Scombroid
From IDWiki
Background
- Food poisoning from improperly-stored fish
- Especially common with Scombridae and Scomberesocidae families of fish, which include tuna, mackeral, skip-jack, and bonito, but can also be seen with dolphin fish, tilapia, salmon, swordfish, trout, sardines, and anchovies
- Similar illness can occur from raw milk contamination when making Swiss cheese
Microbiology
- Preformed toxins
- Involves Escherichia coli, Klebsiella species, Vibrio species, Proteus species, Clostridium species, Salmonella species, and Shigella species
Pathophysiology
- Storing fish above 4ºC allows multiple bacteria to grow
- Can be as short as 2 to 3 hours at 20ºC
- The bacteria produce toxins including histamine
- Histamine is resistant to freezing and cooking
- Ingestion of histamine causes the symptoms, described below
Clinical Manifestations
- Within 1 hour of consumption
- Feeling flushed and warm
- Urticaria on face and upper torso
- Headache
- Diarrhea
- Can also cause perioral burning, itching, and edema, blurred vision, tachycardia, palpitations, hypotension, and dizziness
- Can occasionally progress to anaphylactoid symptoms with bronchospasm, respiratory distress, and arrhythmias
- Illness is more severe in people taking MOA inhibitors or isoniazid, which prevent breakdown of histamines
Prognosis and Complications
- Symptoms resolve within 12 to 48 hours with no serious sequelae
Management
- Close airway monitoring with intubation and ventilation if required
- Antihistamines, including diphenhydramine, hydroxyzine, ranitidine, cimetidine, which should be continued until 1 or 2 days after resolution of symptoms to prevent recurrence