Ninety-eight now sick from romaine
lettuce-linked E. coli: CDC
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[April 28, 2018]
(Reuters) - Fourteen more people
fell ill from an E. coli outbreak linked to romaine lettuce, U.S. health
officials said on Friday, bringing the number of people affected to 98
across 22 U.S. states.
The reported strain of E. coli, which produces poisonous substances
known as Shiga toxins, can cause severe abdominal cramps, bloody
diarrhea and vomiting.
The outbreak that began last month is now the largest multi-state Shiga
toxin-producing outbreak since 2006, the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC) said.
Forty-six people have been hospitalized, including 10 who had developed
a type of kidney failure, the CDC said in its latest update on the
outbreak. No deaths have been reported.
Three more states — Mississippi, Tennessee, and Wisconsin — reported
people falling sick.
"We do expect more reports of illnesses since there is a two-to-three
week delay between the time that a person is sick and between the time
they can be confirmed as part of the outbreak," Matthew Wise, deputy
branch chief for Outbreak Response at the CDC, said at a media briefing.
Eight cases in Alaska were linked to a farm in Yuma, Arizona, the CDC
said.
"Most of the illnesses linked to the Romaine outbreak are not linked to
the Romaine lettuce from (the Yuma) farm. We are investigating dozens of
other fields as potential sources of the chopped Romaine lettuce," a
U.S. Food and Drug Administration official said at the briefing.
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Romaine lettuce grows near Soledad, California, U.S., May 3, 2017.
REUTERS/Michael Fiala
The CDC repeated its advice that people not eat or buy romaine
lettuce, which is commonly used in salads, unless they can confirm
it is not from the Yuma growing region.
(Reporting by Manas Mishra in Bengaluru; Editing by Sai Sachin
Ravikumar)
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