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E. Coli Outbreak: Smoking Gun Difficult To Track Down

E Coli Outbreak

DAVID RISING and MIKE STOBBE   06/ 1/11 07:23 PM ET   AP

BERLIN — European health officials tracking one of the worst E. coli outbreaks on record might never know where it came from. It's a sad fact of life in food poisoning cases: There often is no smoking gun.

The germ has sickened more than 1,500 people, mostly in Germany. Most patients who have been interviewed said they ate lettuce, tomatoes or cucumbers, but officials testing produce across the continent have yet to find any vegetables with the particular strain involved.

Illnesses can occur days after tainted food is eaten and leftovers thrown out, so "the trail gets cold pretty quick," said Bill Marler, a Seattle attorney who specializes in food poisoning cases.

"They might never find the cause of the outbreak," said Paul Hunter, professor of health protection at England's University of East Anglia. "In most foodborne outbreaks, we don't know definitively where the contaminated food came from."

Germany's national health agency said Wednesday that more than 1,530 people there had been sickened by a dangerous E. coli germ, including 17 dead and 470 suffering from a kidney failure complication that was previously considered rare.

The outbreak has hit at least nine European countries, but virtually all the sick people either live in Germany or recently traveled there. Two people who were sickened are now in the U.S., and both had recently traveled to Hamburg, Germany, where many of the infections occurred.

The outbreak is already considered the third-largest involving E. coli in recent world history, and it may be the deadliest. Twelve people died in a 1996 Japanese outbreak that reportedly sickened more than 12,000, and seven died in a 2000 Canadian outbreak that also made thousands ill.

Nearly all cases are linked to northern Germany, "so it seems to be a common exposure there. But we don't yet know what was this exposure," said Dr. Hilde Kruse, the World Health Organization's food safety program manager for Europe.

"It's like a puzzle. But unfortunately the puzzle is not complete."

Where the dangerous germ came from is just one of the questions health officials have. Another is why patients are suffering from life-threatening kidney complications in an unusually high percentage of cases. It might mean the strain is particularly virulent, but it's also possible that thousands of less serious cases of food poisoning have gone unreported.

People with less severe symptoms may contact health authorities later, or not at all, Kruse said.

Kruse also said the outbreak is "different in that it mainly affects adults and predominantly women." Some experts say that likely has to do with diet – women tend to eat more fresh produce.

Experts are cautious about trying to explain what's happening at the moment. "An epidemic is like a battle – it's not clear where everything is coming from and what is going on," said Dr. Phillip Tarr, an E. coli expert at the Washington University School of Medicine.

The bacteria being investigated is one of the few dangerous types among the hundreds of different E. coli bugs. People and animals carry various E. coli in their intestines. But only a very small percentage are deadly. One of the most notorious was a strain that killed four U.S. children in 1993 and was linked to contaminated hamburgers at a fast-food chain.

Some experts said the sheer scope of the German outbreak may help eventually solve it. With more cases, there are better odds that the source can be found. That helped in the Japanese outbreak in 1996, which was blamed on radish sprouts, and the 2000 Canadian outbreak, which was traced to drinking water.

"Public health investigations are not always successful. But a big one with a lot of investigation around it is usually successful," said Dr. Robert Tauxe, a foodborne disease expert at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

To nail down the source, scientists will have to match the strain found in patients to one in vegetables or other sources by using DNA sequencing, said Brendan Wren, professor of pathogen molecular biology at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

But it can be difficult to find the strain in vegetables, and Wren doubts cucumbers are responsible. "As in many foodborne disease outbreaks, the culprit may never be identified and the epidemic just fades away," he said.

Meanwhile, investigators will increase efforts to find the food distributors and producers where the vegetables originated.

That can take weeks or even months, and can be complicated by the fact that different vegetables are often eaten together, as in salads, Tauxe said.

In the U.S., the government said it would step up testing of any imports of cucumbers or other possibly implicated produce from affected countries – but the nation gets very little fresh produce from Europe, especially this time of year. There was just one shipment of cucumbers from Spain in May, for instance, and no cucumbers, tomatoes or lettuce from Germany since January.

Another challenge for health officials: Catching and preventing future outbreaks of this strain.

According to an expert panel of the European Food Safety Authority, there is limited data on the presence of dangerous E. coli strains across Europe.

