Lourens Heres
Wageningen University and Research Centre
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Featured researches published by Lourens Heres.
Occupational and Environmental Medicine | 2012
Maarten J. Gilbert; Marian E. H. Bos; Birgitta Duim; Bert A.P. Urlings; Lourens Heres; Jaap A. Wagenaar; Dick Heederik
Objectives To assess livestock-associated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (LA-MRSA) carriage among workers in pig slaughterhouses and assess associated risk factors, including occupational exposure to LA-MRSA. Methods A cross-sectional study in three Dutch pig slaughterhouses was undertaken. Nasal swabs of participants were taken. Nasal swabs and surface wipes, air and glove samples were screened for presence of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). MRSA was quantitatively determined on gloves and in air samples by culturing and real-time PCR. Results 11 of 341 (3.2%) participants were identified as nasal MRSA carriers. MRSA-positive workers were predominantly found at the start of the slaughter process. Major risk factors for carriage were working in the lairage and working in the scalding and dehairing area. Most nasal isolates (73%) belonged to the LA-MRSA clone ST398. MRSA ST398-positive environmental samples were found throughout the slaughter process. A clear decrease was seen along the slaughterline in the number of MRSA-positive samples and in the MRSA amount per sample. Conclusions This study showed that working in the lairage area or scalding and dehairing area were the major risk factors for MRSA carriage in pig slaughterhouse workers, while the overall prevalence of MRSA carriage is low. Occupational exposure to MRSA decreased along the slaughterline, and the risk of carriage showed a parallel decrease.
International Journal of Food Microbiology | 2003
Lourens Heres; B. Engel; Frans van Knapen; Jaap A. Wagenaar; Bert A.P. Urlings
Fermented liquid feed (FLF) protects broiler chickens against colonisation with Salmonella. While Campylobacter causes more disease cases in humans than Salmonella, the effect of FLF on Campylobacter was assessed. The fermented liquid feed is a moistened feed with a high number of lactobacilli, a high concentration of lactic acid, and a pH of 4. In three experiments Campylobacter was orally applied to individually housed 9-day-old broiler chickens. A significant reduction of susceptibility, as determined by cloacal swabs, was observed. At any moment where an animal has not started to shed Campylobacter yet, the probability to start shedding Campylobacter in a subsequent small time interval was nine times as high for the control chickens than for the animals that were fed FLF. FLF did not consistently change the Campylobacter colonisation level in the caeca. It was concluded that FLF could reduce the probability of introduction of Campylobacter in broiler flocks. In an experiment where some chickens were simultaneously inoculated with Salmonella enteritidis and Campylobacter, no interaction on susceptibility or caecal colonisation level was observed.
Journal of Food Protection | 2012
J. H. Smid; Lourens Heres; Arie H. Havelaar; Annemarie Pielaat
In biotracing systems, downstream chain information and model-based approaches are used to trace the sources of microbial contamination in a food chain. This article includes the results of a biotracing model for Salmonella in the pork slaughter process chain. A Bayesian belief network model was used in which information on the Salmonella level at different locations in the slaughterhouse were used in combination with prior knowledge about the dynamics of Salmonella throughout the slaughter line. Data collected in a Dutch slaughterhouse were used to specify prior beliefs about the model inputs and to iteratively refine the distributions of the parameters in the model to obtain an optimal description of that specific slaughterhouse. The primary purpose of the model is to trace the sources of contamination for individual Salmonella-positive carcasses at the end of the slaughter line. The model results indicated that house flora on or in the carcass splitter was the source of contamination for many carcasses, especially for those that carried contamination on the cutting side. The results also indicated that the parameter values of the model may be subject to temporal variation and can be used as a tool to provide estimates of such trends. This model illustrates the concept of biotracing, gives insight into the dynamics of Salmonella in the slaughter line, and indicates the sites in the line where data collection is most effective for biotracing. This biotracing model was implemented as an interactive computer application, which is a step in the process toward an operational biotracing system by which a stakeholder can initiate immediate responses to Salmonella contamination and other hazards in the pork slaughterhouse.
