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COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS ON FOOD INFECTIONS AND
FOOD INTOXICATIONS
PRESENTED BY – PROXIMA DHIMAN
CONTENTS
 Food borne diseases
 Types of food borne diseases
 Food infection
 Types of food infections
 Food intoxication
 Types of food intoxications
FOOD BORNE DISEASES
 Foodborne diseases can be defined as the illness due to the ingestion of
spoiled or poisonous food, contaminated by microorganisms or toxicants,
which may occur at any stage during food processing from production to
consumption.
 Contamination occur from the environment by use of chemicals or polluted
water and soil for cultivation or from air.
 Clinical symptoms represent a wide spectrum of illness which include
gastrointestinal infections, immunological or neurological disorders,
multiorgan failure, and even cancer.
TYPES OF FOOD BORN DISEASES
1. Foodborne infection
2. Foodborne intoxication
FOODBORNE INFECTIONS
 Illness resulting from contaminated foods by
pathogenic microbes
 Disease caused by ingestion of microorganisms
through food and infect the gastrointestinal tract
by releasing toxins, damaging the intestinal
epithelium, and causing gastroenteritis
CONTINUE….
 Microorganisms: Bacteria, viruses, and parasites
 Incubation period: Hours to days
 Symptoms: Diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, cramping, fever
 Transmission: Can spread from person to person through feco-oral route, cross
contamination of food
 Factors related to contamination: Inadequate cooking, poor personal hygiene, bare
hand contact, mixing of raw and cooked food
TYPES OF FOOD BORNE INFECTION
 Bacterial food borne infection
 Virus food borne infection
 Parasitic foodborne infection
BACTERIAL FOODBORNE INFECTIONS
 Bacteria, single-celled microscopic organisms, they
need available nutrients which are abundant in food
to grow
 Bacteria can contaminate food at any time during
harvesting, processing, storage, and shipping as well
as during the preparation.
 Raw foods such as meat, poultry, fish and shellfish,
eggs, unpasteurized milk, and dairy products are the
most favorable foodstuff for pathogenic bacterial
growth and the cause of illness.
SOME COMMON BACTERIA RELATED TO
FOODBORNE INFECTION
1. Bacillus cereus - Gram positive, facultative anaerobe, and endospore forming
bacteria
Food sources: Meats, Stews, Gravies, Vanilla Sauces
Symptoms: abdominal cramps, watery diarrhea, nausea, vomiting Duration: 24–48 h
2. Clostridium botulinum - Gram positive, anaerobic, and spore forming bacteria
Food sources: Mostly found in improperly canned foods, home canned vegetables,
fermented fish, baked potatoes in aluminum foil, etc.
Symptoms: Vomiting, diarrhea, blurred vision, double vision, difficulty in
swallowing,
muscle weakness, respiratory failure and may leads to death.
VIRUS FOODBORNE INFECTION
 viruses do not grow in food because they
need living cells for replication.
 Almost all the viral foodborne diseases are
strictly human pathogens that are
transmitted to humans via food through
fecal contamination.
 Most of the foodborne viruses are infectious
and spreads so fast from one individual to
another and are capable of causing
significant illness and mortality in humans
SOME EXAMPLES OF
VIRUS RELATED TO FOODBORNE INFECTIONS
1. Hepatitis A (HAV) –
Food sources: Contaminated drinking water,
fruit and fruit juices, milk and milk products,
uncooked foods, cooked foods, that are not
reheated, after contact with an infected food
handler, Shellfish from contaminated water.
Symptoms: Fever, headache, nausea,
abdominal pain, diarrhea, dark urine, jaundice,
and flu like symptoms
2. Rotavirus –
Food sources: Foods such as salads and fruits
handled by the infected people. Transmitted
from Person to person. Fecal oral spread is
the most important means of transmission
Symptoms: Vomiting, watery diarrhea, fever,
dehydration, hypovolemic shock and in
cases, death.
PARASITIC FOODBORNE INFECTION
 Enteric parasitic infections are transmitted by the
fecal-oral route by taking intrinsically
contaminated food products. Parasites are
different from bacterial pathogens as they do not
replicate outside the host.
 Infection caused by parasite is a symbiotic
relationship between two organisms
SOME EXAMPLES OF PARASITES RELATED TO
FOODBORNE INFECTION
1. Entamoeba histolytica –
Food sources: E. histolytica cysts contaminated drinking water and foods, sometimes
raw foods may act as source of infection
Symptoms: Mild diarrhea to severe, dysentery with mucus and blood, weight loss, liver
tenderness.
