1.A Case of Gastroenteritis due to Vibrio fluvialis.
Hye Jeong LEE ; Sung Ook LEE ; Young Jin BAE ; Jin Gon PARK ; Phil Sun CHOI ; Kang Il JO ; Jong Chul CHUN ; Sung Chai MOON ; Eun Joo HWANG
Korean Journal of Infectious Diseases 1998;30(3):294-299
V. fluvialis is a gram-negative, oxidase-producing, halophilic bacterium. It is normally found in coastal waters and seafoods. There have been a few reports on Vibrio fluvialis gastroenteritis in other countries, whereas there has been no previous report of V. fluvialis infections in Korea. Reports from other countries showed that V. fluvialis was isolated mostly from infants and children. We experienced a rare case of gastroenteritis due to V. fluvialis in a 55-year-old man with liver cirrhosis who ate an ark shell. He was admitted due to mild abdominal pain and severe watery diarrhea followed by rapidly progressive dehydration, electrolyte imbalance, and hepatorenal syndrome for a week. This patient was not improved by intensive care and antibiotic therapy.
Abdominal Pain
;
Arcidae
;
Child
;
Dehydration
;
Diarrhea
;
Gastroenteritis*
;
Hepatorenal Syndrome
;
Humans
;
Infant
;
Critical Care
;
Korea
;
Liver Cirrhosis
;
Middle Aged
;
Seafood
;
Vibrio*
2.Epidemiological Studies of Vibrio vulnificus Sepsis.
Seok Don PARK ; Hyun Dai KIM ; Tai Hyok WON ; Phil Seung SEO
Korean Journal of Dermatology 2008;46(2):171-180
BACKGROUND: Vibrio vulnificus is an estuarine bacterium which is capable of causing rapidly fatal infections in humans following either ingestion of raw seafoods or entry from seawater into wounds. Although V. vulnificus sepsis (called as Vibrio sepsis) has been well known in Korea since 1982 and was designated as a legal communicable disease (group III) since August 2000, many patients occurr annually. OBJECTIVE: We investigated the epidemiological features of Vibrio sepsis to offer basic data such as correlation among disease occurrence, seawater temperature, salinity and pH, amount of rainfall, incidence rate and consumed seafoods, in order to further prevent this disease. METHODS: We reviewed the epidemiologic data on monthly disease occurrence, history of raw seafood consumption and kinds of consumed seafoods in 141 patients with Vibrio sepsis obtained from 105 admitted patients in hospitals and 36 case reports published in the Korean medical journals between 1982 and 2004. Environmental data on seawater temperature, salinity and pH were obtained from the National Fisheries Research & Development Institute. The monthly amount of rainfall was obtained from the Korea Meteorological Administration. The yearly occurrence of Vibrio vulnificus regional areas was obtained from the Korea Center for Disease Control & Prevention. Population data were obtained from the Korea National Statistical Office. RESULTS: Patients began to develop in June when mean seawater temperature was over 18.9degrees C, and with a peak from July to September when seawater temperature was over 22degrees C. The majority of the patients were found in the southern and western coastal areas of Korea, especially, estuaries, where sea mud is abundant. Also disease occurrence was positively correlated with the amount of rainfall which can lower the salt concentration of seawater. Yearly occurrence of patients by regional area was the highest in the Jellanam-do during the 5 years since August 2000. The incidence rates per 100,000 population were highest in the Jellanam-do (0.69), lowest in the Jeju-do (0.01) and 0.10 in the whole areas. Seventy two percent of patients ingested 38 kinds of seafoods raw such as blue crab, goby, blood ark shell and many kinds of fishes and shellfishes. 9% of patients had not eaten seafood and 17% had either no records or unknown. 2% developed sepsis resulted from exposure of wounds to seawater. CONCLUSION: Vibrio sepsis develops in summer months with much rain and mostly in the estuaries. These results suggest that Vibrio vulnificus multiply well in the warm and in relatively low salt seawater. We think that weather, environmental and geographic factors are important for the outbreak of Vibrio sepsis.
Arcidae
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Brachyura
;
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (U.S.)
;
Communicable Diseases
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Eating
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Epidemiologic Studies
;
Estuaries
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Fisheries
;
Fishes
;
Geography
;
Humans
;
Hydrogen-Ion Concentration
;
Incidence
;
Korea
;
Rain
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Salinity
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Seafood
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Seawater
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Sepsis
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Shellfish
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Vibrio
;
Vibrio vulnificus
;
Weather
3.Biochemical Characteristics of Vibrios isolated from Cultured Shellfish, Ruditapes philippinarum, and Some Species of Wild Shellfish.
Hun Ku LEE ; Sang Seob LEE ; Young Hee YOON ; Kuk Hea HA
Journal of the Korean Society for Microbiology 1998;33(6):567-574
This study was conducted to investigate the vibrio flora in edible shellfish (Ruditapes philippinarum, Scapharca broughtonii, Batillus cornutus and Mytilus coruscus) which were purchased from seafood-market or collected from shellfish culture bed in Pusan and Masan Bay from May to October 1997. Sixty-three vibrio strains were identified among 438 collected strains. Five species of vibrios [V. alginolyticus (22 strains), V. parahaemolyticus (35 strains), V. costicola (2 strains), L. damsela (V. damsela 2 strains), and V. cholerae non-Ol (2 strains)] were identified by their phenotyfic and biochemical characteristics. Four groups (142 strains) were identified as genus Vibrio by their biological characteristics, but they could not be identified to the species level.
Bays
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Busan
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Cholera
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Mytilus
;
Population Characteristics
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Scapharca
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Shellfish*
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Vibrio*