Avian Pathology | 2003
Lourens Heres; Jaap A. Wagenaar; F. van Knapen; Bert A.P. Urlings
In vivo experiments were conducted in order to investigate the passage and bacterial reduction of Salmonella in the crop and gizzard of chickens when fed two different feeds. The chickens were fed dry conventional feed and fermented liquid feed. The fermented feed contains a relatively high concentration of lactic and acetic acid and lactobacilli. One and three week old broiler chickens were necropsied at short intervals after inoculation with Salmonella Enteritidis. Counts of Salmonella from the crop, gizzard, duodenum, caecum and colon/rectum were obtained. This revealed a sharper decrease of Salmonella in the anterior parts of the gastro-intestinal tract in chickens fed with fermented feed than in chickens fed dry feed. It is therefore concluded that fermented feed improves the barrier formed by the crop and gizzard. The reduction of Salmonella is fully realised in the crop and gizzard. The lower intestinal compartment did not show a substantial effect on the reduction of Salmonella. The performed in vivo method appeared to be an appropriate way to study intervention strategies that aim to control Salmonella by improving the barrier function of the upper gastro-intestinal tract.
Food Additives and Contaminants Part A-chemistry Analysis Control Exposure & Risk Assessment | 2010
Lourens Heres; Ron Laurentius Hoogenboom; Rik Herbes; W.A. Traag; Bert A.P. Urlings
High levels of dioxins (PCDD/Fs) in pork were discovered in France and the Netherlands at the end of 2008. The contamination was rapidly traced back to a feed stock in the Republic of Ireland (RoI). Burning oil, used for the drying of bakery waste, appeared to be contaminated with PCBs. Consequently, very high levels up to 500 pg TEQ g−1 fat were found in pork. The congener pattern clearly pointed to PCB-oil as a source, but the ratio between the non-dioxin-like indicator PCBs (PCBs 28, 52, 101, 138, 152 and 180) and PCDD/Fs was much lower than observed during the Belgian incident, thereby limiting the suitability of indicator PCBs as a marker for the presence of dioxins and dioxin-like PCBs. This paper describes the tracking and tracing of the incident, the public–private cooperation, the surveillance activities and its results. A major lesson to be learned from this incident is the importance of good private food safety systems. In this incident, it was the private surveillance systems that identified the origin of contamination within 10 days after the first signal of increased dioxin levels in a product. On the other hand, retrospective analyses showed that signals were missed that could have led to an earlier detection of the incident and the source. Above all, the incident would not have occurred when food safety assurance systems had been effectively implemented in the involved feed chain. It is discussed that besides primary responsibility for effective private food safety systems, the competent authorities have to supervise whether the food safety procedures are capable of coping with these kinds of complex food safety issues, while private food companies need to implement the law, and public authorities should supervise and enforce them. Finally, it is discussed whether the health risks derived from consumption of the contaminated batches of meat may have been underestimated during the incident due to the unusually high intake of dioxins.
