New Nanotech Foodborne Pathogen Detection 31
CodeWanker writes "Scientific American is reporting that scientists in China have developed a better, faster way to screen foodstuffs for infectious agent contamination. Bind antibodies to flourescent silica bits, mix with your hamburger, and turn on the black lights. Hilarity ensues."
OH NO! (Score:2, Funny)
China? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:China? (Score:1, Informative)
Re:China? (Score:2)
Health and Safety (Score:4, Insightful)
- how
will this retard mishandled food during preparation? (e.g. chefs who don't wash their hands) Shall happy meals now come w/ crank-powered blacklights?Re:Health and Safety (Score:2)
Maybe fear of losing their job will improve the preparation process?
Allergies...!? (Score:4, Insightful)
Field testing (Score:3, Interesting)
Or at least for the grocery/fast food stores to use on the stuff they are selling.
2)Fluorescence, not flourescence. (Americans also cannot spel aluminium.)
American English... (Score:1)
So you can take your "misspellings," and shove 'em in your "loo."
--Teechur007
Re:Field testing (Score:3, Insightful)
Except for one detail. Some contaminents can be harmful in small amounts and may be invisible to the unaided eye even when tagged. As I recall from a stint working in public health, people can easily get sick when food is contaminated with a very few organisms of E. Coli 0157:H7, So those test strips should, at the very least, come w
Hilarity ensues. (Score:2)
Here, on slashdot we like news for nerds, without any hilarity ensuing. Thanks.
Re:Hilarity ensues. (Score:1)
D-oh! That's so obvious... (Score:2)
Fast Food Fun (Score:2, Funny)
2. Turn on blacklights.
3. Vomit!
Now my order at Burger King (Score:1)
What about unsaturated fats? (Score:2)
Any experts out there care to weigh in?
Re:What about unsaturated fats? (Score:1)
What if this test gave a false positive for E. coli in a Happy Meal? You'd have a screaming mother, a screaming child, and a test approved by that magical flawless black box called SCIENCE to justi
Re:What about unsaturated fats? (Score:2, Informative)
E coli, yeah... but which one? (Score:3, Informative)
Addendum: I've just finished skimming through the PNAS paper and apparently the selectivity of this method is pretty good, which should minimize food-scare inducing false positives. More good news is they're also adapting it for other food contaminant like Salmonella (eggs, poultry etc) and Bacillus cereus (pasta, rice etc). Finally, after reading the Materials & Methods section, I can confirm that the plan is definitely not to illuminate burgers with blacklight - the method involves several sample preparation steps to bind the fluorescent particles and so on, and the reading is taken using a spectrophotometer set to specific excitation and emission wavelengths, solving the problem mentioned in another post of background signal due to fat and whatnot.