2. Giardia lamblia –
Food sources: Ingestion of water or food contaminated with feces of infected humans
or animals
Symptoms: Sometimes asymptomic. Malodorus diarrhea, malaise cramps, flatulence,
and weight loss
FOODBORNE INTOXICATIONS
 Intoxication can be stated as the
diseases caused by ingesting food
containing toxins produced by
microorganisms or biotoxicants or by
poisonous substances that were
added as additives intentionally or
unintentionally to the foods
 This does not spread from person to
person.
TYPES OF FOODBORNE INTOXICATIONS
1. Toxicants from plants
2. Toxicants from animals
3. Bacterial intoxications
4. Fungal intoxications
5. Chemical intoxications
TOXICANTS FROM PLANTS
 Poisonous substances derived from plants, presumably as a result of metabolic
activities create disorders inside the body and can lead to death.
 Various types of plant toxicants have been identified some examples:-
1. Solanine - Generally found in potatoes and other members of solanaceae family.
Solanine leads to neurological damage in humans.
2. Caffeine - found in Tea, coffee, cocoa, and cola beverages. It is addictive, Increase
blood pressure, Cause of vasoconstriction and high Caffeine consumption can
accelerate bone loss in women – Cause of anxiety, insomnia.
CONTINUE….
3. Lectins or Haemaglutinins - Present in kidney beans, cereal grains, seeds,
nuts, and potatoes harmful if consumed in excess amounts
4. Hydrogen cyanide - Releases from glycosides in food, leads to
Neurological damage and a form of blindness
5. Mushroom Poisoning - Toxins found in mushrooms are Alpha-amanitin,
phallotoxin, orellanine, muscarine, gyromitrin, coprine, ibotenic acid,
muscimol, etc. all these toxins leads to Gastrointestinal upset, Respiratory
failure, Liver damage, toxins can be fatal too.
TOXICANTS FROM ANIMALS
 Intoxication can occur from consumption of infected
meat, animal tissue could be rendered poisonous by
bacterial and enzymatic decomposition or are
naturally toxic.
 Primarily toxicity occurs due to inherent toxicants in
normal metabolic process
 secondary toxicity arises due to external toxicants
such as pesticides, heavy metals, and drug residues
that contaminate animal tissues.
 Most of the external toxicants are water soluble and
heat labile, found in high concentration in viscera
and dark meats.
 Some examples of animal toxicants:-
1. Tetrodotoxin –
• Occurs in the organs (liver and ovaries) of the puffer fish. Such deadly parts of puffer
fish should be separated from edible ones.
• It Blocks the movement of sodium across the membranes of nerve fibers, Disrupting
transmission of nerve impulses, Lead to paralysis and respiratory failure, Death occurs
within 6–24 h
1. Scombrotoxin –
• Generally occurred in the fish from the family of scrombride like tuna, bonitos etc.,
Poisoning occurs due to formation of high level of heat stable histamine
• Symptoms :- Dizziness, abdominal pain, burning of throat, difficulty in swallowing, etc.
BACTERIAL FOODBORNE INTOXICATIONS
 Pathogenic bacteria are also responsible for producing toxicities in
the food.
 Bacterial food intoxication is a food-borne illness caused by
ingestion of food containing bacterial toxins which are produced as
a result of bacterial growth in food.
 Important bacterial species that are most commonly involved in
food poisoning outbreaks clostridium botulinum, clostridium
perfringens, staphylococcus aureus and bacillus cereus.
 Toxins produced by these bacteria mainly act on digestive or
nervous systems, leading to severe disorders and sometimes
death.
 Simple hygiene practices, and proper food handling mechanisms
can prevent bacterial food intoxication.
FUNGAL INTOXICATION
 Food intoxication due to metabolites produced by fungi known
as mycotoxins is called fungal intoxication.
 There are over 150 fungal species (mold) recognized as
producing toxins in food.
 Poor dry storage practices of grains and other foods lead to
mold growth.
 They have important effects on human and animal health
 The common foodborne mycotoxins are :-
1. Aflatoxins –
• Produced by Aspergillus flavus.
