Plasmid, serotypic, and enterotoxin analysis of Bacillus cereus in an outbreak setting

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Abstract

Bacillus cereus is a recognized agent of food-borne disease. In this report we describe an outbreak of B. cereus gastroenteritis associated with consumption of beef stew among patients and staff at a Rhode Island nursing home. The beef had been improperly stored after preparation. The predominant symptoms of the illness were cramps and diarrhea; it lasted an average of 16 h. No deaths occurred. The organism was recovered from 10 of 23 stools collected from ill patients and 1 of 21 stools collected from controls (P = 0.0044, Fisher's two-tailed exact test). All isolates had the same biotype and serotype, newly designated H.26; all elaborated the diarrheal B. cereus enterotoxin when tested in rabbits by the vascular permeability reaction; and all had identical plasmid profiles, which differed from those of B. cereus strains selected randomly from other outbreaks. Plasmid analysis may prove to be a useful new tool in investigating outbreaks of B. cereus food poisoning.

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APA

DeBuono, B. A., Brondum, J., Kramer, J. M., Gilbert, R. J., & Opal, S. M. (1988). Plasmid, serotypic, and enterotoxin analysis of Bacillus cereus in an outbreak setting. Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 26(8), 1571–1574. https://doi.org/10.1128/jcm.26.8.1571-1574.1988

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