Botulisme: pas toujours une intoxication par ingestion |
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Affiliation: | 1. Supervisory Centre South for Public Law Tasks of the Bundeswehr Medical Service, Dachauer Straße 128, 80637 München, Germany;2. Central Institute of the Bundeswehr Medical Service Munich, Ingolstädter Landstraße 102, 85748 Garching-Hochbrück, Germany;3. Institute for Veterinary Food Science, Justus-Liebig-University, Frankfurter Straße 92, 35392 Gießen, Germany;4. Federal Ministry of Health, Friedrichstraße 108, 10117 Berlin, Germany;1. Bureau of Microbial Hazards, Health Products and Food Branch, Health Canada, K1A 0K9, Canada;2. Department of Food Science, McGill University, Macdonald Campus, 21111 Lakeshore Road, Ste-Anne-de-Bellevue, PQ H9X 3V9, Canada;3. Trojan Technologies, London, ON, Canada |
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Abstract: | Botulism is a rare but paralyzing disease caused by a neurotoxin produced by the anaerobic, spore-forming Gram-positive bacterium. Clostridium botulinum. Temperatures of over 120° C are required to kill the spores, while a one-minute exposure to 85° C is sufficient to inactivate the toxin. Although in most cases botulism is caused by eating contaminated food, experimental data and documented cases of botulism in laboratory workers clearly indicate that an aerosolized form of the toxin may also provoke botulism, i.e., that the bacterium can be inhaled. Moreover, according to experts, the use of aerosolized botullinum toxin could be one of the most frightening weapons in the context of biological warfare. We report one case of documented botulism probably secondary to the inhalation of serotype B toxin from contaminated food. This observation emphasizes that although the clinical diagnosis of botulism is fairly straighforward as it is based on highly indicative symptoms (multiple paralysis of the cranial nerves and atropinic signs), the route of acquisition is not always easy to determine. |
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