| Literature DB >> 7350497 |
P A Blake, D T Allegra, J D Snyder, T J Barrett, L McFarland, C T Caraway, J C Feeley, J P Craig, J V Lee, N D Puhr, R A Feldman.
Abstract
In September and October 1978, after a case of cholera had been discovered in southwestern Louisiana, 10 more Vibrio cholerae O-Group 1 infections were detected in four additional clusters. All 11 infected persons had recently eaten cooked crabs from five widely separated sites in the coastal marsh, and a matched-triplet case-control study showed a significant relation between cholera and eating such crabs (P = 0.007). V. cholerae O1 was isolated from estuarine water, from fresh shrimp, from a leftover cooked crab from a patient's refrigerator, and from sewage in six towns, including three without identified cases. All isolates in Louisiana and an isolate from a single unexplained case in Texas in 1973 were biotype El Tor and serotype inaba; they were hemolytic and of a phage type unique to the United States--suggesting that the organism persisted undetected along the Gulf Coast for at least five years.Entities:
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Year: 1980 PMID: 7350497 DOI: 10.1056/NEJM198002073020601
Source DB: PubMed Journal: N Engl J Med ISSN: 0028-4793 Impact factor: 91.245