What's new

Sushi parasite that embeds in the stomach is on the rise, doctors warn

Keel

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Sep 29, 2014
Messages
3,532
Reaction score
-14
Country
China
Location
Greece
y Mary Brophy Marcus CBS News May 12, 2017, 1:30 PM
Sushi parasite that embeds in the stomach is on the rise, doctors warn
istock-511991334.jpg



Eating raw fish can lead to anisakiasis, a disease caused by parasitic worms.

Getty Images/iStockphoto
Sushi has a healthy reputation – it can be low fat and high in protein – but a new report serves as a stark reminder that sushi made with raw fish can carry a dangerous parasite. Doctors warn that it's becoming a greater problem in Western countries as more people eat sushi, and they documented one recent case that serves as a cautionary tale.

The case of a previously healthy 32-year-old man from Lisbon, Portugal, is featured in the medical journal BMJ Case Reports this week. The man was suffering from a bout of stomach pain for more than a week, and experienced vomiting and a fever.



Play Video
Newlyweds infected with rare parasitic disease

When doctors questioned him about his symptoms and history, he revealed that he had recently eaten sushi.

Doctors performed an endoscopy – a scope test that uses a tiny camera on the end of a long, flexible tube to view the upper digestive system – and discovered he had parasite larvae attached to the lining of his stomach wall.

The culprit: Anisakiasis, a disease caused by parasitic worms.

"It is caused by the consumption of contaminated raw or undercooked fish or seafood," the authors wrote in their case study.

Photos published with their account of the case show a worm "firmly attached" inside the man's stomach.

Surgeons used a special device, called a Roth net, to remove the parasite, and the man's symptoms resolved.

bmj-parasite.jpg

A parasite firmly attached to an area of swollen and hyperaemic mucosa, with its end penetrating gastric mucosa, was seen on the gastric body in an upper gastrointestinal endoscopy.

Joana Carmo et al./ BMJ Case Reports
Most cases of the parasite have previously occurred in Japan, but the disease has been increasingly recognized as a problem in the West, the authors wrote.

Patients can have other symptoms too, including nausea, digestive bleeding, bowel obstruction, inflammation of the abdomen and allergic symptoms including itching and anaphalaxis, a severe and life-threatening reaction, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Dr. Daniel Eiras, assistant professor of infectious diseases at NYU Langone Medical Center, told CBS News that it's pretty rare to see cases in the U.S. He's only seen one case about two years ago, in a 45-year-old man.

"He was having reflux and severe abdominal pain. They thought he had a mass in his belly, cancer in his small intestine, so they took out the mass and looked at it under the microscope and it was one of these worms," said Eiras.

Cases of anisakiasis are probably widely underreported, though, he said, because primary care doctors and pharmacists, the first health care professionals an infected person might consult with, typically aren't aware of or looking for this type of parasite.

"We don't do endoscopies on every person with stomach complaints, so we don't know. Presumably there are many people who get anisakiasis and it gets sloughed out of their digestive system. It doesn't lay eggs or continuously infect the intestine," Eiras said.

So, only cases where the parasite actually embeds in the stomach or intestine wall may actually come to light, he explained.

The parasite can crop up in raw or undercooked seafood such as cod, fluke, haddock and monk fish.

Dr. Donald Hensrud, medical director of the Mayo Clinic Healthy Living Program and specialist in nutrition and preventive medicine, told CBS News that pregnant women and people with compromised immune systems, such as HIV patients or individuals taking biologic drugs, should avoid raw or undercooked fish and seafood. They can carry a risk for other illnesses, too.

"Two years ago, a salmonella outbreak was linked to raw tuna.," said Hensrud, the author of the Mayo Clinic Diet book.

Don't eat raw fish at sketchy restaurants, either, Eiras recommended.

"I would not go to a restaurant with a 'C' rating in New York largely for this reason. It's a big red flag when a sushi restaurant can't maintain an 'A' rating, because one of the main things they get rated on is refrigeration. They're not cooking the fish so that is the only prevention method, keeping it cold," he said.

