Toxoplasma gondii is a single-celled parasite that used to be a significant problem in pork. The definitive host for the parasite is cats. When pigs were allowed to forage for food, they often ate food contaminated with infected cat feces, or ate wild animals and birds that contained the oocysts. That’s why it is important to cook pork well done to 160 degrees F, because that destroyed the parasite in all of its forms.
When pork farmers changed the methods of hog rising to eliminate foraging and fed the animals processed food, the risk of toxoplasmosis fell considerably. But the current trend toward free-range food animals, especially pigs and lamb, has increased the toxoplasmosis risk, since those animals are foraging for food. Wild game, such as venison, is also a source of the toxoplasmosis parasite.
The symptoms of toxoplasmosis include swollen lymph glands, aches and pains that last longer than a month, and the feeling of unwellness that usually accompanies the flu. Treatment is usually not needed in normally healthy people, but some require medication. The parasite can infect the placenta and the fetus in pregnant women, which can cause stillbirth and neurological damage. Toxoplasmosis infections hospitalize 4,000 people and kill 300 every year in the U.S.
Many people carry the parasite but do not become ill or show symptoms because their immune systems are strong.
The USDA recommends these final internal cooked temperatures for meat:
- 145 degrees F with a 3-minute standing time for whole cuts of meat, including pork chops, pork roasts, lamb chops and roasts, and beef roasts.
- 160 degrees F for all ground meats.
- 165 degrees F for all poultry, including chicken and turkey.
The foods with the greatest risk of carrying Toxoplasmosis gondii include raw ground beef, lamb cooked to rare, unpasteurized goat’s milk, wild game, and raw clams, mussels, and oysters.
Fuente: http://foodpoisoningbulletin.com/2012/organic-meats-may-have-increased-toxoplasmosis-risk/Aporte: Ninoska Cordero M.
1 comentario:
Considero que las nuevas tendencias hacia la comida orgánica mejora considerablemente el bienestar animal, parte esencial de los pre-requisitos en las BPA. Desafortunadamente incluye un aumento en las probabilidades de contraer ciertas enfermedades como la toxoplasmosis pero de todas maneras es un tema manejable a nivel de educación de productores y de consumidores realizando a lo mejor campañas de tenencia responsable asociada a gatos y en mayor información en las etiquetas de los productos sobre la forma de cocción, tal cual como lo hace Chile para combatir otro parásito de importancia en la Salud Pública como lo es Echinoccocus granulosus.
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