Current surveillance systems aren't well coordinated across Europe, the group said. It recommends monitoring a number of dangerous E. coli strains – but not the one that is responsible for the current outbreak.

In Germany, there are no spot checks of imported food coming from the 25 countries that are part of a zone that lacks internal border controls.

In the United States, labs regularly test for a dangerous E. coli type in stool samples from people with food-poisoning symptoms, but only a small percentage of the labs test for other forms of E. coli that make people sick. In recent years, investigators have found that a wider variety of E. coli bugs are also causing illness.

___

Stobbe reported from Atlanta. Medical Writer Maria Cheng in London and Karl Ritter in Stockholm contributed to this report.

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BERLIN — European health officials tracking one of the worst E. coli outbreaks on record might never know where it came from. It's a sad fact of life in food poisoning cases: There often is no s...
BERLIN — European health officials tracking one of the worst E. coli outbreaks on record might never know where it came from. It's a sad fact of life in food poisoning cases: There often is no s...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ethiopia1a
I want to take Lady Karma out for drinks and treat
02:55 PM on 06/02/2011
Sounds like al Qaeda has been busy in the lab these days. Scary for the rest of the world.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ethiopia1a
I want to take Lady Karma out for drinks and treat
02:55 PM on 06/02/2011
Weaponized E.coli? just a thought.
02:52 PM on 06/02/2011
bio terrorism!
10:37 AM on 06/02/2011
I am skeptical about this one. With so many localize cases, it is hard to believe that the questionnaires have not produced some solid leads.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cornel
wuf wuf
10:00 AM on 06/02/2011
This strain of E Coli is so rare, that I have to wonder if it was not disseminated on purpose !
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BoudiccaBlanc
~Yes, my micro-bio is emply! ~
09:59 AM on 06/02/2011
It only takes one person to infect many fruits and veggies; if they are employed at the right place. Whether by design or by accident.

For example....

"2008, May: Sahnoun Daifallah, a 42 year old chemist from Gloucester, UK, caused an estimated $700,000 (English pounds) damage when in May of 2008, he went on spraying a mixture of his urine and feces on foods in two supermarkets; on children's books in a bookshop and in a pub, as his personal campaign of Jihad. When caught by the Police, he did not resist, instead he said "you are doing your work and I am doing my work. (i.e. Jihad)" --"Understanding Mohammad -- A Psychobiology" by Ali Sina, page 3, 5th edition

Another example: "A person called: 'Typhoid Mary' of 1800's NYC fame."

-----

Accidental contamination.... ???
or
Terrorist attack...???
01:28 PM on 06/02/2011
I hate to say it, but I was thinking the same thing. With gene splicing becoming so commonplace, it's not hard to believe that someone with bad intent may be behind all of this. What a sad commentary on the human condition!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lesperado
glad I wasn't born conservative
09:45 AM on 06/02/2011
Yeah.... let's do what the Republicans and conservatives want and do away with the FDA.

You see, what they want is ultimately going to strip of what we need.
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Sandman911
Self employed gun toting Bible thumper.
08:52 AM on 06/02/2011
"And there shall be pestilences" (Disease caused by animals)
02:53 PM on 06/02/2011
fanned sand!
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Sandman911
Self employed gun toting Bible thumper.
10:20 PM on 06/02/2011
Thnx.
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08:40 AM on 06/02/2011
Any consideration given that it may not be foodbourne?
08:13 AM on 06/02/2011
All tests on fruit, veg and salad have proved negative so far.
Germany has stated publicly that the infection is NOT from Spanish cucumbers and that they were wrong to accuse. The German Health Authorities in Hamburg have tested the rinse baths that imported salads are washed in as they arrive in Hamburg and these have also proved negative.

All of these negative tests offer evidence of the worst possible consideration for the source of contamination, one that if publicly stated could cause panic and fear throughout Hamburg, if not the rest of Europe, one that us old British duffers remember well and shudder at the memory of.

Typhoid Annie.

Pray to God that I am wrong.
09:40 AM on 06/02/2011
Sorry, I should have explained. During 1964 in the UK there were outbreaks of Typhoid and it was reported that it was caused by a casual worker that had the infection and was unknowingly passing it on to others by the process of washing dishes in hotels. The reports in the press and the rumours generated caused much fear throughout Britain as many people had died and hundreds were infected, mainly in Aberdeen Scotland, without the cause of infection being known.