• Four major aflatoxins are AFB1, AFB2, AFG1, and AFG2
• Commonly found in corn (maize), sorghum, rice, cottonseed, peanuts, treenuts, cocoa
beans, figs, ginger, and nutmeg.
• Symptoms: Hemorrhaging, jaundice, premature cell death, and tissue necrosis in
liver and possibly other organs
CONTINUE….
2. Fumonisin –
• A group of mycotoxins derived from Fusarium.
• Classified into three types: B1, B2, and B3.
• Mostly occurred in corn crops.
• Fumonisin B1 is responsible for Esophageal cancer in humans.
3. Sterigmatocystin –
• Produced by fungi Aspergillus nidulans and Aspergillus versicolor
• Found in moldy grain, green coffee beans and cheese
• Toxicity is as much similar to aflatoxins
• Potent liver carcinogen
CHEMICAL INTOXICATIONS
Intoxication due to the consumption of poisonous food contaminated by chemicals
may be fatal. These types of chemicals are added to the foods intentionally or
unintentionally at the time of cultivation or during processing, transportation, or
storage. Chemical foodborne intoxications involve the following:
 pesticides
 heavy metals
 antibiotics and hormones
 radio nuclides
 preservatives
 adulteration through hazardous chemicals.
1. Pesticides – they find their way through the crops into human diets. Consuming
these pesticides is likely to cause health problems especially in people who handle
these foods and in children playing with infected soil or eating unwashed fruits or
vegetables. E.g. dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT), Alpha BHC (benzene
hexachloride) etc.
2. Heavy metals - many of the heavy metals such as zinc, copper, chromium, iron, and
manganese are essential for proper body function in a very small amount. But,
sometimes it may exceed the normal level due to industrial exposure, air and water
pollutions, intake of metal-contaminated foods or food of improperly coated food
containers may cause serious damages to the body.
3. Antibiotics and hormones - antibiotics such as
tetracyclines, lincosamides, polypeptides,
penicillins, sulfonamides, aminoglycosides, and
fluroquinolones. which lead to increase in the
emergence and spread of antibiotic-resistant
bacteria. Another type of residue is Sterol
(hormone), used for increasing growth in
animals raised for meat which has been found
to be carcinogenic
4. Radio nuclides - naturally occurring
radioisotopes of chemical elements that is
unavoidable and considered to be one of the
inherent risks in life. The long-term adverse
health effects associated with radionuclides
include genetic mutations, teratogenic effects,
and cancer.
Deposition
increases due to
heavy rainfall
Direct exposer
Cultivation through
contaminated water
Contaminated
fishes
Cattles are eating
contaminated grass
Radioactive wastes are mixing
with fresh water and
contaminating drinking water
and fishes
Nuclear reactor
Radioactive smokes
are mixing with the
winds and causing
dense cloud and
heavy rainfall
5. Additives and preservatives - Preservatives are the substances or chemicals widely
used in food products as well as in pharmaceutical drugs, cosmetics, and biological
samples to prevent microbial decompositions and adverse chemical changes.
Artificial preservatives causes negative side effects rather than preserving freshness.
6. Adulteration Through Hazardous Chemicals - Hazardous chemicals such as
calcium carbide, sodium cyclamate, cyanide, and formalin are widely used for
ripening green tropical fruits, to keep them fresh, and for preserving until sale such
types of chemically treated food may cause complex diseases and has direct
consequences such as liver and kidney failure, autism, metabolic dysfunctions, and
cancer
THANK YOU

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Comparative Analysis of Food Infections and Intoxications

  • 1. COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS ON FOOD INFECTIONS AND FOOD INTOXICATIONS PRESENTED BY – PROXIMA DHIMAN
  • 2. CONTENTS  Food borne diseases  Types of food borne diseases  Food infection  Types of food infections  Food intoxication  Types of food intoxications
  • 3. FOOD BORNE DISEASES  Foodborne diseases can be defined as the illness due to the ingestion of spoiled or poisonous food, contaminated by microorganisms or toxicants, which may occur at any stage during food processing from production to consumption.  Contamination occur from the environment by use of chemicals or polluted water and soil for cultivation or from air.  Clinical symptoms represent a wide spectrum of illness which include gastrointestinal infections, immunological or neurological disorders, multiorgan failure, and even cancer.
