DIRECT INOCULATION OF FOOD AS THE CAUSE OF AN OUTBREAK OF GROUP-A STREPTOCOCCAL PHARYNGITIS

被引:23
|
作者
FARLEY, TA
WILSON, SA
MAHONEY, F
KELSO, KY
JOHNSON, DR
KAPLAN, EL
机构
[1] LOUISIANA DEPT HLTH & HOSP, EPIDEMIOL SECT, POB 60630, NEW ORLEANS, LA 70160 USA
[2] UNIV MINNESOTA, WHO, COLLABORATING CTR REFERENCE & RES STREPTOCOCCI, MINNEAPOLIS, MN 55455 USA
[3] CTR DIS CONTROL & PREVENT, DIV FIELD EPIDEMIOL, ATLANTA, GA USA
[4] UNIV MINNESOTA, DEPT PEDIAT, MINNEAPOLIS, MN 55455 USA
来源
JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES | 1993年 / 167卷 / 05期
关键词
D O I
10.1093/infdis/167.5.1232
中图分类号
R392 [医学免疫学]; Q939.91 [免疫学];
学科分类号
100102 ;
摘要
An investigation was conducted of a food-related outbreak of group A streptococcal pharyngitis following an elementary school banquet. Of 166 surveyed banquet attendees, 71 (43%) reported outbreak-associated pharyngitis, and 21 (88%) of 24 tested attendees had evidence of group A streptococcus (GAS) in the throat. Attendees who ate macaroni and cheese were three times more likely to develop pharyngitis than those who did not (66/132 [50%] vs. 5/30 [17%], P = .002). None of the food handlers had GAS recovered by throat culture. However, the cook who prepared the macaroni and cheese had a hand wound; a wound culture grew GAS with the same T agglutination pattern and M- and/or opacity factor type as that of all available GAS strains from ill attendees. Under laboratory conditions, macaroni and cheese supported rapid growth of the outbreak-associated strain of GAS. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first documented foodborne outbreak of GAS pharyngitis in which the only apparent source of contamination was a food handler's skin lesion.
引用
收藏
页码:1232 / 1235
页数:4
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] RAPID DETECTION OF GROUP-A STREPTOCOCCAL PHARYNGITIS IN A PEDIATRIC POPULATION WITH OPTICAL IMMUNOASSAY
    DELLALATTA, P
    WHITTIER, S
    HOSMER, M
    AGRE, F
    PEDIATRIC INFECTIOUS DISEASE JOURNAL, 1994, 13 (08) : 742 - 743
  • [32] GROUP-A BETA-HEMOLYTIC STREPTOCOCCAL PHARYNGITIS - CURRENT CLINICAL CONCEPTS
    KISELICA, D
    AMERICAN FAMILY PHYSICIAN, 1994, 49 (05) : 1147 - 1154
  • [34] GROUP-A B-HEMOLYTIC STREPTOCOCCAL PHARYNGITIS - RESULTS OF TREATMENT WITH LINCOMYCIN
    JACKSON, H
    COOPER, J
    MELLINGE.WJ
    OLSEN, AR
    CLINICIAN, 1974, 38 (07): : 296 - 302
  • [35] THE DIAGNOSIS OF GROUP-A, BETA-HEMOLYTIC STREPTOCOCCAL PHARYNGITIS IN THE OFFICE SETTING
    KELLOGG, JA
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF DISEASES OF CHILDREN, 1989, 143 (07): : 761 - 761
  • [36] EFFICACY OF BENZATHINE PENICILLIN-G IN GROUP-A STREPTOCOCCAL PHARYNGITIS - REEVALUATION
    FELDMAN, S
    BISNO, AL
    LOTT, L
    DODGE, R
    JACKSON, RE
    JOURNAL OF PEDIATRICS, 1987, 110 (05): : 783 - 787
  • [37] A large food-borne outbreak of group a streptococcal pharyngitis in an industrial plant: Potential for deliberate contamination
    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.
    ISRAEL MEDICAL ASSOCIATION JOURNAL, 2006, 8 (09): : 618 - 621
  • [38] RECENT CHANGES IN GROUP-A STREPTOCOCCAL SEROTYPES FROM UNCOMPLICATED PHARYNGITIS - A REFLECTION OF THE CHANGING EPIDEMIOLOGY OF SEVERE GROUP-A INFECTIONS
    KAPLAN, EL
    JOHNSON, DR
    REHDER, CD
    JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 1994, 170 (05): : 1346 - 1347
  • [39] Food-borne outbreak of streptococcal pharyngitis in an Israeli airforce base
    BarDayan, Y
    BarDayan, Y
    Klainbaum, Y
    Shemer, J
    SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 1996, 28 (06) : 563 - 566
  • [40] Group A streptococcal pharyngitis
    Li, Lok-Yee Joyce
    Wang, Shin-Yi
    Tsai, Cheng-Yu
    Wu, Cheng-Jung
    BMJ CASE REPORTS, 2021, 14 (09)