What is food-borne botulism?
Food-borne botulism is a rare but serious type of
food poisoning that can result in
paralysis. It is caused by the Clostridium botulinum (C. botulinum)
bacterium. The bacteria produce a nerve toxin that can cause paralysis.
Food-borne botulism can be fatal and is considered a medical emergency.
What causes food-borne botulism?
Food-borne botulism can be caused by eating contaminated
home-canned foods that have a low acid content, such as asparagus, green beans,
beets, and corn. However, there have been cases of botulism from more unusual
sources, such as chopped garlic in oil, chile peppers, tomatoes, improperly
handled baked potatoes wrapped in aluminum foil, and home-canned or fermented
fish.
In infants, botulism can result if a baby eats raw (unpasteurized)
honey contaminated by C. botulinum spores. The spores
multiply in the infant's
intestine and produce toxins. Infants should not be
given raw honey.
What are the symptoms?
The symptoms of food-borne botulism may include double vision,
blurred vision, drooping eyelids, slurred speech, difficulty swallowing, dry
mouth, and muscle weakness. Infants with botulism appear to have little energy
(lethargic), eat poorly, are constipated, and have a weak cry and poor muscle
tone. These are all symptoms of the muscle
paralysis caused by the nerve toxin. If botulism is
not treated, advanced symptoms may cause paralysis of the arms, legs, and trunk
and the muscles that help you breathe. In food-borne botulism, symptoms
generally begin 18 to 36 hours after eating a contaminated food, but they can
occur as early as 4 hours or as late as 10 days after eating the food.
How is food-borne botulism diagnosed?
Your health professional will do a medical history and physical
exam and ask you questions about your symptoms and foods you have recently
eaten. The best way to be sure of the diagnosis is for a health professional to
inject your blood serum or stool into mice and look for signs of botulism.
Other tests that may be done include a brain scan and a spinal fluid exam.
How is it treated?
If diagnosed early, food-borne botulism can be treated with an
antitoxin that blocks the action of the botulism
toxins. This can prevent the condition from getting worse, but recovery still
takes many weeks. Your health professional may try to remove contaminated food
in the digestive tract by inducing vomiting or by using
enemas.
The paralysis that occurs with severe botulism may cause you to
need a breathing machine (ventilator) for weeks, along with
intensive medical and nursing care. After several weeks, the paralysis slowly
improves.
Infants are usually not given antitoxin. But infants younger than
1 year old can be given a botulism immune globulin (BabyBIG) to treat botulism.
How can I prevent food-borne botulism?
Food-borne botulism often comes from home-canned foods. You can
prevent botulism by following strict procedures when canning and by boiling
home-canned food for 10 minutes before eating it. You can get instructions on
safe home canning from county extension services or from the U.S. Department of
Agriculture. Rarely, people get botulism from commercially canned and processed
foods.
Botulism from more unusual sources, such as chopped garlic in oil,
chile peppers, tomatoes, improperly handled baked potatoes wrapped in aluminum
foil, and home-canned or fermented fish, have occurred. To prevent this,
refrigerate oils with garlic or herbs and serve baked potatoes while they are
still hot.
Do not give raw (unpasteurized) honey to children younger than 12
months. It can contain spores of C. botulinum.