As children and teenagers we were afraid, mainly because our parents were afraid by the rumours of people dying. Typhoid Annie they called her and she was going about breathing on us all and killing our poor grandmothers with a disease that had not been seen in these islands for over 100 years.

Itinerant workers, Black People, in fact anyone that was not known or was of a so called lower class, were stigmatised and abused through fear that any contact with them would cause typhoid and certain death. Uncontrolled panic and fear ruled the day because it was said that a harbinger was at large.

Anyway, as it turned out, the typhoid came from Argentine corned beef but the fear and I suppose the shame of our parents actions stays with us old farts who remember. A bit like your McCarthy era I suppose, but with sticks.
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BoudiccaBlanc
~Yes, my micro-bio is emply! ~
09:46 AM on 06/02/2011
NYC had a real "Typhoid Mary" during the 1800's. She was banned from working as a cook and given a home at an asylum. However, more than once she left and took up working as a cook; with subsequent infection of the people that she cooked for; eventually, she was convicted and sentenced to permanent residency in an asylum.
lovelybunchofcoconuts
It's nice, to be nice, to the nice
08:24 AM on 06/03/2011
Sticks?
08:12 AM on 06/02/2011
According to the World Health Organisation this strain of E coli is a mutant strain and can be passed on via contact with an infected person. All tests so far on of fruit, veg and salad have proved negative and it is the consensus of both the US advisors and the German authorities that the source is from another area. Germany has today publicly stated that Spain is not to blame. Unusually, this strain of e coli can be passed on by contact with an infected person, their body fluids and a sneeze is as good as an infection.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-13626499

It has now been reported that the strain has reached the USA but is so far contained. http://abcnews.go.com/Health/coli-strain-ravages-europe-reaches-us/story?id=13733017
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08:45 AM on 06/02/2011
Thanks for the links Cromwell.
11:36 AM on 06/02/2011
Actually the spanish cucumbers tested positive for e-coli, just not this particular strain.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JasonMNan
07:34 PM on 06/02/2011
You do realise that E. coli is also found in warm blooded animals? i.e. 1 birdy doing it and the entire crate gets it. That is why you are supposed to wash your veg!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
unami
sonic truth
08:01 AM on 06/02/2011
"With increasing international travel and globalization of the world's economies, changing climates, and altered human behavior and demographics, multiple viruses have emerged to occupy expanded ecologic niches, producing disease syndromes in parts of the world where they had never before existed." - Our glorious global capitalist economy.
07:36 AM on 06/02/2011
Meanwhile tons of fruit and vegetables are rotting or being disposed of in Spain - one of the main exporters of fresh produce in Europe, because the first thing German authorities did was to blame it all on the Spanish producers, then they started to investigate where it actually came from.
Irresponsible declarations like that have already caused massive quantities of produce to be withdrawn from stores all over Europe and other huge quantities will never be delivered, because they cannot find buyers.
The impact on the Andalusian(South of Spain) economy is tragic at this point: not only do they have to dispose of the fruits and greens that have already been picked, but huge quantities will not even be harvested, since the producers cannot afford to pick what they cannot sell. Needless to say, the tens if not hundreds of thousands of people working at the farms will all be jobless.
The German authorities should be held legally and financially accountable for the slander they so easily dispensed instead of concentrating on the investigation from the beginning.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cornel
wuf wuf
09:56 AM on 06/02/2011
Spain is claiming damages and as you point out with right.
06:39 PM on 06/02/2011
This is truly most unfortunate. Spanish produce is divine. As I understand it, the authorities in Hamburg rang the alarm bell, but the EU commission is responsible for the ban. Either way, complete incompetence at work here. I hope Spanish growers will be compensated somehow.
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sabelmouse
my micro bio is emty
07:29 AM on 06/02/2011
another good reason to eat locally grown food.
11:01 AM on 06/02/2011
Yes then you can have locally grown E Coli. It is best not to eat raw food.
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sabelmouse
my micro bio is emty
01:04 PM on 06/02/2011
yes but then you know where it has come from. we don't even know which country.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
aspiecelia
06:48 AM on 06/02/2011
Since it is clear they know which strain this is it would be nice to have that information.
11:53 PM on 06/02/2011
O104:H4