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Outbreak of wound botulism in injecting drug users

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 April 2009

M. SCHROETER
Affiliation:
Institute for Public Health, North Rhine-Westphalia, Bielefeld and Münster, Germany
K. ALPERS*
Affiliation:
Department for Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Robert Koch-Institute, Berlin, Germany
U. VAN TREECK
Affiliation:
Institute for Public Health, North Rhine-Westphalia, Bielefeld and Münster, Germany
C. FRANK
Affiliation:
Department for Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Robert Koch-Institute, Berlin, Germany
N. ROSENKOETTER
Affiliation:
Institute for Public Health, North Rhine-Westphalia, Bielefeld and Münster, Germany
R. SCHAUMANN
Affiliation:
Institute for Medical Microbiology and Epidemiology of Infectious Diseases, National Reference Laboratory for Anaerobes, University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany
*
*Author for correspondence: Dr K. Alpers, Abteilung für Infektionsepidemiologie, Robert Koch-Institut, Seestraße 10, D-13353 Berlin. (Email: AlpersK@rki.de)
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Summary

Between October and December 2005, 16 cases of wound botulism were notified to the health authorities of North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. All patients were injecting drug users (IDU) and the epidemiological investigations suggested contaminated injection drugs as the most probable source of infection. Clostridium botulinum was cultivated from clinical samples of six patients and molecular typing revealed that the different isolates were clonally identical. Two samples of heroin, one of them provided by a patient, were examined but C. botulinum could not be isolated. This outbreak demonstrates that IDU are at risk for acquiring wound botulism by injecting contaminated drugs. A greater awareness of this disease is needed by physicians and a close cooperation between public health authorities, street workers, operators of sheltered injecting facilities, and medical centres focusing on IDU is essential to prevent and manage outbreaks in IDU in a timely manner.

Information

Type
Original Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2009
Figure 0

Fig. 1. (a) Cases of botulism in injecting drug users (IDUs) by residence and week of onset; (b) Cases of botulism in IDUs by week of onset (n=16), Germany, 2005.

Figure 1

Fig. 2. PFGE pattern of seven C. botulinum strains isolated from six patients during the outbreak and control strains. Lane 12, λ-ladder (50–1000 kb); lane 11, S. aureus control strain of the PFGE kit; lanes 1, 10, C. botulinum control strains (lane 1, neurotoxin A gene-carrying strain; lane 10, neurotoxin B gene-carrying strain); lane 3, C. sporogenes; lanes 2, 4–9, C. botulinum strains from the six patients.