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E.coli O157 & Haemolytic Uraemic Syndrome


E.coli O104 poses a risk to holidaymakers.

2nd February 2012

A group of French tourists returned home from Turkey last autumn with diarrhoeal illnesses, and two of them developed Haemolytic Uraemic Syndrome (HUS) - a life-threatening kidney disease usually linked to E.coli.

Now French health officials have completed an investigation into this illness cluster and say the two women were infected with a strain of E.coli similar to the rarely seen bacteria that caused last year’s devastating European outbreak linked to sprouts grown from Egyptian fenugreek seeds.

In findings just released, it is claimed the two cases of HUS were caused by E.coli O104:H4, "genetically similar but not indistinguishable" from the E. coli O104:H4 outbreak strain in France and Germany last spring.

They conclude this is "further evidence" that Shiga toxin-producing E.coli (STEC) serogroup O104 circulates in Turkey, along with Afghanistan, Egypt and Tunisia. Public health authorities and clinicians are asked to be vigilant for possible STEC O104 infection in individuals returning from these areas.

The study involved 8 out of 22 French tourists who became sick after a two-week bus tour of Turkey in September of 2011. Two of these patients, both women in their 60s, experienced more serious illnesses, and upon their return to Caen, France they were treated for HUS.

Exposure to the bacteria most likely occurred in Turkey, the authors say, because the women began experiencing symptoms 11 days into their trip, and the average incubation period for E.coli O104:H4 is only 8 to 9 days. (The incubation period is the time between contact with a pathogen and when symptoms begin to appear).

Evidence suggests that the 6 other sickened tourists also contracted their illnesses in Turkey, because none reported eating foods in common before their flight to Turkey, and there was no commonality between the meals they selected on the flight (out of a choice of 2).

The two HUS cases may have been unrelated to the diarrheal illnesses of the other tour group members, according to the article.

"The reported incubation period [for the other 6 diarrheal cases] was much shorter than that of the HUS cases," it states. "Moreover, none were confirmed as STEC O104:H4 infection. Thus, this cluster may have been due to another pathogen and may have been a distinct event not linked to the HUS cases."

This most recent outbreak of E. coli O104:H4 from Turkey adds to evidence suggesting that E.coli O104 circulates in this region of the world, says the report. Between 2006 and 2010, the authors note, there have been reports of travelers returning from Afghanistan, Egypt, Tunisia and Turkey infected with various strains of the bacterium.

In this case, the source of the infection could not be determined. The tour group's meals were often served buffet-style, and investigators were unable to identify a specific food that might have been associated with illness. No member of the group recalled having eaten sprouts before or during the trip to Turkey.




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2nd February 2012

A group of French tourists returned home from Turkey last autumn with diarrhoeal illnesses, and two of them developed Haemolytic Uraemic Syndrome (HUS) - a life-threatening kidney disease usually linked to E.coli. Now French health... ...read on
2nd February 2012

Following a periodical review of consumer health risks from unpasteurised milk and cream, the Food Standards Agency (FSA) have maintained their recommendation that pasteurisation is an important control measure in reducing the risks from consumption of raw milk. ... ...read on
2nd February 2012

Researchers investigating the risk of E. coli O157 in the countryside as part of the UK research councils’ Rural Economy and Land Use Programme, say that simple measures and coordinated action from the relevant authorities could play a major role in keeping chil... ...read on
2nd February 2012

A $25 million grant has been awarded to the University of Nebraska-Lincoln to study how to reduce the risk of 8 pathogenic E.coli strains that can contaminate beef and cause human illness. The five-year research project, will not o... ...read on
2nd February 2012

Evidence is emerging that sprouted seeds could present an unacceptable risk to human health unless effective control measures such as irradiation can be used to make them safer. ... ...read on
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