Skip to main content
Back

CEN ISO/TS 17919:2013

Microbiology of the food chain - Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for the detection of food-borne pathogens - Detection of botulinum type A, B, E and F neurotoxin-producing clostridia (ISO/TS 17919:2013)

General information

Valid from 09.12.2013
Base Documents
ISO/TS 17919:2013; CEN ISO/TS 17919:2013
Directives or regulations
None

Standard history

Status
Date
Type
Name
09.12.2013
Main
This Technical Specification specifies a horizontal method for the molecular detection of clostridia carrying botulinum neurotoxin A, B, E and F genes by a PCR method. This method detects the genes and not the toxins, therefore a positive result does not necessarily mean the presence of these toxins in the sample investigated. This Technical Specification is applicable to products for human consumption, animal feeding stuffs and environmental samples. The PCR assays for detection of genetic sequences encoding specific toxin types are described in the annexes B to C.

Required fields are indicated with *

*
*
*
PDF
26.84 € incl tax
Paper
26.84 € incl tax
Browse standard from 2.44 € incl tax
Standard monitoring

Customers who bought this item also bought

Main

CEN ISO/TS 15216-1:2013

Microbiology of food and animal feed - Horizontal method for determination of hepatitis A virus and norovirus in food using real-time RT-PCR - Part 1: Method for quantification (ISO/TS 15216-1:2013, Corrected Version 2013-05-01)
Withdrawn from 18.04.2017
Main

CEN ISO/TS 15216-2:2013

Microbiology of food and animal feed - Horizontal method for determination of hepatitis A virus and norovirus in food using real-time RT-PCR - Part 2: Method for qualitative detection (ISO/TS 15216-2:2013, Corrected Version 2013-05-01)
Withdrawn from 01.10.2019
Main

CEN ISO/TS 18867:2015

Microbiology of the food chain - Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for the detection of food-borne pathogens - Detection of pathogenic Yersinia enterocolitica and Yersinia pseudotuberculosis (ISO/TS 18867:2015)
Newest version Valid from 04.11.2015