Occurrence of antibiotic residues in milk. A case study of Gweru 2014.

ABSTRACT

The aim of the research was to determine the occurrence of antibiotic residues in milk in Gweru.

The population consisted of twenty-eight farmers. Ten farmers were randomly selected from the

population. The average volume that the farmers supply to dairy processing companies was

twenty thousand liters during the time of sampling. Raw milk was sampled in two hundred and

fifty mls sterile sample bottles. The samples were frozen up to the time of analysis. Detection

and quantitation of antibiotic residues was done using High Performance Liquid

Chromatography coupled to a mass spectroscopy detector (HPLC-MS). Fourteen antibiotics

were analyzed for and these are: the sulphonamides,(trimethoprin, sulfaquinoxali, sulfamethoxin,

sulfamethoxazole, sulfamethizole, sulfamethazine and sulfachloropyril), the steroids

dexamethasone, the flouroquinolones which is enrofloxacin , the β-Lactams which is Penicillin G

and amoxicillin as well as the Benzimidazoles which are thiabendazole and albendazole. Only

one antibiotic which is albendazole was detectable on the two analyses which were done

separately on the qualitative HPLC-MS machine in all the samples. The quantities of the

albendazole were then quantified on the Quantitative HPLC-MS machine. During the first

analysis farmer A had 241.31ppb albendazole and this was above 100ppb which is the Codex

maximum residual limit for albendazole. On the second analysis done farmers ,A, B, C, D, E, F

had 239.8ppb, 118.34ppb, 140.63ppb, 254.13ppb, 252.57ppb and 198.62ppb respectively which

were above the 100ppb Codex Standard and other farmers were below 100ppb. T-test at 95%

significance level showed that there is no significant difference in antibiotic concentration among

Dairy farmers that supply milk to Dairy processing companies around Gweru. The effect of

albendazole on fermentation of milk was done using back fermentation with 40ml of fermented

milk in 500ml of fresh milk. Albendazole was added at different concentrations which were 0,

100, 500, 750, 1000 and 2000μL. pH was measured using a pH meter and lactic acid content was

determined by using freshly prepared 0.1N sodium hydroxide. Albendazole slows down the rate

of fermentation as pH and percentage lactic acid content was less in the sample with 2000μl

albendazole added. pH change was highest in the samples with no antibiotic added. One way

ANOVA done at 99% significance level showed that the lactic acid content vary significantly

with antibiotic concentration. Regression analysis showed that there is a strong positive

correlation (R2= 0.967) between antibiotic concentration and percentage lactic acid.

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APA

Nyoka, R (2021). Occurrence of antibiotic residues in milk. A case study of Gweru 2014.. Afribary. Retrieved from https://tracking.afribary.com/works/occurrence-of-antibiotic-residues-in-milk-a-case-study-of-gweru-2014

MLA 8th

Nyoka, Ruth "Occurrence of antibiotic residues in milk. A case study of Gweru 2014." Afribary. Afribary, 09 May. 2021, https://tracking.afribary.com/works/occurrence-of-antibiotic-residues-in-milk-a-case-study-of-gweru-2014. Accessed 21 Nov. 2024.

MLA7

Nyoka, Ruth . "Occurrence of antibiotic residues in milk. A case study of Gweru 2014.". Afribary, Afribary, 09 May. 2021. Web. 21 Nov. 2024. < https://tracking.afribary.com/works/occurrence-of-antibiotic-residues-in-milk-a-case-study-of-gweru-2014 >.

Chicago

Nyoka, Ruth . "Occurrence of antibiotic residues in milk. A case study of Gweru 2014." Afribary (2021). Accessed November 21, 2024. https://tracking.afribary.com/works/occurrence-of-antibiotic-residues-in-milk-a-case-study-of-gweru-2014