Veterinary Microbiology | 2014
E. van Duijkeren; P.D. Hengeveld; M. Albers; G. Pluister; P. Jacobs; Lourens Heres; A.W. van de Giessen
In the Netherlands, livestock-associated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (LA-MRSA) has been found in pigs, veal calves, horses and poultry. However, little is known about its prevalence in healthy dairy cattle. Recently, a new mec gene, called mecC, has been found in methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) isolates from humans and animals in several countries. The objective of our pilot study was to investigate the prevalence of MRSA (mecA and mecC) in dairy cows at a large slaughterhouse. Samples from the skin between the udder and hind leg were taken from 411 cows. The samples were incubated in Mueller-Hinton enrichment broth with 6.5% NaCl, followed by selective enrichment and plated onto Columbia agar with 5% sheep blood, Brilliance MRSA 2 agar and Baird-Parker agar. Suspected colonies were tested by PCR for a S. aureus specific DNA fragment, the mecA and mecC genes and the Panton-Valentine leucotoxin (PVL) genes. All MRSA isolates and methicillin-susceptible S. aureus (MSSA) isolates were typed by spa typing and MLVA typing. Sixteen of 411 (3.9%) cows, all originating from different farms, were found to be MRSA positive and this prevalence is lower than in Dutch pigs, veal calves and broilers. All MRSA isolates belonging to livestock-associated MLVA complex 398, were PVL-negative and spa type t011 predominated. MSSA isolates (n=39) were of many different MLVA types and spa type t543 was found most often. Four MSSA isolates belonging to MLVA clonal complex 398 and spa types t011 (n=2), t108 and t034 were isolated from different MRSA-negative animals. In conclusion, the prevalence of MRSA in dairy cows was low and isolates carrying the mecC gene were not found, indicating that it is absent or has a low prevalence (<0.73%) in Dutch dairy cows.
BMC Veterinary Research | 2008
Lourens Heres; D.J. Brus; T.H.J. Hagenaars
BackgroundIn many of the European countries affected by Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE), case clustering patterns have been observed. Most of these patterns have been interpreted in terms of heterogeneities in exposure of cattle to the BSE agent. Here we investigate whether spatial clustering is present in the Dutch BSE case data.ResultsWe have found three spatial case clusters in the Dutch BSE epidemic. The clusters are geographically distinct and each cluster appears in a different birth cohort. When testing all birth cohorts together, only one significant cluster was detected. The fact that we found stronger spatial clustering when using a cohort-based analysis, is consistent with the evidence that most BSE infections occur in animals less than 12 or 18 months old.ConclusionSignificant spatial case clustering is present in the Dutch BSE epidemic. The spatial clusters of BSE cases are most likely due to time-dependent heterogeneities in exposure related to feed production.
Meat Science | 2014
J. H. Smid; A.H.A.M. van Hoek; H.J.M. Aarts; Arie H. Havelaar; Lourens Heres; R. de Jonge; Annemarie Pielaat
Salmonella serotyping data, qualitatively described by van Hoek et al. (2012), were used to quantify potential sources of Salmonella in a Dutch pig slaughterhouse. Statistical tests to compare per-day Salmonella prevalence and serotyping data from multiple points in the chain were used to find transmission pathways. A statistical model based on serotyping data was developed to attribute Salmonella on dressed carcasses to the most likely source. Approximately two-third of dressed carcasses carrying Salmonella on the medial surface had been contaminated by house flora. For carcasses carrying Salmonella on the distal surface, transient Salmonella from incoming pigs was a more important source. The relevance of the different sources of Salmonella varied within and between sampling days. Results were compared to those of another modeling approach, in which Salmonella concentration data from the same samples were used (Smid et al., 2012). They mostly agreed. The approach chosen by an individual slaughterhouse depends on the data that are collected.
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health | 2013
Anne Hiller; Derk Oorburg; Henk J. Wisselink; Conny B. van Solt-Smits; Bert A.P. Urlings; Günter Klein; Gereon Schulze Althoff; Lourens Heres
Mycobacterium avium (MA) is a potential food safety hazard in pigs. Blood samples of slaughtered pigs in the Netherlands and Germany were tested for the presence of MA antibodies to estimate the serological prevalence in the tested population. In the Dutch and German population 1.0% and 1.7% samples were positive, and 0.5% and 17.4% of the herds were at risk for having a MA infection respectively. The validity of the applied MA-ELISA was evaluated under field conditions. The specificity of the MA-ELISA was high (>98.4%). The average herd sensitivity was 18%. In the affected herds on average 50% of the animals were tested bacteriological positive for MA. It can be concluded that serological screening for the presence of MA antibodies is capable of identifying pig populations that are at risk for a MA infection.
Poultry Science | 2003
Lourens Heres; B. Engel; F. van Knapen; M. C. M. de Jong; Jaap A. Wagenaar; H. A. P. Urlings