The same goes for eating ceviche -- a dish made from raw fish and cured in lemon or lime juice -- and poke, a Hawaiian raw fish salad that's increasingly popping up on menus.

When preparing fish at home, cook seafood to an internal temperature of 145 degrees Fahrenheit, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration recommends. The FDA says freezing fish can kill parasites, too.

© 2017 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/sushi-parasite-anisakiasis-on-the-rise-doctors-warn/

images
 
Last edited:
.
Japan reports increase in parasitic worm infections from eating raw fish

http://www.scmp.com/news/asia/east-...ase-parasitic-worm-infections-eating-raw-fish

Official said more seafood being transported across Japan raw rather than frozen may be the cause of the sharp increase in the number of infection reports

PUBLISHED : Friday, 12 May, 2017, 4:09pm
UPDATED : Friday, 12 May, 2017, 4:09pm
Comments: 2

0b232a9e-36e9-11e7-8663-b22bc7352b12_1280x720_160925.JPG


Kyodo

0Share
2

PrintEmail
More people in Japan are becoming infected with a parasitic worm after eating raw fish and other seafood, with medical experts pointing to a change in the way seafood is distributed nationwide, health ministry officials said Friday.

This Week in Asia
Get updates direct to your inbox
E-mail *
By registering you agree to our T&Cs & Privacy Policy
The number of reports of anisakis infection, which is accompanied by sharp abdominal pain, jumped to 124 in 2016 from six in 2007, leading the ministry to urge people to either heat or freeze seafood and examine it thoroughly for signs of the parasite before eating.

Larvae of anisakis, a white string-like parasite 2 to 3 centimetres long, are frequently found in species like mackerel, bonito, salmon, squid and Pacific saury. They infect the intestines of their hosts and move into their muscles when the hosts die.

The larvae die when thoroughly heated or frozen under minus 20 C for more than a day, but they can make it into the human body alive when the food is raw or undercooked and cause acute stomach pain as they invade the digestive system.

Experts say anisakis dies in three or four days even if left untreated, but recommend people to visit doctors and have the parasite removed using endoscopes as the infection is very painful.

Hiromu Sugiyama, an official at the National Institute of Infectious Diseases, said more seafood being transported across Japan raw rather than frozen may be the cause of the sharp increase in the number of infection reports.

Sugiyama estimates some 7,000 people become infected with anisakis annually, based on the medical bills of 330,000 people who were treated at medical institutions between 2005 and 2011.

The health ministry formally began taking tallies of anisakis infection reports from 2013 and said it has been able to confirm that it is common.

The ministry is calling on people to choose fresh fish and remove internal organs swiftly, avoid eating internal organs uncooked and look at fish closely and remove anisakis if found.

http://www.scmp.com/news/asia/east-...ase-parasitic-worm-infections-eating-raw-fish

images
 
.
Thats why I never eat Sushi.
Two factors, one, its bland.
The other, raw fish may contain Listeria & Salmonella - a health risk.
 
.
One effect of cooking is to kill all bacteria. Raw food is by nature more dangerous.
 
.
It is recomended that raw fish to be frozen so parasites would die. This issue due to raw fish being used straight after being caught. Raw fish is used in many dishes in the world not just Japan and there are many ways to kill parasites.

Eating fresh fish is really dumb, avoiding the flash freezing process does not really affect the taste in any negative way. Also while Wasabi does reduce bacterial growth it is not a magical germ killer and Wasabi is really hard to grow and what you call Wasabi probabaly doesn't have anything with the Wasabi plant except the taste
 
.
In Holland we're used to eating a lot of herring, raw... with onion and pickled gerkins.

Prior to the introduction of the obligation to freeze herring immediately after catch, anisakiasis aka 'herring disease' occurred regularly in the Netherlands.

