Craven P C, Mackel D C, Baine W B, Barker W H, Gangarosa E J
Lancet. 1975 Apr 5;1(7910):788-92. doi: 10.1016/s0140-6736(75)92446-0.
Between Dec. 4, 1973, and Feb. 15, 1974, 80 cases of infection due to Salmonella eastbourne, previously a rare isolated serotype in the United States, were reported from twenty-three States. An additional 39 cases were reported from seven Provinces in Canada during a similar period. A telephone case-control study implicated Christmas-wrapped chocolate balls manufactured by a Canadian company as the vehicle of transmission. S. eastbourne was subsequently isolated from several samples of leftover chocolate balls obtained from homes where cases occurred. Investigation of the factory revealed that the contaminated Christmas and Easter chocolates, and a few chocolate items for year-round sale, had been produced between May and October, 1973. Bacteriological testing of samples taken at the plant implicated cocoa beans as the probable source of the salmonella organisms which, in the low-moisture chocolate, were able to survive heating during production. This outbreak and the finding of salmonella of other serotypes in chocolates produced by another manufacturer suggest that chocolate-related salmonellosis may be a significant public-health problem.
1973年12月4日至1974年2月15日期间,美国23个州报告了80例由伊斯特本沙门氏菌感染的病例,该菌株此前在美国是一种罕见的分离血清型。在同一时期,加拿大7个省又报告了39例。一项电话病例对照研究表明,一家加拿大公司生产的圣诞包装巧克力球是传播媒介。随后,从病例发生家庭获取的剩余巧克力球的几个样本中分离出了伊斯特本沙门氏菌。对该工厂的调查显示,受污染的圣诞和复活节巧克力以及一些全年销售的巧克力产品是在1973年5月至10月期间生产的。对工厂采集的样本进行的细菌学检测表明,可可豆可能是沙门氏菌的来源,在低水分巧克力中,这些沙门氏菌能够在生产过程中的加热环节存活下来。此次疫情以及另一家制造商生产的巧克力中发现其他血清型沙门氏菌表明,与巧克力相关的沙门氏菌病可能是一个重大的公共卫生问题。