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Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2005

Multistate outbreak of Listeria monocytogenes infection linked to delicatessen turkey meat.

Sonja J. Olsen; Mary Patrick; Susan B. Hunter; Vasudha Reddy; Laura Kornstein; William R. MacKenzie; Kimberly Lane; Sally A. Bidol; Gillian Stoltman; Douglas M. Frye; Irene Lee; Sharon Hurd; Timothy F. Jones; Tracy N. LaPorte; Wallis E. DeWitt; Lewis M. Graves; Martin Wiedmann; Dianna J. Schoonmaker-Bopp; Ada J. Huang; Curt Vincent; Al Bugenhagen; Joe Corby; Edmund R. Carloni; Mara E. Holcomb; Raymond F. Woron; Shelley M. Zansky; Gerrie Dowdle; Forrest Smith; Susann Ahrabi-Fard; Anna Rae Ong

BACKGROUND Despite a decreasing incidence of listeriosis in the United States, molecular subtyping has increased the number of recognized outbreaks. In September 2000, the New York City Department of Health identified a cluster of infections caused by Listeria monocytogenes isolates with identical molecular subtypes by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) and ribotyping. METHODS To determine the magnitude of the outbreak and identify risk factors for infection, we notified state health departments and conducted a case-control study. A case was defined as a patient or mother-infant pair infected with Listeria monocytogenes whose isolate yielded the outbreak PFGE pattern. Controls were patients infected with Listeria monocytogenes whose isolate yielded a different PFGE pattern. Patients were asked about food and drink consumed during the 30 days before the onset of illness. RESULTS Between May and December 2000, there were 30 clinical isolates of Listeria monocytogenes with identical PFGE patterns identified in 11 US states. Cases of infection caused by these isolates were associated with 4 deaths and 3 miscarriages. A case-control study implicated sliced processed turkey from a delicatessen (Mantel-Haenszel odds ratio, 8.0; 95% confidence interval, 1.2-43.3). A traceback investigation identified a single processing plant as the likely source of the outbreak, and the company voluntarily recalled 16 million pounds of processed meat. The same plant had been identified in a Listeria contamination event that had occurred more than a decade previously. CONCLUSIONS Prevention of persistent L. monocytogenes contamination in food processing plants presents a critical challenge to food safety professionals.


Epidemiology and Infection | 2006

Nationwide outbreak of listeriosis due to contaminated meat

Paul S. Mead; E. F. Dunne; Lewis M. Graves; Martin Wiedmann; Mary Patrick; Susan B. Hunter; E. Salehi; F. Mostashari; A. Craig; P. Mshar; Tammy Bannerman; B. D. Sauders; P. S. Hayes; Wallis E. DeWitt; P. Sparling; Patricia M. Griffin; D. Morse; L. Slutsker; B. Swaminathan

We used molecular subtyping to investigate an outbreak of listeriosis involving residents of 24 US states. We defined a case as infection with Listeria monocytogenes serotype 4b yielding one of several closely related patterns when subtyped by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. Patients infected with strains yielding different patterns were used as controls. A total of 108 cases were identified with 14 associated deaths and four miscarriages or stillbirths. A case-control study implicated meat frankfurters as the likely source of infection (OR 17.3, 95% CI 2.4-160). The outbreak ended abruptly following a manufacturer-issued recall, and the outbreak strain was later detected in low levels in the recalled product. A second strain was recovered at higher levels but was not associated with human illness. Our findings suggest that L. monocytogenes strains vary widely in virulence and confirm that large outbreaks can occur even when only low levels of contamination are detected in sampled food. Standardized molecular subtyping and coordinated, multi-jurisdiction investigations can greatly facilitate detection and control of listeriosis outbreaks.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 1998

An outbreak of salmonellosis among children attending a reptile exhibit at a zoo

Cindy R. Friedman; Christine Torigian; Pamela J. Shillam; Richard E. Hoffman; David Heltze; James L. Beebe; Georgia Malcolm; Wallis E. DeWitt; Lori Hutwagner; Patricia M. Griffin

OBJECTIVE In January 1996, an outbreak of diarrhea caused by Salmonella Enteritidis occurred in children attending a Komodo dragon exhibit at a metropolitan zoo. We sought to determine the extent of the outbreak and mode of transmission. STUDY DESIGN A case-control study was conducted. Controls were randomly selected from zoo membership lists and matched to patients by age group and date of exhibit visit. RESULTS Of 65 patients identified, 39 had confirmed and 26 had suspected cases. The median age was 7 years (range, 3 months to 48 years); 55% were enrolled in the case-control study. No patients and two (4%) controls reported touching a dragon; however, 83% of patients but only 52% of controls touched the wooden barrier that surrounded the dragon pen (odds ratio = 4.0, 95% CI 1.2 to 13.9). Washing hands at the zoo after visiting the dragons was highly protective (OR = 0.14, 95% CI 0.03 to 0.7). Cultures from the patients, one dragon, and the exhibit barriers yielded Salmonella Enteritidis, phage type 8. On the basis of an attack rate of 4.3% among exhibit attendees under 13 years old on whom data were collected, we estimate that 315 additional cases of salmonellosis occurred among visitors in this age group. CONCLUSION This large outbreak demonstrates the importance of environmental contamination in the transmission of Salmonella from reptiles, and the protective value of hand washing. Recommendations regarding reptile exhibits and reptilian pets should emphasize this indirect route.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2005

Microbiological Aspects of the Investigation That Traced the 1998 Outbreak of Listeriosis in the United States to Contaminated Hot Dogs and Establishment of Molecular Subtyping-Based Surveillance for Listeria monocytogenes in the PulseNet Network

