Food and Water Borne Diseases
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Transcript Food and Water Borne Diseases
Food Poisoning
Dr. Sabir
Fecal-Oral Route
Pathogen
is shed in feces
Transmission occurs when another
person comes in contact with this
feces (food or person)
EX: Food handler use the restroom,
does not wash hands well makes
salad customer eats the salad, gets
sick
General Measures of Prevention
Clean & store food properly
Prepare food properly cooking
adequately
Restrict carriers from food preparation
Protect food from insects, rodents
Use pure water
Staphylococcal Food Poisoning
Staphylococcus aureus
Humans harbor these organisms, present
in boils, skin lesions
Food poisoning is caused when staph is
transferred from person to food
Could
come from an open boil, lesions,
sneeze, etc
Staphylococcal Food Poisoning
Intoxication caused by 3 toxins
“True” food poisoning
Exotoxins are heat stable proteins known
as enterotoxins
second inhibit water absorption from
the intestine & induce diarrhea & vomiting
Third one damages the intestinal lining
colitis
Symptoms
Nausea, vomiting, abdominal cramps,
diarrhea
Onset 1-6 hours after eating the
contaminated food
Key Feature absence of fever, this
distinguishes it from other food borne
diseases
Prevention
1.
2.
Reduce the possibility of food
handlers contaminating food
( education in general hygiene)
Keep cold foods cold, hot foods hot
( serve foods when prepared or
keep refrigerated, do not allow
foods to sit at room temperature)
Clostridium botulinum &
Botulism
C.
botulinum Gm(+) ,
endospore forming organism,
anaerobic
Present in soil, ponds and lakes
Botulism
Infrequent,
but fatal
Caused by exotoxins produced
by C. botulinum most deadly
biological toxin neurotoxin
and affects the CNS
Botulinum Toxin
8
types 3 affect humans
Exotoxins are readily destroyed
by heat
Boiling for 3 mins will inactivate
the toxin( 10-20 min recom.)
Botulism
Associated
with home or commercial
canned low acid foods, ex: veggies &
fruits
Smoked meat
Toxin is preformed & acts readily
Vomiting, diarrhea, constipation may
occur BUT neurological symptoms are
inevitable w/in 12-36hrs
Neurological Symptoms
Blurred
or double vision, slurred
speech, dyspnea, dysphagia, dry
mouth
Evidence of paralysis and reflect
loss of ability to transmit nerve
impulses
Death may occur w/in 12-24h
from respiratory failure
Diagnosis & Therapy
Fatality
rate is low due to accurate
diagnosis and supportive therapy
Suspected cases must be
hospitalized and give IM or IV
antitoxin and respiratory support.
Recovery may be slow months to
years
Prevention
Endospores
may not be removed
by washing
Proper canning
After canning avoid bulging
can/jar
Clostridium perfringes
Anaerobic spore former
Present in soil & intestines of humans
and animals hence also in sewage
Typical illness diarrhea, abdominal
cramps, nausea and vomiting
Sickness lasts a day, incubation period is
usually 6-24 hours
Prevention: refrigerate food and cook
adequately
Bacillus cereus
Anaerobic spore former present in soil
Produces a heat stable toxin
Common in uncooked rice rice is cooked
and left at room temp, spores germinate
& produces the toxin that is not
destroyed by brief cooking )
Symptoms & Prevention same as C.
perfringes
Salmonella
Gm(-)
rod
Facultative anaerobe
Causes salmonellosis
Two strains S. enteritidis, S.
typhimurium
Salmonellosis
Infection
caused by salmonella
transferred in food (fecal
contamination)
Bacteria enter & adhere to the
intestinal mucosa
Infection is limited to the
intestinal mucosa
Symptoms
Headache, chills, vomiting, nausea,
abdominal cramps & fever
Onset: sudden and violent after ingestion
of contaminated food
12-36 hrs incubation period
Lasts for 1 wk can cause severe
dehydration in infants
May eventually spread to the blood
stream
Reservoir
Wide
variety of animals poultry,
cattle, swine, rodents
Pets chicks, dogs, cats, reptiles
Transmission
Raw
undercooked foods
Meat, poultry, eggs, milk
Person-person
Fecal-oral route
Prevention
Thaw
meat in refrigerator
Cook eggs & meat well
Salmonella is destroyed by
conventional cooking
Escherichia coli
Gm(-) rod, facultative anaerobic
Causes gastroenteritis, bladder
infections, Kidney infections, gall
bladder infections, septicemia,
pneumonia
Urine infection in 90% of non hospital
patients, 30% in nosocomial patients
4 Major Types
Enteropathogenic E.coli
ETEC Enterotoxigenic E.coli
EIEC Enteroinvasive E.coli
EHEC Enterhemorrhagic
EPEC
E.coli
EPEC
Associated
with severe diarrhea,
Outbreaks most often affect
infants, especially those that are
bottle-fed
ETEC
Associated
with “travelers diarrhea,
Produces 2 toxins
Results in fluid loss& copious watery
diarrhea
Disease is usually self-limiting,
infants, elderly appropriate
electrolyte replacement therapy may
be necessary.
EIEC
Affects
the large intestine
Illness known as bacillary
dysentery
Penetrates the epithelial cells
Multiplies & destroys cell
Results in bloody mucus stools
Often
mistaken for dysentery caused
by Shigella species
EHEC
Present
in undercooked meat, also
in fruit juices
Causes severe abdominal cramps,
copius bloody diarrhea with no pus
Produces a powerful exotoxin
GI disease can lead to kidney
damage
Foodborne & Waterborne Viruses
Rotavirus most common cause of
severe dehydrating diarrhea
Hepatitis A Virus
Enteroviruses
Norwalk Agent winter vomiting
disease