Tag Archives: bloody diarrhoea

Europe – Laboratory Preparedness for Detection and Monitoring of Shiga Toxin 2-producing Escherichia coli O104:H4 in Europe and Response to the 2011 Outbreak

Eurosurveillance

A hybrid strain of enteroaggregative and Shiga toxin 2-producing Escherichia coli (EAEC-STEC) serotype O104:H4 strain caused a large outbreak of haemolytic uraemic syndrome and bloody diarrhoea in 2011 in Europe. Two surveys were performed in the European Union (EU) and European Economic Area (EEA) countries to assess their laboratory capabilities to detect and characterise this previously uncommon STEC strain. Prior to the outbreak, 11 of the 32 countries in this survey had capacity at national reference laboratory (NRL) level for epidemic case confirmation according to the EU definition. During the outbreak, at primary diagnostic level, nine countries reported that clinical microbiology laboratories routinely used Shiga toxin detection assays suitable for diagnosis of infections with EAEC-STEC O104:H4, while 14 countries had NRL capacity to confirm epidemic cases. Six months after the outbreak, 22 countries reported NRL capacity to confirm such cases following initiatives taken by NRLs and the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) Food- and Waterborne Disease and Zoonoses laboratory network. These data highlight the challenge of detection and confirmation of epidemic infections caused by atypical STEC strains and the benefits of coordinated EU laboratory networks to strengthen capabilities in response to a major outbreak.

Ireland – Recall – Cheese – E.coli O157

FSAIcheese

E.coli O157 present in Gouda Herb Cheese by Kilshanny Farmhouse Cheese

Wednesday, 27 February 2013

Summary
Category 1: For Action
Alert Notification: 2013.05
Product: Kilshanny Farmhouse Cheese Gouda Herb Cheese: approval number: IE 1859 EC
Batch Code: production date: 19/09/2012
Country Of Origin: Ireland

Message:

E.coli O157 has been found in a batch of Gouda herb cheese by Kilshanny Farmhouse Cheese. This product has been sold in a foodstall in the Limerick Milk Market and in a retailer in Co. Clare. The company has been ordered by the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine to withhold placing any further batches on the market.  Consumers are advised not to eat the implicated cheese due to the presence of E.coli O157.

Nature Of Danger:

E.coli O157 may cause severe bloody diarrhoea and abdominal cramps, although sometimes the infection causes non-bloody diarrhoea or no symptoms. In some groups, particularly children under 5 years of age and the elderly, the infection can also cause a complication called haemolytic uraemic syndrome (HUS), in which the red blood cells are destroyed and the kidneys fail.

Consumers are advised not to eat the implicated cheese.