Much Peter, Berghold Christian, Krassnig Gerald, Schweighardt Hans, Wenzl Harald, Allerberger Franz
Competence Centre Infectious Diseases Epidemiology, Austrian Agency for Health and Food Safety (AGES), Vienna, Austria.
Wien Klin Wochenschr. 2005 Sep;117(17):599-603. doi: 10.1007/s00508-005-0415-y.
In June 2004, an egg packing station was epidemiologically incriminated as possibly distributing the vehicle of the Salmonella enterica subsp. enterica ser. Typhimurium definitive type (DT) U291 outbreak which began in September 2003 and--as of June 2004 affected more than 100 persons all over Austria and 8 German tourists. A total of 68 egg producing farms were screened for salmonella. Whereas all samples tested negative for S. Typhimurium DT U291, one batch of laying hens was identified as being heavily contaminated with a rare Salmonella enterica subsp. enterica ser. Enteritidis phage type, namely PT 36. This phage type was cultured from 6 of 7 swabs from pooled fecal samples (drag swabs), from 1 of 4 samples of pooled yolks, and from 7 of 11 hens tested (ovaries, liver and intestinal content pooled per hen). In 2004, a total of 36 culture-confirmed human PT 36 infections (19 manifest cases, 12 asymptomatic carriers, and 5 excreters with unknown clinical status) were documented in 4 of the 9 Austrian provinces. It was possible to demonstrate that eggs from this single farm were the probable source of infection for 30 of 31 culture-confirmed human infections. Only in the case of one patient, who regularly purchased eggs at the local market, could no connection to the farm be proven due to inability to trace the market's egg source. The PT 36 outbreak ceased after elimination of the contaminated flock. This episode underlines the considerable potential of adequate epidemiological and microbiological investigations of food-borne outbreaks to improve prevention and control of communicable diseases. The source of the S. Typhimurium DT U291 outbreak--which initially prompted this investigation--is still not identified and accounts for more than 300 human cases until August 2005.
2004年6月,一家鸡蛋包装站在流行病学调查中被认定可能是2003年9月开始的肠炎沙门氏菌肠炎亚种鼠伤寒血清型(DT)U291疫情的传播媒介,截至2004年6月,该疫情已影响奥地利各地100多人及8名德国游客。共对68个蛋鸡养殖场进行了沙门氏菌筛查。虽然所有样本的鼠伤寒沙门氏菌DT U291检测均为阴性,但一批产蛋母鸡被确定受到一种罕见的肠炎沙门氏菌肠炎亚种肠炎血清型噬菌体分型(PT)36的严重污染。从混合粪便样本(拖拭样本)的7份拭子中的6份、混合蛋黄样本的4份中的1份以及检测的11只母鸡中的7只(每只母鸡的卵巢、肝脏和肠道内容物混合)中培养出了这种噬菌体分型。2004年,奥地利9个省份中的4个省份共记录了36例经培养确诊的人类PT 36感染病例(19例显性病例、12例无症状携带者和5例临床状态不明的排泄物携带者)。已证实该单一养殖场的鸡蛋可能是31例经培养确诊的人类感染病例中30例的感染源。只有一名患者经常在当地市场购买鸡蛋,由于无法追踪市场鸡蛋来源,无法证明其与该养殖场有联系。在清除受污染鸡群后,PT 36疫情停止。这一事件突显了对食源性疫情进行充分的流行病学和微生物学调查对于改善传染病预防和控制的巨大潜力。最初促使此次调查的鼠伤寒沙门氏菌DT U291疫情的源头仍未查明,截至2005年8月已导致300多例人类病例。