258 now sick in salmonella sushi outbreak

CDC

Tainted tuna scraped from the backbone of the fish has been implicated in salmonella outbreak that has sickened at least 200 people in 21 states and Washington, D.C.

At least 258 people in 24 states and Washington, D.C., now have been sickened by raw scraped tuna contaminated with not one but two rare strains of salmonella, government health officials reported Thursday.

Tainted tuna scraped from the backbone of the fish has been linked not only to the salmonella Bareilly strain, but also to salmonella Nchanga infections, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported. The two genetic fingerprint patterns of the strains have been grouped into a single outbreak strain, CDC officials said.

At least 247 people have been confirmed with salmonella Bareilly infections, and another 11 have been infected with salmonella Nchanga. Thirty-two victims have been hospitalized, but no deaths have been reported.

A frozen yellowfin tun product, known as Nakaochi Scrape, produced by Moon Marine USA Corp. is the likely source of the outbreak.

In April, Moon Marine recalled 58,828 pounds of the frozen tuna product. It wasn't for sale to individual customers, but may have been used to make sushi, sashimi, ceviche and similar dishes in restaurants and grocery stores.

The outbreak could continue to grow. Illnesses that occured after March 27 might not be reported yet because of the time frame between when a person becomes ill and when it's reported to authorities.

At least two people have filed lawsuits against Moon Marine, a Cupertino, Calif., firm. The women, both from Wisconsin, said they became ill after eating tainted seafood.

The CDC's most recent estimates suggest that for every salmonella infection detected, perhaps 29.3 go unreported. Using that multiplier, 7,559 people may have been affected so far by the tainted tuna outbreak.

Related story:

First lawsuit filed in salmonella sushi outbreak

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There are no problems with sashimi in Japan. Food must be handled with care.

    Reply#27 - Fri Apr 27, 2012 6:39 AM EDT

    It has also been recently revealed that not only is sushi raw -- totally uncooked -- but that most sushi is NOT REFRIGERATED after it is caught and travels to the restaurant near you UNREFRIGERATED for up to eight days before being served. Now, that sounds like a case of something serious just waiting to happen!

      Reply#28 - Fri Apr 27, 2012 11:30 AM EDT

      PVALDES, BALEEN whales eat plankton(blue whale,grey,right) Tooth whales such as the SPERM WHALE eat fish and squid!!

        Reply#29 - Fri Apr 27, 2012 11:31 AM EDT

        That is ouch. Can the consumers ask the company to pay back the hospitalization cost and any due cost for the problems, such as unable to go to work or lost pay?

          Reply#30 - Fri Apr 27, 2012 2:00 PM EDT

          Wake up folks... You decided to eat raw food that was processed by folks making minimum wage under probably less than ideal conditions...

          Like Ron White says... You can't fix stupid...

            Reply#31 - Fri Apr 27, 2012 4:27 PM EDT

            Raw fish can have parasites as well as salmonella.

            All fish should be cooked or frozen and thawed before eating.

              Reply#32 - Sat Apr 28, 2012 3:07 PM EDT

              note to self: never vote democrat and never ever eat spicy tuna roll.

              Republicans rule! Democrats just drool...

              We will bury you

                Reply#33 - Fri May 4, 2012 10:08 AM EDT

                Keep on eating imported foods buying imported toys for your kids when are we going to realize there standards if any are low they don't care if they are poisoning us Americans deep down they hate us.BUY AMERICAN we have fisherman here that need jobs and have to deal with unfair limits on the number there allowed to catch while Asian fisherman will catch every last Yellow Fin Tuna in the ocean and then move on to the extinction of every other fish,mammal,insect,crustacean they can kill and eat.

                  Reply#34 - Sun Jun 24, 2012 12:20 AM EDT
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