A San Jose seafood restaurant in California is currently in hot water after customers have reportedly been sick due to food poisoning linked to Shigella bacteria. The California health officials is currently doing an investigation of the outbreak as they try to get to the bottom of the real source of the contamination.
Individuals being reporting symptoms including fever, abdominal pain and diarrhea last Saturday. Currently, at least 24 of those sickened have been diagnosed with shigella, according to the health department.
The restaurant was closed Sunday and officials are asking anyone who has eaten there and developed symptoms to see a doctor immediately. No specific source of contamination has been identified, according to the health department.
Health department officials told ABC News that many of those that were in the intensive care unit have since been discharged. Still, they were warning anyone with symptoms to stop working to curb the infection.
Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease expert at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, said officials will be especially concerned about improper food handling or if the produce was contaminated with polluted water.
“If produce comes in from the developing world, on occasion fresh produce has been irrigated or freshened with polluted water,” he explained.
The bacteria shigella can cause an infection called shigellosis. Symptoms usually appear one to two days after a person has been exposed to the bacteria, according to the U.S.Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Symptoms include diarrhea, fever and abdominal pain, and it usually resolves itself between five to seven days, though in rare cases the disease can be so dehydrating it can lead to dangerous complications. Young children, the elderly and those with compromised immune systems are at heightened risk for complications.
“This is serious business. It is a highly infectious agent,” Schaffner said. “It usually takes very little [bacteria] to make people sick. … That may account in part for the large number of [patients in] the outbreak.”
Agencies/Canadajournal