ForMyThunder
- 149
- 0
Does stomach acid kill all bacteria that you eat? If it does, then how do we get food poisoning?
ForMyThunder said:Does stomach acid kill all bacteria that you eat? If it does, then how do we get food poisoning?
That was the S. aureus for exampleSW VandeCarr said:In the case of staphylococcal food poisoning, bacterial toxins rather than the bacterium itself causes the symptoms. A case in point is in re-freezing uncooked fish or poultry that has fully thawed. If the meat is subsequently re-thawed, cooked and eaten, there is a risk of this type of food poisoning even if the meat is well cooked because the toxins are not always degraded at cooking temperatures.
Salmonella (non typhoid) food poisoning, on the other hand, occurs because the bacterium is acid resistant as bobze described. This is probably the most common source of food poisoning in the North America and Western Europe.
http://www.merckmanuals.com/home/sec09/ch122/ch122c.html
ForMyThunder said:Does stomach acid kill all bacteria that you eat? If it does, then how do we get food poisoning?