a survey on the clinical presentations in food-borne botulism for patients refering to razi hospital during 2001-2006

Authors

مرتضی رهبر طارمسری

morteza rahbartaromsari guilan university of medical sciences, rasht, iran. علیرضا بادسار

ali reza badsar guilan university of medical sciences, rasht, iran. نیلوفر آخوند زاده

niloofar akhoundzade guilan university of medical sciences, rasht, iran. فریده اجاقی

farideh oojaghi guilan university of medical sciences, rasht, iran. مرتضی فلاح کارکان

abstract

background: botulism is caused by a neurotoxin produced from the anaerobic, spore forming bacterium clostridium. food-borne botulism is one of the dangerous forms of food poisoning in the world. the purpose of this study was to survey some clinical presentations and laboratory findings in patients suspected with botulism toxicity that had received anti-botulism. methods: this descriptive-retrospective study was done on food-borne botulism poisoning cases admitted to the emergency ward and received anti-botulism at razi hospital of rasht (north of iran) during 2001-6. completion of the questionnaire which included such variables as gender, age, clinical presentations, and laboratory data was based on the information available on the patients. results: of the 31 patients that had taken anti botulism, 20 cases (64.5%) were male. subjects were in age range of 19-55 and the mean of age was 34.5 years. conserved foods (38.7%), salted caviar (32.3%), and fish (16.3%) were the main causes of botulism, respectively. the most common clinical symptom was vomiting (77.4%) and the most common neurological presentations were visual abnormalities (48.4%). azotemia, leukocytosis, and leukopenia were seen in 3 cases (9.7%), in 2 cases (6.5%), and in 4 cases (12.9%), respectively. conclusion: marine products (salted caviar and fish) have an important role in the incidence of botulism in guilan. botulism is seen in males more than females and its most common clinical manifestation is vomiting.

Upgrade to premium to download articles

Sign up to access the full text

Already have an account?login

similar resources

A Survey on the Clinical Presentations in Food-borne Botulism for Patients Refering to Razi Hospital During 2001-2006

Background: Botulism is caused by a neurotoxin produced from the anaerobic, spore forming Bacterium clostridium. Food-borne botulism is one of the dangerous forms of food poisoning in the world. The purpose of this study was to survey some clinical presentations and laboratory findings in patients suspected with botulism toxicity that had received anti-botulism. Methods: This descriptive-retr...

full text

An Investigation of Clinical Symptoms and Treatment of Organophosphate Poisoning among Patients Referred to Razi Hospital during 2006 – 2012

Background: Organophosphates are pesticides that are used widely in agriculture and industry. Because of the ease of access and abundant use of these pesticides, many cases of intentional and accidental poisoning of these compounds are reported. The aim of this comprehensive study was to evaluate the symptoms and treatment of patients referred to Razi hospital as the main center for poisoning i...

full text

Clinical and Laboratory Findings in Patients with Tramadol Intoxication Referred to Razi Hospital During 2005-06

ABSTRACT Introduction: Frequency of Tramadol intoxication is increasing as a result of its use as a drug for suppression of withdrawal symptoms by opioids abusers and its wide accessibility of this drug. Tramadol intoxication can lead to death and, therefore, early identification of its clinical manifestations is crucial since early detection of the intoxication and its treatment could impro...

full text

Clinical features of types A and B food-borne botulism.

Medical records of 55 patients with type A and type B food-borne botulism reported to the Centers for Disease Control during 2 years were reviewed to assess the clinical features and severity of illness, diagnostic test results, nature of complications, amd causes of death. Some patients had features not usually associated with botulism including paresthesia (14%), asymmetric extremely weakness...

full text

Difficulties in Diagnosing Food-Borne Botulism

Botulism is a muscle-paralyzing disease caused by neurotoxins (types A-G) produced by the bacteria Clostridium botulinum. Symptoms of food-borne botulism most commonly appear 12-36 h after eating contaminated food, but the earliest neurological symptoms may in some cases start abruptly. Here, we report the cases of two patients with food-borne botulism who were admitted to the neurological emer...

full text

a survey on 80 cases of botulism and its clinical presentations as a public health concern

background botulism is a toxin-induced paralytic illness characterized by cranial nerve palsies and descending flaccid paralysis. botulinum toxin is regarded as the most lethal ever-known substance. the diagnosis in sporadic cases and even in small outbreaks is the main physicians’ challenge. the aim of this study was to assess clinical presentations of 80 cases of botulism referred to loghman ...

full text

My Resources

Save resource for easier access later


Journal title:
iranian journal of toxicology

جلد ۵، شماره ۱۵، صفحات ۵۵۴-۵۵۷

Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com

copyright © 2015-2023