| Literature DB >> 19751593 |
Lena Shah1, Laura MacDougall, Andrea Ellis, Corinne Ong, Sion Shyng, Linda LeBlanc.
Abstract
Investigations of community outbreaks of cyclosporiasis are challenged by case-patients' poor recall of exposure resulting from lags in detection and the stealthy nature of food vehicles. We combined multiple techniques, including early consultation with food regulators, traceback of suspected items, and grocery store loyalty card records, to identify a single vehicle for a cyclosporiasis outbreak in British Columbia, Canada, in 2007.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19751593 PMCID: PMC2815965 DOI: 10.3201/eid1508.081585
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Figure 1Confirmed and probable cases of cyclosporiasis (N = 29), by date of onset, British Columbia, Canada, May–August 2007.
Cyclosporiasis case definitions, British Columbia, Canada, May 1–July 31, 2007
| Case type | Definition |
|---|---|
| Confirmed | British Columbia residents who had not traveled outside Canada and the United States within 2 weeks before symptom onset and in whom |
| Probable | Clinical illness compatible with |
*Laboratory-confirmed cases were reported to public health by medical diagnostic laboratories and specimens forwarded for confirmation to the public health reference laboratory. The morphologic identification of Cyclospora spp. oocysts included shape (spherical), size (8–10 μm in diameter), oocyst wall (well-defined), internal contents with refractile globules, autofluorescence, and modified acid-fast or safranin staining ().
Food items eaten more often by case-patients than by population controls, British Columbia, Canada, May 1–July 31, 2007*
| Food item | No. (%) case-patients | Controls, % | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Waterloo survey | US FoodNet | ||
| Strawberries | 16–17 (94–100) (1 unsure) | 32 | 28 |
| Romaine lettuce | 15 (88) | Any lettuce, 84 | 37 |
| Garlic | 12 (71) | NA | NA |
| Red peppers | 14 (82) | NA | NA |
| Cilantro | 12–15 (70–88) (3 unsure) | 8 | NA |
| Basil | 14–16 (82–94) (2 unsure) | 12 | NA |
*Case-patients were 17 persons with laboratory-confirmed cases interviewed during phase 2 (June 24–July 21, 2007). US FoodNet, Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network; NA, not applicable.
Figure 2Traceback of basil eaten by persons with confirmed cyclosporiasis (N = 14), British Columbia, Canada, May–August 2007.