Comunidad de Negocios Internacionales relacionados con la producción animal
Usted necesita actualizar su Flash Player
Site:
Aquaculture MYCOTOXINS Poultry Industry Pig Industry Dairy Cattle Feed
Technical Articles / Technical Articles' List / Back to Mycotoxins
 

Avoiding Some Pitfalls in Testing for Mycotoxins for Pet Food Manufacturers

Readers' Rating: (See details)  Rate this article

Send enviar

Who saw this article? New!


Author: John L. Richard, Ph.D. - Consultant to Romer Labs


As an independent consultant to several pet food companies, both domestic and international, and in light of the recent episode of dog deaths following consumption of aflatoxin-tainted foodfrom Diamond Pet Foods, I would like to offer some advice to other pet food companiesregarding testing for mycotoxins.

Hopefully, as a pet food company, you are testing for mycotoxins in the incoming ingredients for your pet food products and especially testing for, at least, aflatoxins. Of course not all ingredients are even potentially involved with contamination by toxigenic fungi. However you should know which mycotoxins are of concern based on your ingredients. Once this is established, you should have determined your criteria for accept or reject of these incoming ingredients of potential contamination with mycotoxins, and you should have chosen a test kit based on these criteria and it should have performed acceptably in your hands.

Knowing that most of the uncertainty or error in testing for mycotoxins is in sampling, you should be cognizant of the appropriate methods of sampling the various kinds of vessels delivering commodities to your facility for inclusion in pet food products. Let us assume then that you have adequately sampled the incoming vessels and have prepared the sample according to specifications for analysis with the selected test kit. When using the test kit, make sure that you do not “cut corners” as the test kit has been validated by the manufacturer using the exact criteria and procedure as in the test kit directions. Also, make sure the test kit was validated by
the manufacturer for the specific commodity on which you are applying the test. Test kit manufacturers do a good job of validating their test kits before offering them on the market and usually they are approved by an outside agency, such as the USDA (GIPSA) or AOAC International, for specified commodities or products.

As a pet food manufacturer you should form a partnership with the test kit manufacturer and if you have reason to suspect that the test kit is not performing adequately, contact the manufacturer and work together to determine if and where there is a problem. Test kits are validated based on their performance in comparison to a reference method of analysis with a high degree of accuracy and sensitivity such as High Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC). So, if you question the results of your test kit, use some of the samples and have them tested with HPLC to determine if there is a problem.

Remember that mycotoxin testing includes sampling, sample preparation and analysis. As I said above, sampling allows the greatest uncertainty or error ( anywhere from 40 to 90 percent of total testing error) while the analysis part usually contributes the lesser amount of total uncertainty or error. So, believe your test kit as it has been validated, BUT if you think there is something wrong, make sure to “check it out” by working with the test kit manufacturer and have identical samples tested with the test kit and HPLC.

Now that you have adequately tested incoming ingredients of potential involvement with mycotoxins, I suggest that you periodically pull some product from the line and send it to a laboratory that is capable of doing HPLC analysis of the finished product BECAUSE it is highly unlikely that the test kit that you are using is validated for use on your finished product and possibly could not pass any validation criteria.

All of these above points are part of a Total Quality Assurance Program for Risk Management of Mycotoxins that has been instituted by many pet food companies. This program is integrated with their general quality assurance and HACCP programs. It offers a means to consistently and accurately monitor for mycotoxin problems and a means to deal with loads or lots of grain thatmay have been inadvertently been purchased and subsequently found to be contaminated.

As a consultant to pet food companies and to Romer Labs, I have been part of a team tosuccessfully institute such a program allowing pet food companies to avoid mycotoxin contaminated products.

Author: John L. Richard, Ph.D. - Consultant to Romer Labs

Readers' Rating: (See details)  Rate this article

   Send   enviar

Who saw this article? New!



MAKE A COMMENT ABOUT THIS ISSUE.

 Make a comment about this issue
ENGOREART MYC 20080517
 
Usted necesita actualizar su Flash Player
Usted necesita actualizar su Flash Player
Usted necesita actualizar su Flash Player
  Related Products
 
Agranco Corp. (United States)
Agrabond (afl)
TECHNICAL SUMMARY What is AGRABOND (afl)? AGRABOND (afl) is a calcium and sodium based alimino-silicate carefully selected and treated with AGRANCO...
 
 
Special Nutrients Inc. (United States)
MANUAL - Mycotoxins And Mycotoxicosis in Animals and Humans
Alberto Gimeno and Maria Ligia Martins published in 2003 a mycotoxins manual in Spanish entitled "Micotoxinas y Micotoxicosis en Animales y Hum...
 
 
Biomin (Austria)
Mycofix Plus
The Mycofix® Plus product line represents a modular system that protects animal health by deactivation of mycotoxins, taken in with respectively conta...
 
 
Tecna SRL (Italy)
I'screen AFLA M1 (MA418 and MA419)
Quantitative ELISA, 48 and 96 det. Detection limit: 5 ppt in milk 37,5 ppt in cheese Sample preparation: centrifugation for milk, extract...
 
 
KeTox A/S (Denmark)
Mycotoxin binders
We have a series of mycotoxin binders based on minerals and yeast...
 
 
  Technical Articles
  FluoroQuant® Afla Plus Test Kit for Aflatoxin Testing Granted Performance TestedSM Status by AOAC
The Aflatoxins are a chemically related group of compounds that are important hepatotoxic mycotoxins. They are produced by fungi, ...

LC/MS/MS – The new reference method for mycotoxin detection?
The analysis of mycotoxins has become an issue of global interest, in particular because most countries already set up regulative ...

Avoiding Some Pitfalls in Testing for Mycotoxins for Pet Food Manufacturers
As an independent consultant to several pet food companies, both domestic and international, and in light of the recent episode of ...

Deoxynivalenol, a Risk Mycotoxin for Children. Analytical Methods. Deoxynivalenol Levels in Wheat-Based Food Products
Description and chemistry of deoxynivalenol 4-Deoxynivalenol (DON), also known as vomitoxin belongs to tri ...

See all...

 
 Related Forums
 Article: Molds, Mycotoxins and Their Effect on Horses

Article: Toxicological Synergism between Fusarium Mycotoxins in Feeds

Article: The negative effects of various mycotoxins on the immune system of poultry

Article: Occurrence of Mycotoxins in Commodities collected in Spain

Article: Occurrence of Mycotoxins in Feed Samples from Asia

Article: Understanding Mycotoxins And Their Impact On Animal Performance

Article: European experts see an increase in mycotoxin contamination globally - A mycotoxin risk management system can help

Article: Mycotoxins in the human food chain: what risks for the consumer?

Article: Determination of fungal microbiota and mycotoxins in brewers grain used in dairy cattle feeding in the State of Bahia, Brazil

Article: An association of mycotoxins with production, health and reproduction in dairy cattle and guidelines for prevention and treatment

Article: Mycotoxins in animal feed: is there really a problem?

Article: Deoxynivalenol, a Risk Mycotoxin for Children. Analytical Methods. Deoxynivalenol Levels in Wheat-Based Food Products

News: Test Flood-Damaged Corn for Mold Before Feeding to Livestock

News: First Quantitative Test for Ochratoxin in Grain and Feedstuff

News: New Pima Cottons Fight Fusarium Fungus

AREAS
Home | Aquaculture | Mycotoxins | Poultry Industry | Pig Industry | Dairy Cattle | Feed
MYCOTOXINS
Home | Events | Companies and Products | Home | Forums | Technical Articles | Professionals Guide | News

Copyright © 1999-2008 Engormix.com - All Rights Reserved.