Acute Toxoplasmosis among Canadian Deer Hunters Associated with Consumption of Undercooked Deer Meat Hunted in the United States

Colette Gaulin,Danielle Ramsay,Karine Thivierge,Joanne Tataryn, Ariane Courville,Catherine Martin, Patricia Cunningham, Joane Desilets, Diane Morin,Rejean Dion

EMERGING INFECTIOUS DISEASES(2020)

Cited 37|Views12
No score
Abstract
We conducted a recent investigation in Quebec, Canada, concerning Canadian deer hunters who went to the United States to hunt deer and returned with symptoms of fever, severe headache, myalgia, and articular pain of undetermined etiology. Further investigation identified that a group of 10 hunters from Quebec attended a hunting retreat in Illinois (USA) during November 22-December 4, 2018. Six of the 10 hunters had similar symptoms and illness onset dates. Serologic tests indicated a recent toxoplasmosis infection for all symptomatic hunters, and the risk factor identified was consumption of undercooked deer meat. Among asymptomatic hunters, 2 were already immune to toxoplasmosis, 1 was not immune, and the immune status of 1 remains unknown. Outbreaks of acute toxoplasmosis infection are rare in North America, but physicians should be aware that such outbreaks could become more common.
More
Translated text
Key words
Canada,Illinois,Quebec,Toxoplasma gondii,United States,deer hunters,epidemiology,food safety,foodborne diseases,infection,outbreak,parasites,toxoplasmosis,undercooked deer meat,zoonoses
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined