At least 200 people in 21 states and Washington, D.C., now have been
sickened by raw scraped tuna contaminated with not one but two rare
strains of salmonella, government health officials reported Thursday.
Tainted
tuna scraped from the backbone of the fish has been linked not only to
the salmonella Bareilly strain, but also to salmonella Nchanga
infections, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported. The
two genetic fingerprint patterns of the strains have been grouped into a
single outbreak strain, CDC officials said.
At least 190 people
have been confirmed with salmonella Bareilly infections, and another 10
have been infected with salmonella Nchanga. Twenty-eight victims have
been hospitalized, but no deaths have been reported.
A frozen yellowfin tun product, known as Nakaochi Scrape, produced by
Moon Marine USA Corp. is the likely source of the outbreak.
Earlier
this month, Moon Marine recalled 58,828 pounds of the frozen tuna
product. It wasn't for sale to individual customers, but may have been
used to make sushi, sashimi, ceviche and similar dishes in restaurants
and grocery stores.
The outbreak could continue to grow. Illnesses
that occured after March 27 might not be reported yet because of the
time frame between when a person becomes ill and when it's reported to
authorities.
At least two people have filed lawsuits against Moon
Marine, a Cupertino, Calif., firm. The women, both from Wisconsin, said
they became ill after eating tainted seafood.
The CDC's most
recent estimates suggest that for every salmonella infection detected,
perhaps 29.3 go unreported. Using that multiplier, 5,860 people could
have been affected so far by the tainted tuna outbreak.
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