Author:
BRUGHA R.,VIPOND I. B.,EVANS M. R.,SANDIFER Q. D.,ROBERTS R. J.,SALMON R. L.,CAUL E. O.,MUKERJEE A. K.
Abstract
In August 1994, 30 of 135 (23%) bakery plant employees and over
100 people from South
Wales and Bristol in the United Kingdom, were affected by an outbreak of
gastroenteritis.
Epidemiological studies of employees and three community clusters found
illness in employees
to be associated with drinking cold water at the bakery (relative
risk 3·3, 95%, CI 1·6–7·0),
and in community cases with eating custard slices (relative risk
19·8, 95%, CI 2·9–135·1) from
a variety of stores supplied by one particular bakery. Small round-structured
viruses (SRSV)
were identified in stool specimens from 4 employees and 7 community cases.
Analysis of the
polymerase and capsid regions of the SRSV genome by reverse transcription-polymerase
chain
reaction (RT-PCR) demonstrated viruses of both genogroups (1 and 2) each
with several
different nucleotide sequences. The heterogeneity of the viruses identified
in the outbreak
suggests that dried custard mix may have been inadvertently reconstituted
with contaminated
water. The incident shows how secondary food contamination can cause wide-scale
community
gastroenteritis outbreaks, and demonstrates the ability of molecular techniques
to support
classical epidemiological methods in outbreak investigations.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Epidemiology
Cited by
65 articles.
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