Food Poisoning and Safe Food HandlingWhat HappensYou may become ill with
food poisoning after you eat food that contains
bacteria, viruses, or other harmful organisms. Most cases of food poisoning
follow the same general course. After you eat a contaminated food, there is an hours-to-days delay
before you notice symptoms. The contaminating organism passes through the
stomach into the intestine, attaches to the
intestinal walls, and begins to multiply. Some
organisms stay in the intestine, some produce a toxin that is absorbed into the
bloodstream, and others directly invade body tissues. Your symptoms depend
greatly on the type of organism that has infected you. Different organisms cause similar symptoms, especially diarrhea,
vomiting, and stomach cramps. Diarrhea and vomiting are a normal response as
the body tries to rid itself of harmful organisms. Unless the illness is part
of a recognized outbreak, it is difficult to identify the infecting organism
and laboratory tests are usually not done. In most cases, you recover in a few days to a week as toxins are
flushed from your system. You may feel weak for several days after other
symptoms go away. Most of the time food poisoning is mild and passes in a few days.
However, the symptoms and course of some types of food poisoning may be more
severe. - Clostridium
botulinum (botulism) produces toxins that paralyze the nerves and
the muscles. Botulism symptoms usually begin 18 to 36 hours after eating
contaminated foods and include weakness and double vision. Paralysis progresses
from the head to the rest of the body. Intensive care, including mechanical
ventilation, is needed to support failing breathing.
Because of aggressive medical care and the availability of
antitoxin, most people who are infected with botulism
live. Recovery may take months, and people are often weak and tire easily for
as long as a year after the initial disease.
- Toxoplasmosis often
has no symptoms, or the symptoms are flu-like. You may have swollen lymph
glands or muscle aches and pains that last for a few days to several weeks.
Toxoplasmosis is dangerous to a pregnant woman and her
fetus. For more information, see the topic
Toxoplasmosis During Pregnancy.
- Salmonellosis may last more than a week and require
hospitalization.
- Listeriosis symptoms include fever, muscle aches, and
sometimes nausea or diarrhea. If the infection spreads to the brain and
nervous system, then symptoms such as headache, stiff
neck, confusion, loss of balance, or convulsions can occur. A pregnant woman
may experience only a mild, flu-like illness. Infections during pregnancy can
lead to premature delivery, serious infection of the newborn, or even
stillbirth.
Rarely, food poisoning can result in kidney or joint
damage.2
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