Since 1968 , Dutch fishermen have been obliged to store raw fish, including herring, once at -20 ° C OR to an acid marinade for a certain period of time. As a consequence, anisaciasis (herring worm disease) in the Netherlands is almost no longer found. In countries where a lot of raw fish are eaten without going through a process like this, such as Japan, anisakiasis is still common.

So, immediate (deboning, cleaning and) freezing solves a lot of this problem (and our experience shows eating raw fish isn't necessarily or automatically dumb).

It does require modern fishing ships, legislation, adequate inspection and the sanctioning of lawbreaking (either by fines, revoking licences or jailtime).

Fish that was frozen this way, when defrosted, is still raw and still qualifies as 'fresh'. In fact, virtually all fresh fish you buy here in a fish store (even the really good ones) is in fact defrosted fish.

One effect of cooking is to kill all bacteria. Raw food is by nature more dangerous.
Raw animal-origin food (including e.g. egg) needs to be extremely fresh and handled properly (all the way from slaughter to your plate) if it is to be eaten safely. These are two necessary (if not always sufficient) preconditions.

Thats why I never eat Sushi.
Two factors, one, its bland.
The other, raw fish may contain Listeria & Salmonella - a health risk.
Bland?

I recommend eliminating most salt and sugar from your normal diet and then try again. Our natural palate gets easily spoiled by these and all sorts of (often artificial) flavorings.

As for the use of herbs and spices in food, here an interesting read:
https://books.google.nl/books?id=TT...v=onepage&q=countries with bland food&f=false
 
. . .
yup.. sorry no sushi for me. I catch fish a lot and you get worms sometimes. In some cases you have other parasitic bugs there as well. Not good idea to eat raw fish. sometimes wierd tapeworms can occur. For freshwater fish, it is a nono

In Holland we're used to eating a lot of herring, raw... with onion and pickled gerkins.

Prior to the introduction of the obligation to freeze herring immediately after catch, anisakiasis aka 'herring disease' occurred regularly in the Netherlands.

Since 1968 , Dutch fishermen have been obliged to store raw fish, including herring, once at -20 ° C OR to an acid marinade for a certain period of time. As a consequence, anisaciasis (herring worm disease) in the Netherlands is almost no longer found. In countries where a lot of raw fish are eaten without going through a process like this, such as Japan, anisakiasis is still common.

So, immediate (deboning, cleaning and) freezing solves a lot of this problem (and our experience shows eating raw fish isn't necessarily or automatically dumb).

It does require modern fishing ships, legislation, adequate inspection and the sanctioning of lawbreaking (either by fines, revoking licences or jailtime).

Fish that was frozen this way, when defrosted, is still raw and still qualifies as 'fresh'. In fact, virtually all fresh fish you buy here in a fish store (even the really good ones) is in fact defrosted fish.


Raw animal-origin food (including e.g. egg) needs to be extremely fresh and handled properly (all the way from slaughter to your plate) if it is to be eaten safely. These are two necessary (if not always sufficient) preconditions.


Bland?

I recommend eliminating most salt and sugar from your normal diet and then try again. Our natural palate gets easily spoiled by these and all sorts of (often artificial) flavorings.

As for the use of herbs and spices in food, here an interesting read:
https://books.google.nl/books?id=TTZLAAAAQBAJ&pg=PT45&lpg=PT45&dq=countries+with+bland+food&source=bl&ots=WH49RqK3tz&sig=_bDHiUGf56JRqMYXuu5myT6l5ZI&hl=nl&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiG84m9gqTUAhVRPVAKHdUVBUI4ChDoAQhuMA0#v=onepage&q=countries with bland food&f=false
Oh man, i had that herring in roterdam, i threw up. Terrible, my friends were laughing, but man it was like eating kaak.
 
.
Ah raw fish! I do like my fish but it needs to have gone through the necessary safe processes.
 
. .
Last edited:
.
No need to worry in Pakistan we overcook our fish most Pakistanis i know dont find sushi to be tasty :D
 
.
Last edited:
. .

Latest posts

Back
Top Bottom