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Determination of Dornic Acidity as a Method to Select Donor Milk in a Milk Bank. [artículo]

Por: Chaves Sánchez, Fernando [Microbiología y Parasitología] | Cruz Bértolo, Javier de la [Epidemiología Clínica] | Escuder Vieco, Diana [Neonatología] | García Lara, Nadia Raquel [Neonatología] | Pallás Alonso, Carmen Rosa [Neonatología] | Vázquez Román, Sara [Neonatología].
Colaborador(es): Servicio de Pediatría-Neonatología | Servicio de Microbiología y Parasitología | Instituto de Investigación imas12.
Editor: Breastfeeding Medicine, 2013; 2013Descripción: 8(1):99-104.Recursos en línea: Solicitar documento Resumen: Background: Dornic acidity may be an indirect measurement of milk's bacteria content and its quality. There are no uniform criteria among different human milk banks on milk acceptance criteria. The main aim of this study is to report the correlation between Dornic acidity and bacterial growth in donor milk in order to validate the Dornic acidity value as an adequate method to select milk prior to its pasteurization. Materials and Methods: From 105 pools, 4-mL samples of human milk were collected. Dornic acidity measurement and culture in blood and McConkey's agar cultures were performed. Based on Dornic acidity degrees, we classified milk into three quality categories: top quality (acidity <4 degrees D), intermediate (acidity between 4 degrees D and 7 degrees D), and milk unsuitable to be consumed (acidity >= 8 degrees D). Spearman's correlation coefficient was used to perform statistical analysis. Results: Seventy percent of the samples had Dornic acidity under 4 degrees D, and 88% had a value under 8 degrees D. A weak positive correlation was observed between the bacterial growth in milk and Dornic acidity. The overall discrimination performance of Dornic acidity was higher for predicting growth of Gram-negative organisms. In milk with Dornic acidity of >= 4 degrees D, such a measurement has a sensitivity of 100% for detecting all the samples with bacterial growth with Gram-negative bacteria of over 10(5) colony-forming units/mL. Conclusions: The correlation between Dornic acidity and bacterial growth in donor milk is weak but positive. The measurement of Dornic acidity could be considered as a simple and economical method to select milk to pasteurize in a human milk bank based in quality and safety criteria.
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Artículo Artículo PC13248 (Navegar estantería) Disponible

Formato Vancouver:
Vázquez-Román S, García-Lara NR, Escuder-Vieco D, Chaves-Sánchez F, De la Cruz-Bertolo J, Pallás-Alonso CR. Determination of Dornic acidity as a method to select donor milk in a milk bank. Breastfeed Med. 2013 Feb;8(1):99-104.

PMID: 23373435

Contiene 30 referencias

Background: Dornic acidity may be an indirect measurement of milk's bacteria content and its quality. There are no uniform criteria among different human milk banks on milk acceptance criteria. The main aim of this study is to report the correlation between Dornic acidity and bacterial growth in donor milk in order to validate the Dornic acidity value as an adequate method to select milk prior to its pasteurization. Materials and Methods: From 105 pools, 4-mL samples of human milk were collected. Dornic acidity measurement and culture in blood and McConkey's agar cultures were performed. Based on Dornic acidity degrees, we classified milk into three quality categories: top quality (acidity <4 degrees D), intermediate (acidity between 4 degrees D and 7 degrees D), and milk unsuitable to be consumed (acidity >= 8 degrees D). Spearman's correlation coefficient was used to perform statistical analysis. Results: Seventy percent of the samples had Dornic acidity under 4 degrees D, and 88% had a value under 8 degrees D. A weak positive correlation was observed between the bacterial growth in milk and Dornic acidity. The overall discrimination performance of Dornic acidity was higher for predicting growth of Gram-negative organisms. In milk with Dornic acidity of >= 4 degrees D, such a measurement has a sensitivity of 100% for detecting all the samples with bacterial growth with Gram-negative bacteria of over 10(5) colony-forming units/mL. Conclusions: The correlation between Dornic acidity and bacterial growth in donor milk is weak but positive. The measurement of Dornic acidity could be considered as a simple and economical method to select milk to pasteurize in a human milk bank based in quality and safety criteria.

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