Publication | Open Access
Plasmid, serotypic, and enterotoxin analysis of Bacillus cereus in an outbreak setting
38
Citations
21
References
1988
Year
Pathogenic MicrobiologyPathogen DetectionOutbreak SettingVeterinary MicrobiologyVascular Permeability ReactionEnterotoxin AnalysisFood MicrobiologyInfection ControlBacillus CereusHealth SciencesMicrobial ToxinFoodborne PathogensBeef StewFoodborne HazardClinical MicrobiologyFood SafetyMicrobial DiseaseFoodborne IllnessMicrobiologyMedicine
Bacillus cereus is a recognized agent of food-borne disease. In this report we describe an outbreak of B. cereus gastroenteritis associated with consumption of beef stew among patients and staff at a Rhode Island nursing home. The beef had been improperly stored after preparation. The predominant symptoms of the illness were cramps and diarrhea; it lasted an average of 16 h. No deaths occurred. The organism was recovered from 10 of 23 stools collected from ill patients and 1 of 21 stools collected from controls (P = 0.0044, Fisher's two-tailed exact test). All isolates had the same biotype and serotype, newly designated H.26; all elaborated the diarrheal B. cereus enterotoxin when tested in rabbits by the vascular permeability reaction; and all had identical plasmid profiles, which differed from those of B. cereus strains selected randomly from other outbreaks. Plasmid analysis may prove to be a useful new tool in investigating outbreaks of B. cereus food poisoning.
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