Staph and Bacillus cereus both can
cause acute food poisoning within six hours of ingestion of food. B cereus is
likely when rice is the culprit
1. Bacillus cereus is able to persist in food processing
environments due to its ability to survive at extreme temperatures as well as
its ability to form biofilms and spores.
2. B. cereus has been recovered from a wide range of
foods, including rice, dairy products, spices, bean sprouts and other vegetables.
3. Fried rice is an important cause of emetic-type
food poisoning associated with B. cereus
4. The organism is frequently present in
uncooked rice, and heat-resistant spores may survive cooking.
5. Cooked rice subsequently at room temperature can
allow vegetative forms to multiply, and the heat-stable toxin that is produced
can survive brief heating such as stir frying
6. Two distinct types of toxin-mediated food
poisoning are caused by B. cereus, characterized by either diarrhea or vomiting,
depending on which toxin is involved. The diarrheal toxin is produced by
vegetative cells in the small intestine after ingestion of either bacilli or
spores. The emetic toxin is ingested directly from contaminated food. Both
toxins cause disease within 24 hours of ingestion.
7. The emetic syndrome is caused by direct
ingestion of the toxin.
8. The number of viable spores and vegetative
bacteria that produce diarrheal toxin is reduced by heating, although spores
associated with emetic toxin are capable of surviving heat processing.
9. Cereulide is heat stable and resistant to gastric
conditions.
10. The ingested toxin itself may therefore cause disease
despite sufficient heating to kill B cereus.
11. The emetic syndrome is characterized by abdominal
cramps, nausea, and vomiting. Diarrhea also occurs in about one-third of
individuals. Symptom onset is usually within one to five hours of ingestion,
but it
can also occur within half an hour and
up to six hours after ingestion of contaminated food.
12. Symptoms usually resolve in 6 to 24 hours.
13. Rice based dishes in particular have been implicated in
emetic toxin mediated disease, usually as a result of cooling fried rice dishes
overnight at room temperature followed by reheating the next day.
14. The infective dose of cereulide required to cause
symptoms is 8 to 10 micrograms per kilogram of body weight.
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