Category Archives: Ciguatera

New Zealand – Krazy Price Mart Ltd frozen camouflage grouper (kawakawa) – Ciguatoxin

MPI

Krazy Price Mart Ltd is recalling a specific batch of its frozen camouflage grouper (kawakawa) due to the presence of ciguatoxin, which may cause ciguatera poisoning if eaten.

 

 

Product identification
Product type Frozen whole fish (gutted)
Name of product Camouflage grouper (kawakawa)
Batch marking The fish is not labelled.
Date marking  No date marks appear on this product.

The product was available for sale between 10 March and 21 May 2020

Package size and description The product is sold as an individual whole fish (gutted) wrapped in clear plastic.
Distribution The product is imported from Fiji.

The product is sold only at Krazy Price Mart Ltd in Christchurch.

Notes This recall does not affect any other Krazy Price Mart products.

The fish was available from a chest freezer at Krazy Price Mart.

Consumer advice

Customers are asked to check when they purchased camouflage grouper (kawakawa) from Krazy Price Mart.

Affected product should not be consumed. There have been reports of associated illness in New Zealand. If you have consumed this product and have any concerns about illness, seek medical advice.

Customers should return the product to the retailer for a full refund.

For more information on ciguatoxin [PDF, 1.3 MB]

Who to contact

If you have questions, contact Krazy Price Mart:

  • Phone: 03 389 8786
  • Address: 431 Tuam Street, Phillipstown, Christchurch.

Canary Islands – Ciguatera outbreak reported in the Canary Islands

Outbreak News Today File:Gambierdiscus toxicus NOAA.png

Health officials with the Government of the Canary Islands have reported a possible outbreak of ciguatera after finding six cases of food poisoning after consuming black medregal (amberjack) in La Victoria de Acentejo, according to a El Dia report (computer translated).

Ciguatera is not unknown in the Canary Island reporting several cases annually and some 20 outbreaks in the past decade.

More than 400 species of fish, including barracuda, black grouper, blackfin snapper, cubera snapper, dog snapper, greater amberjack, hogfish, horse-eye jack, king mackerel, and yellowfin grouper have been implicated in this food borne illness that’s relatively common in several areas of the world.

This toxin is the result of the accumulation of marine algae and the toxins they produce passing up the food chain. These marine algae hang on to dead coral and seaweed. They are then eaten by herbivore fish which are subsequently eaten by predatory reef fish which concentrates the toxin in its tissue. People get this food borne toxin from eating these contaminated larger fish. The reef fishes are more likely to get contaminated during storms and other turbulence.

 

Research – Marine Toxins: 5 Poisons Under the Sea

Pharmacytimes 

Marine toxins originate from microorganisms native to aquatic ecosystems. These molecules eventually find their way into the human gastrointestinal tract through concentrating and bioaccumulating in species such as mollusks, crustaceans, and various fish. Ingestion of marine toxins can generate foodborne illnesses and a constellation of neurologic and gastrointestinal manifestations accompanied by other symptoms.

Ciguatoxin

Ciguatera illness is caused by ciguatoxins, which are compounds that bioaccumulate in shallow, coastal water-dwelling fish.

Saxitoxin

Paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP) is a foodborne illness brought on by saxitoxin, a chemical compound produced by cyanobacteria of freshwater and by dinoflagellates of marine water. As with ciguatoxin, saxitoxin reaches the human gastrointestinal tract through concentration in species that are higher up in the food chain.

Brevetoxin

Also a result of toxic algal blooms and mollusk consumption, neurotoxic shellfish poisoning (NSP) is thought of as a ‘milder’ case of the paralytic shellfish poisoning described above. Its cause is brevetoxin, a group of more than 10 lipid soluble polyether compounds.

Tetrodotoxin

Tetrodotoxin (TTX) is perhaps the most well known of the marine toxins. Its notoriety arises from the popularity of pufferfish.

Histamine

A red herring in the recognition of fish food poisoning is scombroid syndrome. This illness is commonly mistaken for fish allergy, but instead results from improper storage and transportation of fish belonging to the Scombroidiae family.

Hong Kong – 19 Diners Sick with Cigutera Poisoning

South China Morning Post

Health authorities are launching an investigation into food poisoning case in which 19 people fell ill after eating coral reef fish at a Lamma Island eatery on Saturday.

Fourteen men and five women, aged 23 to 71, had eaten fish at the seafood restaurant, and had fallen ill with symptoms of the potentially lethal ciguatera poisoning three to 19 hours later, the Centre for Health Protection said.

The restaurant in question was the Wai Kee Sea Food Restaurant in Sok Kwu Wan.

Symptoms can include numbness of the mouth and limbs, heart palpitations fatigue, vomiting, diarrhoea and flushes. Excessive consumption can also affect the circulatory and nervous systems.

