Tuesday, January 24, 2017

Japanese Tapeworm in your salmon, shrimp and catfish


REPOSTED SINCE THERE HAS BEEN AN OUTBREAK OF THIS IN ALSIP.

FOX 32 NEWS - Researchers are warning that a spike in human parasite infection from the Japanese broad tapeworm is likely due to the increase in popularity of eating raw fish as well as the presence of the tapeworm in salmon from Alaska. The tapeworm has also been found in shipments of salmon, shrimp and catfish which was shipped from the far east and Alaska to the Chicago area, during the past few weeks.

The researchers found the tapeworm Diphyllobothrium nihonkaiense in wild pink salmon from Alaska, according to a study published in the CDC's Emerging Infectious Diseases journal. That means salmon from the Pacific Ocean coasts in both Asia and America could be risky to people who eat it raw, such as in sushi and sashimi.

"For decades, the possible occurrence of the Japanese broad tapeworm on the Pacific coast of North America was ignored, but since 2008, human infection with adult tapeworms and natural infection of carnivores (wolves and bears) with adult tapeworms have been confirmed by use of molecular markers," the researchers wrote in the published study. "Our main intent is to alert parasitologists and medical doctors about the potential danger of human infection with this long tapeworm resulting from consumption of infected salmon imported (on ice) from the Pacific coast of North America and elsewhere."

The researchers are concerned that Pacific salmon could be a source of human infection because the fish is often exported on ice, but not frozen, allowing the parasite to survive transport. That could pose a risk to consumers in China, Europe, New Zealand, and the rest of the United States.

6 comments:

  1. Anonymous1/14/2017

    Don't eat anything from the Pacific you forgot to mention the radiation from Fukushima they are still covering up.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous1/15/2017

      that is a MAJOR COVERUP

      Delete
  2. Anonymous1/16/2017

    There is no cure for a diphyllobothrium nihonkaiense infection. People that catch this are usually dead in a year.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Anonymous1/26/2017

    pen raised Tilapia is looking good now........

    ReplyDelete
  4. Anonymous1/28/2017

    When buying fish, find out where it's from. If they don't know, don't buy it.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Anonymous7/14/2017

    Thanks for finally writing about >"Japanese Tapeworm iin your salmon, shrimp and catfish" <Liked it!

    ReplyDelete