| Literature DB >> 33117481 |
Oyeladun Okunromade1, Mahmood Muazu Dalhat2, Aminatu Makarfi Umar2, Augustine Olajide Dada2, Jamilu Nikau2, Lamin Maneh2, Okokon Ita Ita2, Muhammad Shakir Balogun2, Patrick Nguku2, Olubunmi Ojo1, Chikwe Ihekweazu1.
Abstract
Food-borne botulism is a rare, acute and potentially fatal neurologic disorder that results from ingestion of food contaminated by botulinum toxin released from the anaerobic, spore-forming, gram-positive bacterium Clostridium botulinum. We reported an unusual cluster of botulism outbreak with high case fatality affecting a family following ingestion of home-made fish. A suspected outbreak of botulism affecting three patients in a family of six was reported to the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control. A rapid response team investigated by line-listing all the family members, interviewed extended family members, caregivers, clinicians, and nurses to collect socio-demographic and clinico epidemiological information using a semi-structured questionnaires. We collected blood from patients and food samples and locally made drink from the family home for laboratory testing. All family members ingested the same home-made food within the 48hrs before onset of symptoms in the index case. The clinical presentation of the three affected cases (AR=50.0%) was consistent with botulinum poisoning. Two of the affected cases died (CFR=66.7%) within 48hrs of admission, before antitoxin was made available. The third case had a milder presentation and survived, after administration of appropriate antitoxin. The remaining three children developed no symptoms. None of the samples cultured Clostridium botulinum. The blood samples were negative for mouse lethality test. Our report describes the challenges of diagnosis and management of rare emerging infectious disease outbreaks in resource-constrained settings. Copyright: Oyeladun Okunromade et al.Entities:
Keywords: Case report; anti-toxin; botulinum; botulism; mouse assay
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33117481 PMCID: PMC7572660 DOI: 10.11604/pamj.2020.36.287.20872
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pan Afr Med J
seventy-two hours dietary recall for case 2
| Date | Breakfast | Lunch | Dinner | Others |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 04/01/2018 | Didn´t remember | Didn´t remember | Didn´t remember | ------ |
| 05/01/2018 | Bread, egg and tea (at home) | Rice (Office) | Pounded yam and fish (home) | ------ |
| 06/01/2018 | Meat pie and tea (in the office) | Rice (Office) | Buffet (office dinner party) | ------ |
disease course and outcome of cases
| Case | Onset of symptoms | Symptoms onset to respiratory failure | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Case 1: female, age-47 (Mother) | 7th January,2018 | <24hrs | Dead |
| Case 2: male, age-49 (Father) | 7th January, 2018 | >24hrs | Dead |
| Case 3: Female, age-15 (daughter) | 11th January, 2018 | Nil respiratory failure | Alive |
Figure 1timeline for suspected botulism outbreak in Abuja, Nigeria, 2018