Six of the diners had sought medical help and at least one person was admitted to hospital. All are in now in stable condition, the CHP said.

Germany – Ciguatoxin Poisoning Outbreak Confirmed

BfR

First outbreak of ciguatoxin poisoning after eating fish in Germany now confirmed by analytical methods

As a rule, the first symptoms experienced are nausea, vomiting and diarrhoea. Most people suffering from ciguatoxin poisoning later also suffer from extremely unpleasant sensations such as burning, tingling, and pain on contact with cold. These symptoms can continue for weeks or even months. If such symptoms occur after eating fish, it is very likely that the person concerned is suffering from Ciguatera, i.e. ciguatoxin poisoning. The official control laboratories, the Poison Information Centre of North Germany and other public health and veterinary authorities reported 14 cases of such poisoning following consumption of red snapper fillets to the National Reference Laboratory for Marine Biotoxins and the Centre for Documentation and Assessment of Poisonings at the Federal Institute for Risk Assessment (BfR) at the end of 2012. The trigger are metabolites produced from algae belonging to the group of so-called species of dinoflagellates which are found on coral reefs of subtropical and tropical marine areas of the Caribbean, the Indian ocean and the Pacific. These algae serve as food for plant-eating fish. If these small fish are eaten in turn by predatory fish, the toxins can accumulate and thus get into the human food chain. “Ciguatoxin poisoning is one of the most common types of fish poisoning worldwide”, says Professor Dr. Dr. Andreas Hensel, President of the BfR. “However, this type of poisoning was confined to certain regions of the world until recently. As a result of the worldwide trade with tropical and subtropical fish, an increase in incidence of such poisoning is to be expected.” The Federal Institute for Risk Assessment has sent leftovers of fish dishes eaten by affected persons as well as samples of the fish batches to the European Reference Laboratory for Marine Biotoxins in Vigo (Spain). Using the analysis method established there in 2012 it was confirmed that the fish samples contained ciguatoxins.

According to estimates, between 50 and 500 thousand cases of ciguatoxin poisoning occur every year. In Germany, such fish poisoning used to be known as very rare travel diseases occurring among tourists who had spent their holiday in tropical or subtropical countries where they had eaten fish dishes. The current outbreak is the first one which was caused by the consumption of fish purchased in Germany. According to a study, the outbreak was caused by red snapper fillets which a German importer had obtained from an Indian distributor. The affected shipment was recalled immediately after poisoning became known.

Ciguatoxins require exceptionally sensitive analysis methods, since ciguatoxins cause symptoms in extremely low concentrations. Different chemical structures of Ciguatoxins are known which, in addition, can vary in dependence of the territorial fishing areas. Until 2012, there was no analysis method allowing fish to be tested for ciguatoxins in the relevant concentration range.

The European Reference Laboratory for Marine Biotoxins (EURL) in Vigo (Spain) established an analysis method for the detection of ciguatoxins in 2012 and found ciguatoxins in most of the fish samples collected in Germany in connection with the outbreak. However, this method is not as yet available for routine testing.

There is no way for consumers to tell whether fish contains ciguatoxins or not. Contamination with ciguatoxins cannot be reduced by frying or cooking. This means that the risk can only be minimised if fish is sold in the market which comes from fishing areas in subtropical and / or tropical waters that are far away from coral reefs or if consumers refrain from eating predatory fish from these waters altogether. In addition, the origin of the fish products must be comprehensively documented and completely traceable.

Following poisoning with ciguatoxins, early symptoms such as nausea, abdominal pains, stomach-ache, vomiting and diarrhoea occur which are also characteristic of other types of food poisoning. These symptoms are soon accompanied or replaced by the typical impaired neurological sensation on the skin such as a feeling of numbness in the hands and feet, muscle pain, physical weakness and notably abnormal heat and cold sensations. The latter symptoms can, in some cases, persist for weeks or months. There is currently no specific therapy.

About the BfR

The Federal Institute for Risk Assessment (BfR) is a scientific institution within the portfolio of the Federal Ministry of Food, Agriculture and Consumer Protection (BMELV). It advises the Federal Government and Federal Laender on questions of food, chemical and product safety. The BfR conducts its own research on topics that are closely linked to its assessment tasks.

 

European Alerts – Salmonella-Listeria-Pseudomonas and Ciguatera

Denmark – Salmonella in Fresh Turkey Breast

RASFF – Salmonella in Frozen Octopus in Italy sourced in Indonesia

RASFF – Suspicion of ciguatera poisoning caused by fresh red snapper fillets in Czech Republic, Germany, Spain and the United Kingdom sourced in India. FDA – Ciguatera

France – Pseudomonas aeruginosa in Hand Gel recall

Switzerland – Listeria in Shoulder Ham