By
Charmain Tan Courcelle MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- That raw oyster appetizer might sound tempting, but
you may want to consider eating it later in a
meal. Mississippi
Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station food
microbiologist Douglas Marshall has found eating raw oysters
on an empty stomach can increase the risk of food poisoning.
And taking an antacid beforehand could make the situation
even worse. Marshall
led a team that determined the effect of antacids on the
survival of Vibrio vulnificus, a bacterial pathogen found
naturally in oysters and other shellfish, in the stomach and
intestines. The study was part of a larger effort to
understand how this potentially deadly bacterium interacts
with its environment. "Infection
with Vibrio vulnificus is very rare, but if you get it, you
have about a 40 percent chance of dying," Marshall said.
"So, why do some people get V. vulnificus and die, while for
most it's no big deal, they don't get sick and they never
know they were exposed?" One
reason most people never get food poisoning from V.
vulnificus is the bacterium can't survive the trip through
the acid environment of the stomach. Marshall said he wanted
to know whether this would change if that acidic environment
became altered by antacids. "We
know there's an increased risk of infection with other
common food-borne pathogens when antacids are consumed
because of reduced stomach acidity. What we didn't know when
we started this study was how V. vulnificus would behave in
a less aggressive stomach environment," Marshall
said. Unable
to find a suitable model of the human gastrointestinal tract
for their studies, Marshall and his team constructed their
own system out of glass beakers, circulating pumps, a
warm-water bath and solutions that mimic digestive fluids
found in the stomach and intestines. "Our
model simulates the dynamics of the gastrointestinal system
and allows us to follow food as it passes through the
'stomach' and 'intestine'," Marshall said. Mississippi
State University has applied for a patent for the group's
invention. The
team added sterilized, raw oysters that had been "chewed" in
a blender with a simulated saliva solution to the mechanical
digestive system. They then added V. vulnificus at levels
found in Gulf Coast oysters and the equivalent of two
teaspoons of liquid antacid to the stomach. Samples
from the device's stomach and intestinal compartments were
tested for living V. vulnificus cells at regular intervals
after the "meal." Results
from the bacterial growth assays showed V. vulnificus was
eliminated from the stomach within 30 minutes. But when
antacid was used, Marshall's group could find surviving
bacteria in the stomach for up to two hours -- the
antacid-neutralized environment had little effect on the
pathogen's numbers. More
surprising to the team was what they found in the intestinal
compartment. V. vulnificus that survived the stomach's acid
treatment were able to quickly multiply within the
intestinal compartment. Up to 100 million V. vulnificus
cells could be found in a milliliter of intestinal fluid.
With antacid use, this number increased another
tenfold. "The
liquid content of the stomach empties into the intestinal
tract quickly in the first 10 to 20 minutes of eating,"
Marshall said. "Because oysters are semisolid and eaten as
appetizers, they would most likely empty from the stomach
easily." Marshall
explained this rapid stomach emptying rate would decrease
the amount of time V. vulnificus was exposed to stomach acid
and allow living bacteria to be delivered to the intestine
where they could readily multiply. "Even a
meal of just one oyster could carry more than 100,000 V.
vulnificus," he said. Because
the stomach's emptying rate slows as more food is ingested
to allow the small intestine to complete its processing of
the stomach's contents, V. vulnificus bacteria consumed
after the first 30 minutes of eating would more likely be
exposed to gastric acid. "So
individuals, and especially high-risk individuals, may want
to eat oysters later in a meal to give the acid in their
stomachs a chance to kill the bacterium," he
said. Marshall
conducted this research with then-graduate research
assistant Jaheon Koo and research scientist Angelo DePaola
of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's Gulf Coast
Seafood Laboratory. Results from this research were
published in Applied and Environmental
Microbiology. Released:
July 15, 2002
Forestry,
Wildlife & Fisheries News
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Empty stomachs,
antacids increase raw oyster risks
Contact: Dr. Doug Marshall, (662) 325-8722
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:31:56
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/fwnews/fw02/020715.html
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