  • 4. TYPES OF FOOD BORN DISEASES 1. Foodborne infection 2. Foodborne intoxication
  • 5. FOODBORNE INFECTIONS  Illness resulting from contaminated foods by pathogenic microbes  Disease caused by ingestion of microorganisms through food and infect the gastrointestinal tract by releasing toxins, damaging the intestinal epithelium, and causing gastroenteritis
  • 6. CONTINUE….  Microorganisms: Bacteria, viruses, and parasites  Incubation period: Hours to days  Symptoms: Diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, cramping, fever  Transmission: Can spread from person to person through feco-oral route, cross contamination of food  Factors related to contamination: Inadequate cooking, poor personal hygiene, bare hand contact, mixing of raw and cooked food
  • 7. TYPES OF FOOD BORNE INFECTION  Bacterial food borne infection  Virus food borne infection  Parasitic foodborne infection
  • 8. BACTERIAL FOODBORNE INFECTIONS  Bacteria, single-celled microscopic organisms, they need available nutrients which are abundant in food to grow  Bacteria can contaminate food at any time during harvesting, processing, storage, and shipping as well as during the preparation.  Raw foods such as meat, poultry, fish and shellfish, eggs, unpasteurized milk, and dairy products are the most favorable foodstuff for pathogenic bacterial growth and the cause of illness.
  • 9. SOME COMMON BACTERIA RELATED TO FOODBORNE INFECTION 1. Bacillus cereus - Gram positive, facultative anaerobe, and endospore forming bacteria Food sources: Meats, Stews, Gravies, Vanilla Sauces Symptoms: abdominal cramps, watery diarrhea, nausea, vomiting Duration: 24–48 h 2. Clostridium botulinum - Gram positive, anaerobic, and spore forming bacteria Food sources: Mostly found in improperly canned foods, home canned vegetables, fermented fish, baked potatoes in aluminum foil, etc. Symptoms: Vomiting, diarrhea, blurred vision, double vision, difficulty in swallowing, muscle weakness, respiratory failure and may leads to death.
  • 10.
  • 11. VIRUS FOODBORNE INFECTION  viruses do not grow in food because they need living cells for replication.  Almost all the viral foodborne diseases are strictly human pathogens that are transmitted to humans via food through fecal contamination.  Most of the foodborne viruses are infectious and spreads so fast from one individual to another and are capable of causing significant illness and mortality in humans
  • 12. SOME EXAMPLES OF VIRUS RELATED TO FOODBORNE INFECTIONS 1. Hepatitis A (HAV) – Food sources: Contaminated drinking water, fruit and fruit juices, milk and milk products, uncooked foods, cooked foods, that are not reheated, after contact with an infected food handler, Shellfish from contaminated water. Symptoms: Fever, headache, nausea, abdominal pain, diarrhea, dark urine, jaundice, and flu like symptoms
  • 13. 2. Rotavirus – Food sources: Foods such as salads and fruits handled by the infected people. Transmitted from Person to person. Fecal oral spread is the most important means of transmission Symptoms: Vomiting, watery diarrhea, fever, dehydration, hypovolemic shock and in cases, death.
  • 14. PARASITIC FOODBORNE INFECTION  Enteric parasitic infections are transmitted by the fecal-oral route by taking intrinsically contaminated food products. Parasites are different from bacterial pathogens as they do not replicate outside the host.  Infection caused by parasite is a symbiotic relationship between two organisms
  • 15. SOME EXAMPLES OF PARASITES RELATED TO FOODBORNE INFECTION 1. Entamoeba histolytica – Food sources: E. histolytica cysts contaminated drinking water and foods, sometimes raw foods may act as source of infection Symptoms: Mild diarrhea to severe, dysentery with mucus and blood, weight loss, liver tenderness. 2. Giardia lamblia – Food sources: Ingestion of water or food contaminated with feces of infected humans or animals Symptoms: Sometimes asymptomic. Malodorus diarrhea, malaise cramps, flatulence, and weight loss
  • 16. FOODBORNE INTOXICATIONS  Intoxication can be stated as the diseases caused by ingesting food containing toxins produced by microorganisms or biotoxicants or by poisonous substances that were added as additives intentionally or unintentionally to the foods  This does not spread from person to person.
