Publication | Closed Access
Cholera — A Possible Endemic Focus in the United States
307
Citations
21
References
1980
Year
Infectious Disease EpidemiologyGulf CoastMedicinePathogenesisEpidemiological DynamicSouthwestern LouisianaDisease OutbreakInfectious DiseaseEmerging Infectious DiseaseMicrobiologyInfection ControlUnited StatesEpidemiology
In September and October 1978, after a case of cholera had been discovered in southwestern Louisiana, 10 more Vibrio cholerae O-Group 1 infections were detected in four additional clusters. All 11 infected persons had recently eaten cooked crabs from five widely separated sites in the coastal marsh, and a matched-triplet case-control study showed a significant relation between cholera and eating such crabs (P = 0.007). V. cholerae O1 was isolated from estuarine water, from fresh shrimp, from a leftover cooked crab from a patient's refrigerator, and from sewage in six towns, including three without identified cases. All isolates in Louisiana and an isolate from a single unexplained case in Texas in 1973 were biotype El Tor and serotype inaba; they were hemolytic and of a phage type unique to the United States--suggesting that the organism persisted undetected along the Gulf Coast for at least five years.
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