Lewis M. Graves; Susan B. Hunter; Anna Rae Ong; Diana Schoonmaker-Bopp; Kelley Hise; Laura Kornstein; Wallis E. DeWitt; Peggy S. Hayes; Eileen M. Dunne; Paul S. Mead; B. Swaminathan

ABSTRACT A multistate outbreak of listeriosis occurred in the United States in 1998 with illness onset dates between August and December. The outbreak caused illness in 108 persons residing in 24 states and caused 14 deaths and four miscarriages or stillbirths. This outbreak was detected by public health officials in Tennessee and New York who observed significant increases over expected listeriosis cases in their states. Subsequently, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) began laboratory characterization of clinical isolates of Listeria monocytogenes by serotyping and restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis using pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE). For the purpose of this investigation, outbreak-related isolates were defined as those that had a specific AscI-PFGE pattern and indistinguishable or highly similar (no more than 2 band difference in 26 bands) ApaI-PFGE patterns when their DNA was restricted by AscI and ApaI restriction enzymes. Timely availability of molecular subtyping results enabled epidemiologists to separate outbreak cases from temporally associated sporadic cases in the same geographic areas and facilitated the identification of contaminated hot dogs manufactured at a single commercial facility as the source of the outbreak. During the investigation of this outbreak, a standardized protocol for subtyping L. monocytogenes by PFGE was developed and disseminated to public health laboratories participating with CDCs PulseNet network; these laboratories were requested to begin routine PFGE subtyping of L. monocytogenes.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2000

An Outbreak of Yersinia enterocolitica O:8 Infections Associated with Pasteurized Milk

Marta-Louise Ackers; Susan Schoenfeld; John D. Markman; M. Geoffrey Smith; Mabel A. Nicholson; Wallis E. DeWitt; Daniel N. Cameron; Patricia M. Griffin; Laurence Slutsker

In October 1995, an outbreak of Yersinia enterocolitica O:8 infections occurred in the Upper Valley of Vermont and New Hampshire. Ten patients were identified, median age 9 years (range, 6 months-44 years). Three patients were hospitalized; 1 underwent an appendectomy. Consumption of bottled pasteurized milk from a local dairy was associated with illness (matched odds ratio undefined; lower 95% confidence interval, 1.9). No deficiencies in pasteurization procedures or equipment were detected. Y. enterocolitica O:8 was isolated from 1 raw-milk sample and from a fecal sample from 1 dairy pig. The route of contamination was not determined; this outbreak likely resulted from postpasteurization contamination of milk. Dairy pigs were the most likely source of contamination. Milk bottles were likely contaminated by rinsing with untreated well water prior to filling or by other environmental routes. Educating dairy owners about Y. enterocolitica and postpasteurization contamination is necessary to prevent further outbreaks.


Archive | 1988

The presence of DNA sequences Related to a 4.2Kb cryptic plasmid in the chromosomes of plasmid-free strains of Neisseria gonorrhoeae

S. R. Johnson; G. H. Perkins; Wallis E. DeWitt

Most strains of Neisseria gonorrhoeae contain a 4.2-Kb cryptic plasmid. However, strains that do not possess the 4.2Kb plasmid have been isolated. We examined 38 such strains and found that five of them contained chromosomal sequences homologous to the 4.2Kb plasmid. Restriction analysis and hybridization of 4.2Kb plasmid DNA to blots of the agarose gels suggested that homology with the 4.2Kb plasmid occurred at a single chromosomal site that was the same for all five strains. Similar experiments showed that these sequences derived from the 2.7Kb Hinfl (HinfIA) fragment of the cryptic plasmid. None of these five strains or two additional strains that exhibited no homology with the plasmid had sequences homologous with the 1.5Kb Hinfl fragment. When the region homologous to the HinfIA fragment was cloned from the chromosomal DNA of one strain, it was found to comprise the entire HinfIA fragment of the plasmid.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1987

Frequency and Distribution in the United States of Strains of Neisseria gonorrhoeae with Plasmid-Mediated, High-Level Resistance to Tetracycline

Joan S. Knapp; Jonathan M. Zenilman; James W. Biddle; Goldie H. Perkins; Wallis E. DeWitt; Myrtle L. Thomas; Steve R. Johnson; Stephen A. Morse


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1992

Epidemic Meningococcal Disease in Nairobi, Kenya, 1989

Robert W. Pinner; Onyango Fe; Bradley A. Perkins; Nazir B. Mirza; Dorothy M. Ngacha; Michael W. Reeves; Wallis E. DeWitt; E.K. Njeru; Naphtali N. Agata; Claire V. Broome


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1993

Decline in Meningococcal Antibody Levels in African Children 5 Years after Vaccination and the Lack of an Effect of Booster Immunization

Serign J. Ceesay; Stephen Allen; Arun Menon; Jim Todd; Kabir Cham; George M. Carlone; Susan H. Turner; Linda L. Gheesling; Wallis E. DeWitt; Brian D. Plikaytis; Brian Greenwood


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1985

Correlation of Auxotype and Protein I Type with Expression of Disease Due to Neisseria gonorrhoeae

Robert C. Brunham; Francis A. Plummer; Leslie Slaney; Fern Rand; Wallis E. DeWitt

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Eugene J. Gangarosa

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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George K. Morris

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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James W. Biddle

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Lewis M. Graves

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Patricia M. Griffin

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Susan B. Hunter

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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William M. McCormack

SUNY Downstate Medical Center

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Anna Rae Ong

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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B. Swaminathan

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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John C. Feeley

National Institutes of Health

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