Food- and Waterborne Viruses: Detection and Inactivation
A special issue of Pathogens (ISSN 2076-0817). This special issue belongs to the section "Viral Pathogens".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 January 2024) | Viewed by 4832
Special Issue Editors
Interests: enteric viruses; hepatitis E virus; food safety; virus persistence
Interests: foodborne viruses; detection methods; food safety; host-pathogen interaction
Interests: emerging viruses; molecular techniques; food safety
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Viruses, especially enteric viruses, frequently cause food- and waterborne disease outbreaks. The root source for the contamination of food or water is often sewage, since humans excrete vast numbers of viruses in their faeces. A typical characteristic of these viruses is their stability in the environment and food.
Food- and waterborne viruses cause various symptoms, and a small number of viruses is enough to infect humans. Persons infected with noroviruses that cause diarrhoea and vomiting often excrete viruses for a couple of weeks after the disappearance of their symptoms or they can be symptomless, and thus pose a challenge for food safety.
The food source can be ready-to-eat food, shellfish, fresh products, such as lettuce or berries, or other produce that has not undergone thorough heat treatment. On one hand, the water used during irrigation or during processing might be contaminated with norovirus or hepatitis A virus due to inadequate water treatment. On the other hand, an epidemiological connection between zoonotic hepatitis E viruses and consumption of pork sausages has been shown. It is well known that pigs and wild boar are commonly infected with HEV globally.
We have still knowledge gaps in the context of the detection and inactivation of food- and waterborne viruses. We need more data on how long viruses survive in food and water and how to efficiently remove viruses using wastewater treatment. We welcome original articles, reviews, mini-reviews, and outbreak studies for food- and waterborne viruses, not excluding other viruses found in sewage.
Dr. Leena Maunula
Dr. Sandra Martin-Latil
Dr. Gloria Sanchez
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- foodborne virus
- waterborne virus
- virus detection
- virus inactivation
- food safety
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