A large food-borne outbreak of group A streptococcal pharyngitis in an industrial plant: potential for deliberate contamination

Contamination of food with streptococci could present with unusual outbreaks that may be difficult to recognize in the early stages. This is demonstrated in a large food-borne outbreak of streptococcal pharyngitis that occurred in 2003 in a factory in Israel. The outbreak was reported to the public...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Israel Medical Association journal 2006-09, Vol.8 (9), p.618
Hauptverfasser: Kaluski, Dorit Nitzan, Barak, Estrella, Kaufman, Zalman, Valinsky, Lea, Marva, Esther, Korenman, Zina, Gorodnitzki, Zeev, Yishai, Ruth, Koltai, Deborah, Leventhal, Alex, Levine, Shimon, Havkin, Ofra, Green, Manfred S
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container_issue 9
container_start_page 618
container_title The Israel Medical Association journal
container_volume 8
creator Kaluski, Dorit Nitzan
Barak, Estrella
Kaufman, Zalman
Valinsky, Lea
Marva, Esther
Korenman, Zina
Gorodnitzki, Zeev
Yishai, Ruth
Koltai, Deborah
Leventhal, Alex
Levine, Shimon
Havkin, Ofra
Green, Manfred S
description Contamination of food with streptococci could present with unusual outbreaks that may be difficult to recognize in the early stages. This is demonstrated in a large food-borne outbreak of streptococcal pharyngitis that occurred in 2003 in a factory in Israel. The outbreak was reported to the public health services on July 2 and an epidemiologic investigation was initiated. Cases and controls were interviewed and throat swabs were taken. An estimated 212 cases occurred within the first 4 days, the peak occurring on the second day. There was a wave of secondary cases during an additional 11 days. The early signs were of a respiratory illness including sore throat, weakness and fever, with high absenteeism rates suggesting a respiratory illness. As part of a case-control study, cases and controls were interviewed and throat swabs taken. Illness was significantly associated with consumption of egg-mayonnaise salad (odds ratio 4.2, 95% confidence interval 1.4-12.6), suggesting an incubation period of 12-96 hours. The initial respiratory signs of food-borne streptococcal pharyngitis outbreaks could delay the identification of the vehicle of transmission. This could be particularly problematic in the event of deliberate contamination.
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source MEDLINE; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Bioterrorism
Case-Control Studies
Disease Outbreaks
Eggs - microbiology
Epidemiologic Methods
Food Microbiology
Humans
Industry
Israel - epidemiology
Occupational Diseases - epidemiology
Occupational Diseases - microbiology
Pharyngitis - epidemiology
Pharyngitis - microbiology
Streptococcal Infections - epidemiology
Streptococcal Infections - microbiology
Streptococcus pyogenes - isolation & purification
title A large food-borne outbreak of group A streptococcal pharyngitis in an industrial plant: potential for deliberate contamination
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