# Viability of Trichinella spiralis in traditional sour pork fermentation and its inactivation by microwave heating: Implications for zoonotic risk and food safety

**Authors:** Atchara Artchayasawat, Benjamabhorn Pumhirunroj, Sukhonthip Khueangchiangkhwang, Thidarut Boonmars, Parichart Boueroy, Porntip Laummaunwai, Panaratana Rattanasuwan

PMC · DOI: 10.14202/vetworld.2025.1660-1666 · Veterinary World · 2025-06-19

## TL;DR

This study shows that traditional sour pork fermentation does not kill Trichinella parasites, but microwave heating can effectively eliminate them, reducing food safety risks.

## Contribution

The study demonstrates that microwave heating is an effective method to inactivate Trichinella spiralis larvae in fermented pork.

## Key findings

- Trichinella spiralis larvae remained viable during 5 days of sour pork fermentation.
- Microwave heating at 400 W for 3 min or 800 W for 1 min or longer inactivated all larvae.
- Boiling was confirmed as an effective control for larval inactivation.

## Abstract

Cultural dietary practices involving the consumption of raw or undercooked meat, such as traditional sour fermented pork, pose significant risks for foodborne parasitic infections, particularly trichinellosis caused by Trichinella spiralis. This study aimed to evaluate the viability of T. spiralis larvae during sour pork fermentation and to assess the efficacy of microwave heating as a practical method for inactivating the larvae.

Laboratory-bred hamsters were experimentally infected with T. spiralis to obtain encysted muscle larvae. Infected muscle samples were incorporated into a traditional sour pork recipe and fermented at ambient temperature (28–30°C) for 5 days. Larval viability was assessed daily using propidium iodide staining and confocal microscopy. In a separate experiment, pork slices embedded with infected muscle were subjected to microwave heating at 400 W (1–4 min) and 800 W (0.5–4.5 min). Post-treatment viability was determined similarly.

Encysted larvae remained viable throughout the 5-day fermentation period, with no uptake of propidium iodide observed in any samples. In contrast, microwave heating at 400 W for 3 min or at 800 W for 1 min or longer resulted in complete larval inactivation, as evidenced by positive staining. Non-heated controls retained viable larvae, while boiling served as an effective positive control for inactivation.

Traditional sour pork fermentation does not inactivate T. spiralis larvae within 5 days, underscoring a persistent zoonotic risk. However, microwave heating offers a rapid and accessible intervention for larval inactivation. These findings underscore the significance of public health education and food safety protocols in regions where the consumption of raw meat is culturally prevalent.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** trichinellosis (MONDO:0019444)
- **Species:** Trichinella spiralis (taxon 6334)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Infected muscle (MESH:D007239), trichinellosis (MESH:D014235), foodborne parasitic infections (MESH:D010272)
- **Chemicals:** propidium iodide (MESH:D011419)
- **Species:** Trichinella spiralis (species) [taxon 6334], Cricetinae (hamsters, subfamily) [taxon 10026]

## Full text

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## Figures

7 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12269927/full.md

## References

21 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12269927/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12269927