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J. Todd Weber, Richard G. Hibbs, Ahmed Darwish, Ban Mishu, Andrew L. Corwin, Magda Rakha, Charles L. Hatheway, Said El Sharkawy, Sobhi Abd El Rahim, Mohammed Fathi Sheba Al Hamd, James E. Sarn, Paul A. Blake, Robert V. Tauxe, A Massive Outbreak of Type E Botulism Associated with Traditional Salted Fish in Cairo, The Journal of Infectious Diseases, Volume 167, Issue 2, February 1993, Pages 451–454, https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/167.2.451
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Abstract
In April 1991, 91 hospitalized patients in Cairo were reported to the Egyptian Ministry of Health with botulism intoxication. To define the spectrum of illness and identify a food vehicle, 45 patients were interviewed and a case-control investigation was conducted among families of 5 hospitalized patients. Clinical specimens and specimens of implicated food were tested for toxin and cultured for Clostridium botulinum. Hospitalized patients had symptoms consistent with botulism; 18 (20%) of91 reported patients died. Illness was associated with eating faseikh (uneviscerated, salted mullet fish; lower 95% confidence limit of odds ratio = 6.6, P < .001). All 5 case-families purchased faseikh from one shop. Very high levels of type E botulinal toxin were detected in faseikh reported to be purchased from the implicated shop; C. botulinum type E was isolated from cultures of clinical specimens and from the faseikh. This is the first documented outbreak of botulism in Egypt and the largest type E outbreak ever reported.