Arctic Trichinosis: Two Alaskan Outbreaks from Walrus Meat

The arctic form of Trichinella spiralis that infects terrestrial and marine mammals is of importance in public health because persons living in arctic regions still depend on wild animals for economic subsistence. In 1975, an extended common-source epidemic of trichinosis attributed to consumption o...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Infectious Diseases
Main Authors: Margolis, Harold S., Middaugh, John P., Burgess, Robert D.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press 1979
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jid.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/139/1/102
https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/139.1.102
Description
Summary:The arctic form of Trichinella spiralis that infects terrestrial and marine mammals is of importance in public health because persons living in arctic regions still depend on wild animals for economic subsistence. In 1975, an extended common-source epidemic of trichinosis attributed to consumption of walrus meat involved 29 persons in Barrow, Alaska. Of those persons eating this meat, 64% became ill, and the rate of infection of persons eating meat prepared with little or no cooking was four times as great as that of persons eating cooked meat. One year later a second outbreak occurred when a family ate partially cooked meat from an infected walrus. Clinical illness differed little from the disease acquired in temperate climates; however, only 70% had a positive bentonite flocculation titer, whereas 96% had eosinophilia. These epidemics of trichinosis are the first reported in Alaska to be associated with the consumption of walrus meat.