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Snow Mountain agent gastroenteritis from clams
Authors:B I Truman  H P Madore  M A Menegus  J L Nitzkin  R Dolin
Abstract:A 1983 investigation of two clambake-related gastroenteritis outbreaks in Rochester, New York, showed that 84 (43%) of 196 persons interviewed had an acute illness characterized by watery diarrhea, vomiting, and abdominal cramps. None of the ill persons were hospitalized or had complications. Illness was associated with eating raw (p = 0.002) or baked (p less than 0.01) hard-shell clams, with the risk of illness increasing with the total number of clams consumed (p less than 0.01). The median incubation period and duration of illness were 36 and 44 hours, respectively. Stool samples obtained 2-4 days after onset of illness were negative for commonly recognized bacterial and viral pathogens. However, of 31 persons whose stools were tested, the stool of only one ill person was positive by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for the Snow Mountain agent, one of the Norwalk-like viruses. Paired serum specimens from six (67%) of nine ill and two (29%) of seven well persons showed a fourfold or greater rise in antibody titer to Snow Mountain agent. Persons who ate clams were more likely to seroconvert to Snow Mountain agent (eight of 12) than were those who did not eat clams (zero of four) (p = 0.04). The clams were harvested off the coast of southern Massachusetts in late October, when harvest waters were documented to be contaminated by untreated municipal sewage. This report describes the first documented outbreak of shellfish-associated gastroenteritis attributed to Snow Mountain agent of which we are aware.
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