach or radish presented >102 fecal coliforms/g, and only 6.6% of lettuce samples contained >102 fecal coliforms/g. The presence of E. coli was confirmed in one sample of spinach, cultivated with cow manure.
Ciencia Rural | 2006
Campos Maria Raquel Hidalgo; André Kipnis; Maria Cláudia Dantas Porfírio Borges André; Carla Atavila da Silva Vieira; Liana Borges Jayme; Patrícia Pimentel Santos; Álvaro Bisol Serafini
The present work aimed to type E. coli strains obtained from handlers hands and noses, raw milk and Minas Frescal cheese produced by a dairy milk processing plant in Goias, Brazil in order to establish a contamination relationship between the sources of E. coli and cheese. Twenty-four samples were collected from raw milk and Minas Frescal cheese, 46 from hands and 46 from noses of handlers involved in the cheese manufacturing, between March/2004 and February/2005. All 69 E. coli strains isolated were submitted to the susceptibility test for six antimicrobials (ampicillin, cephalothin, ciprofloxacin, gentamicin, trimethopim-sulphamethoxazole and tetracycline. The strains were grouped in 17 different phenotypic susceptibility profiles (A-Q). The test allowed to establish correlation among a cheese strain (14Qb) and a handler (10M1) strain that presented the same susceptibility profile (E) suggesting a possible product contamination during the handling. In conclusion, the phenotypic susceptibility profiles determinated by the antibiogram method failed to establish a correlation between the strains obtained from the probable sources (handlers and milk) and the final products.
Revista De Saude Publica | 2003
Álvaro Bisol Serafini; Maria Cláudia Dantas Porfírio Borges André; Márcia Alves Vasconcelos Rodrigues; André Kipnis; Cynthia O Carvalho; Maria Raquel Hidalgo Campos; Érica C Monteiro; Fábia Martins; Thiago F N Jubé
OBJECTIVE The objectives of the present study were to determine the prevalence of potentially pathogenic microorganisms that indicate the hygienic and sanitary conditions of human milk samples collected at a Human Milk Bank. METHODS Three hundred and thirty eight (338) samples of human milk collected from a milk bank in a maternity in the municipality of Goiânia, in the state of Goias, Brazil were submitted to microbiological analysis. The latter were plated on McConkey agar according to the type of bacteria. Among the total number of samples collected, 194 consisted of raw milk and the remaining 144 were pasteurized milk. RESULTS The presence of Staphylococcus spp., Streptococcus spp., yeasts and molds, and Enterobacteriaceae was verified in the raw milk samples. Staphylococcus aureus were isolated in 10 (5.2%) samples, Staphylococcus epidermidis in 28 (14.4%) samples, Streptococcus spp. in three (1.6%) samples, yeasts and molds in 43 (22.2%) and Enterobacteriaceae in 49 (25.3%) samples. In a hundred and forty four (144) samples which underwent thermal treatment Staphylococcus aureus was detected in five (3.5%) samples, Staphylococcus epidermidis in 15 (10.4%), Staphylococcus lugdenensis in two (1.4%), Streptococcus spp. in four (2.8%), yeasts and molds in 37 (25.7%), and Enterobacteriaceae in nine (6.3%). CONCLUSIONS Analysis indicated a high degree of contamination in raw human milk, and as for the pasteurized milk, despite elimination of the great majority of potentially pathogenic microorganisms, the percentage of yeasts and molds was higher than in raw milk, demonstrating that a lower degree of initial contamination would be necessary for pasteurization to be an efficient means of microbiological control.
Journal of Food Science | 2010
Liana Jayme Borges; Maria Raquel Hidalgo Campos; Juliana Lamaro Cardoso; Maria Cláudia Dantas Porfírio Borges André; Álvaro Bisol Serafini
UNLABELLED This study aimed to compare strains of Staphylococcus aureus and E. coli isolated from food workers and enteral diet samples obtained from 2 public hospitals (H1/H2) in Goiania, Goias, Brazil, by the means of antibiogram and pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE). In the H1, strains of S. aureus were present in 2 enteral diet samples and in 13 food worker swabs. Strains of E. coli were found in an enteral diet sample from H1 and in 2 enteral diet samples from H2 and in 6 food worker swabs in the H1 and in 12 food worker swabs from H2. According to the antibiogram, the 6 susceptibility profiles (A to F) of 15 S. aureus strains colonizing personnel and enteral feeding did not allow the identification of the probable source of diet contamination. All 20 E. coli strains isolated from the H1 and H2 were grouped in 4 phenotypic profiles (A to D). The phenotypes A (H1) and C (H2) showed the same profile for microorganisms isolated from handlers and diets, suggesting more phenotypic similarity among these samples. PFGE genotyping showed that S. aureus isolates from diets were related to a single strain isolated from a food worker suggesting that in this case the reason for the diet contamination may be a result of food handling. The food worker appears to be the most probable source of E. coli contamination for enteral feeding from H2. This fact emphasizes on the food workers as a risk of bacterial transmission for the diets and that the diet chain production must be controlled. PRACTICAL APPLICATION The study emphasizes the importance of monitoring the enteral diet microbiological quality and the factors associated to its contamination. The study highlights the use of molecular biology as an instrument to correlate strains to determine the origin of the final product contamination.
Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2004
Márcia Alves Vasconcelos Rodrigues; Álvaro Bisol Serafini; Marieta de Souza Pereira; Thathiane Dias da Silva; Marcelo Fouad Rabahi; Suely Lemes de Alves; André Kipnis
This study compares smear, growth in Lowenstein-Jensen medium, and in-house polymerase chain reaction (PCR) techniques for the detection of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. A total of 72 specimens from 72 patients with clinical symptoms of tuberculosis, including 70 sputum and two bronchial aspirate samples, were tested in parallel by smear, culture, and in-house PCR techniques. From these, 48 (66.6%) were negative by the 3 methods, 2 (2.8%) were smear positive and negative by culture and in-house PCR, 11 (15.3%) were both smear and culture negative, and in-house PCR positive, 7 (9.7%) were positive by the 3 methods, 2 (2.8%) were positive by smear and culture, and negative by PCR, 2 (2.8%) were positive by culture and PCR, but smear negative. After the resolution of discrepancies in PCR results, the sensitivity and specificity for in-house PCR technique to M. tuberculosis relative to the culture, were 81.8% and 81.9%, respectively. These results confirm that this method, in-house PCR, may be a sensitive and specific technique for M. tuberculosis detection, occurring in both positive and negative smear and negative cultures.
Food Control | 2008
Maria Cláudia Dantas Porfírio Borges André; Maria Raquel Hidalgo Campos; Liana Jayme Borges; André Kipnis; Fabiana Cristina Pimenta; Álvaro Bisol Serafini
Revista de Patologia Tropical | 2007
Talissa de Moraes Tavares; Álvaro Bisol Serafini
Hig. aliment | 2002
Aline Essado Resende Calixto; Álvaro Bisol Serafini; André Kipnis; Maria Cláudia Dantas Porfírio Borges André
Revista de Patologia Tropical | 2008
Talissa de Moraes Tavares; Álvaro Bisol Serafini
Brazilian Journal of Veterinary Research and Animal Science | 2006
Maria Cláudia Dantas Porfírio Borges André; Patrícia Pimentel Santos; Maria Raquel Hidalgo Campos; Liana Jayme Borges; Álvaro Bisol Serafini
Collaboration
Dive into the Álvaro Bisol Serafini's collaboration.
Maria Cláudia Dantas Porfírio Borges André
Universidade Federal de Goiás
View shared research outputs