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Meat
Irradiation
Irradiation:
An Overview
Irradiation
passes through food in the form of
radiant energy, without leaving any residue. Ionizing radiation--that
which produces enough energy to kill bacteria and other pathogens in
food--involves the use of gamma rays produced by cobalt or cesium, or
X-rays or electrons from machine sources. The Food and Drug
Administration has declared that low-dose irradiation of food presents
no health risk.
In the
1920's, a French scientist discovered that
irradiation could preserve food. During World War II, the U.S. Army
tested irradiation on fruits, vegetables, dairy products and meat.
Irradiated food has been routinely used for years by NASA.
Donald W.
Thayer, a research chemist with USDA's
Agricultural Research Service, and colleagues at ARS' Food Safety
Research Unit of the Eastern Regional Research Center in Wyndmoor,
Pennsylvania, have been testing irradiation on food for 16 years.
Not only
does irradiation extend the shelf life of
fruits and vegetables, but it also kills pests. Thayer likens
irradiation to pasteurization. "When used with the proper handling and
processing techniques, irradiation greatly reduces the risk that
contaminated meat, poultry and other foods will reach consumers."
"Irradiation
reduces the chance of food borne
pathogens reaching the consumer," says Thayer. "Scientific studies
conducted worldwide over the past 40 years have shown irradiation to be
a wholesome process."
According
to Thayer, during the irradiation
process, food never comes in contact with any radioactive material. The
gamma rays, X-rays, or electrons used in the process do not make food
radioactive. Irradiation, he says, is similar to exposure to sunlight
or being X-rayed for medical reasons. Specific doses of radiation can
kill rapidly growing cells, such as those of insects or spoilage and
pathogenic bacteria. But the process has little effect on the food
itself because there is no cellular activity in the food. The changes
that do occur are similar to the effects of canning, cooking or
freezing food.
One
concern raised with irradiation is that it may
affect the nutritional aspect of food. Thayer reports that irradiation
can minimally affect some very sensitive vitamins like B1 in pork.
"But it
has been estimated that if all the pork in
the United States were to be irradiated, Americans would lose only 3.2
percent of the vitamin B1 in their diets," Thayer says. "Irradiation
converts small amounts of vitamin C in fruit to another equally usable
form, so nothing is lost. In fact, multigenerational studies of animals
fed irradiated foods show that not only is it safe, but the nutritive
value remains virtually unchanged."
Herbs,
spices and seasonings can introduce bacteria
that may cause spoilage or food borne disease in food that must be
stored or transported before reaching consumers. Some commercial food
processors treat spices with methyl bromide to kill insects or with
ethylene oxide to control bacteria and mold. Both these chemicals are
extremely toxic.
But most
spices, herbs and dry vegetable seasonings
in the United States are treated with ionizing radiation, which was
sanctioned for this particular use by FDA in 1986.
In 1963,
FDA authorized the first use of
irradiation to treat food in the United States. Wheat and wheat flour
were irradiated to rid them of insects. An electron beam--a result of
collaborative research between ARS and the U.S. Army--is used to kill
insects on about 400,000 tons of wheat a year at the port of Odessa,
Ukraine. This irradiation treatment is not used in the United States
because for the time being we have other fumigants and methods of
getting pests out of grain.
It was 23
years later, in 1986, that irradiation
was approved to control insects and inhibit growth and ripening in
fruits, vegetables, and grain. Irradiation increases the shelf life of
very perishable sweet onions to three months and not only extends the
shelf life of tomatoes, but also allows them to be picked when fully
ripe. Most flavorless tomatoes taste that way because they're picked
green to ensure they get to market before they rot. Zapped by
irradiation, mushrooms can last for three weeks without browning or cap
separation and strawberries can stay in the refrigerator for three
weeks without decay or shrinkage.
Even the
dreaded Cyclospora parasite succumbs to
irradiation. Thayer and colleagues have completed four studies of this
pest that has recently been found on raspberries and strawberries.
"We used a
dose of irradiation that is recommended
for fresh fruit on raspberries infected with Cyclospora. Not only does
irradiation inactivate the parasite, but it also doubles the
raspberries' shelf life," Thayer reports. "More research is planned on
irradiating Cyclospora, but it reacts in much the same way as
Toxoplasma gondii, a species of organism that continues to sporulate
after irradiation but does not multiply in its host."
Most of
Thayer's irradiation work has been with
meat to rid it of harmful microorganisms that cause foodborne
illnesses.
He was the
first to discover that E. coli 0157:H7
could be controlled by radiation and he and colleagues have
successfully used irradiation against other foodborne pathogens
including Bacillus cereus, Clostridium botulinum, Listeria
monocytogenes, Salmonella, Staphylococcus aureus and Toxoplasma gondii
on meat and poultry.
FDA's 1990
approval to use irradiation on poultry
to eliminate harmful pathogens was, in part, a result of Thayer's
research, as was the Dec. 2, 1997, approval to irradiate red meat.
In
addition to USDA scientists and FDA, the list of
endorsers of irradiation includes the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services, U.S. Public Health Service, U.S. Army, National
Association of State Departments of Agriculture, American Medical
Association, American Dietetic Association, American Meat Institute,
Institute of Food Technologists, and National Food Processors
Association. The World Health Organization and the Codex Alimentarius
Commission sanction the use of irradiation, which is also being used
in about 40 countries.
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