The first reported multistate outbreak from undercooked chicken liver in the US
Six people
were sickened and two were hospitalized, said the Morbidity and Mortality
Weekly Report (MMWR) at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).Affected were exposed to raw or lightly cooked chicken
livers produced at the same poultry factory (establishment A) collected livers yielded
the same strain of C. jejuni.
In October
2012 the VDH identified three cases of laboratory-confirmed C. jejuni infection in Vermont residents; the
isolates had indistinguishable pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE)
patterns. PulseNet, the molecular subtyping network for foodborne disease
surveillance, led to one additional case from New Hampshire, New York, and
Vermont reported in the preceding six months.
Farm worker exposed: One of the people was exposed to the
pathogen while working on the farm, the other four cases became ill after eating
the livers, which were deliberately undercooked to maintain their texture.
USDA-FSIS
found that establishment A, which stopped selling chicken livers, used
antimicrobial cleaners to the livers, these efforts only affect the external
surfaces and because Campylobacter contamination can be internal, the safety of
undercooked chicken livers was not assured.
A food
safety assessment conducted by the US Department of Agriculture's Food Safety
and Inspection Service (USDA-FSIS) found no major violations.
The Food
and Drug Administration (FDA) says that poultry must reach an internal
temperature of 165oF (73.9oC) for at least 15 seconds.
Studies have
shown that 77% of retail chicken livers are contaminated with Campylobacter and
contamination is usually in internal tissues as well as on the surface.
Patients affected: The six patients ranged in age from 19 to 87 years; three were female.
Two were hospitalized, but all six had recovered by the time of their
interviews.
Frozen
chicken livers collected from restaurant A were sent to the VDH laboratory,
minced into 13 25-gram subsamples and enriched as normal for the C. jejuni immunoassay. Two of the 13
subsamples screened gave positive results, but the pathogen could not be recovered
in culture.
Source:FoodQualityNews.com
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