WASHINGTON
(AP) -- A yellow fin tuna product used
to make dishes like sushi and sashimi sold at restaurants and grocery stores
has been linked with an outbreak of salmonella that has sickened more than 100
people in 20 states and the District of Columbia, federal health authorities
said Friday.
The
Food and Drug Administration said 116 illnesses have been reported, including
12 people who have been hospitalized. No deaths have been reported.
Moon
Marine USA Corp. of Cupertino, Calif., also known as MMI, is voluntarily
recalling 58,828 pounds of frozen raw yellowfin tuna. It was labeled as
Nakaochi Scrape AA or AAA when it was sold to grocery stores and restaurants
and is scraped off the fish bones and looks like a ground product.
The
product is not available for sale to individual consumers but may have been
used to make sushi, sashimi, ceviche and similar dishes available in
restaurants and grocery stores. Many of the people who became ill reported
eating raw tuna in sushi as "spicy tuna," the FDA said.
Reports
of the foodborne illness caused by salmonella bareilly have mainly come from
the Eastern Seaboard and South, though cases have been reported as far west as
Missouri and Texas.
As of
Friday, illness had been reported these states and the District of Columbia:
Alabama (2), Arkansas (1), Connecticut (5), District of Columbia (2), Florida
(1), As Georgia (5), Illinois (10), Louisiana (2), Maryland (11), Massachusetts
(8), Mississippi (1), Missouri (2), New Jersey (7), New York (24), North
Carolina (2), Pennsylvania (5), Rhode Island (5), South Carolina (3), Texas
(3), Virginia (5), and Wisconsin (12).
The
memo notes there is likely a 30-day lag time between when people become sick
and when cases are reported to health officials.
The raw
yellowfin tuna product may have passed through several distributors before
reaching the restaurant and grocery market and may not be clearly labeled.
Previous
outbreaks of salmonella bareilly have been linked to bean sprouts, which are
grown in warm, damp conditions.
The
most common symptoms of salmonella are diarrhea, abdominal cramps and fever
within eight to 72 hours of eating the contaminated food. The illness can be
severe or even life-threatening for infants, older people, pregnant women and
people with weakened immune systems.
The FDA
recommended that people be cautious about eating raw seafood, inquire about the
source and "when in doubt, don't eat it."
WILL
LESTER
AP
FDA
news release: http://tinyurl.com/7nsezo8
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