  • 17. TYPES OF FOODBORNE INTOXICATIONS 1. Toxicants from plants 2. Toxicants from animals 3. Bacterial intoxications 4. Fungal intoxications 5. Chemical intoxications
  • 18. TOXICANTS FROM PLANTS  Poisonous substances derived from plants, presumably as a result of metabolic activities create disorders inside the body and can lead to death.  Various types of plant toxicants have been identified some examples:- 1. Solanine - Generally found in potatoes and other members of solanaceae family. Solanine leads to neurological damage in humans. 2. Caffeine - found in Tea, coffee, cocoa, and cola beverages. It is addictive, Increase blood pressure, Cause of vasoconstriction and high Caffeine consumption can accelerate bone loss in women – Cause of anxiety, insomnia.
  • 19.
  • 20. CONTINUE…. 3. Lectins or Haemaglutinins - Present in kidney beans, cereal grains, seeds, nuts, and potatoes harmful if consumed in excess amounts 4. Hydrogen cyanide - Releases from glycosides in food, leads to Neurological damage and a form of blindness 5. Mushroom Poisoning - Toxins found in mushrooms are Alpha-amanitin, phallotoxin, orellanine, muscarine, gyromitrin, coprine, ibotenic acid, muscimol, etc. all these toxins leads to Gastrointestinal upset, Respiratory failure, Liver damage, toxins can be fatal too.
  • 21. TOXICANTS FROM ANIMALS  Intoxication can occur from consumption of infected meat, animal tissue could be rendered poisonous by bacterial and enzymatic decomposition or are naturally toxic.  Primarily toxicity occurs due to inherent toxicants in normal metabolic process  secondary toxicity arises due to external toxicants such as pesticides, heavy metals, and drug residues that contaminate animal tissues.  Most of the external toxicants are water soluble and heat labile, found in high concentration in viscera and dark meats.
  • 22.  Some examples of animal toxicants:- 1. Tetrodotoxin – • Occurs in the organs (liver and ovaries) of the puffer fish. Such deadly parts of puffer fish should be separated from edible ones. • It Blocks the movement of sodium across the membranes of nerve fibers, Disrupting transmission of nerve impulses, Lead to paralysis and respiratory failure, Death occurs within 6–24 h 1. Scombrotoxin – • Generally occurred in the fish from the family of scrombride like tuna, bonitos etc., Poisoning occurs due to formation of high level of heat stable histamine • Symptoms :- Dizziness, abdominal pain, burning of throat, difficulty in swallowing, etc.
  • 23. BACTERIAL FOODBORNE INTOXICATIONS  Pathogenic bacteria are also responsible for producing toxicities in the food.  Bacterial food intoxication is a food-borne illness caused by ingestion of food containing bacterial toxins which are produced as a result of bacterial growth in food.  Important bacterial species that are most commonly involved in food poisoning outbreaks clostridium botulinum, clostridium perfringens, staphylococcus aureus and bacillus cereus.  Toxins produced by these bacteria mainly act on digestive or nervous systems, leading to severe disorders and sometimes death.  Simple hygiene practices, and proper food handling mechanisms can prevent bacterial food intoxication.
  • 24. FUNGAL INTOXICATION  Food intoxication due to metabolites produced by fungi known as mycotoxins is called fungal intoxication.  There are over 150 fungal species (mold) recognized as producing toxins in food.  Poor dry storage practices of grains and other foods lead to mold growth.  They have important effects on human and animal health
  • 25.  The common foodborne mycotoxins are :- 1. Aflatoxins – • Produced by Aspergillus flavus. • Four major aflatoxins are AFB1, AFB2, AFG1, and AFG2 • Commonly found in corn (maize), sorghum, rice, cottonseed, peanuts, treenuts, cocoa beans, figs, ginger, and nutmeg. • Symptoms: Hemorrhaging, jaundice, premature cell death, and tissue necrosis in liver and possibly other organs
  • 26. CONTINUE…. 2. Fumonisin – • A group of mycotoxins derived from Fusarium. • Classified into three types: B1, B2, and B3. • Mostly occurred in corn crops. • Fumonisin B1 is responsible for Esophageal cancer in humans. 3. Sterigmatocystin – • Produced by fungi Aspergillus nidulans and Aspergillus versicolor • Found in moldy grain, green coffee beans and cheese • Toxicity is as much similar to aflatoxins • Potent liver carcinogen
  • 27. CHEMICAL INTOXICATIONS Intoxication due to the consumption of poisonous food contaminated by chemicals may be fatal. These types of chemicals are added to the foods intentionally or unintentionally at the time of cultivation or during processing, transportation, or storage. Chemical foodborne intoxications involve the following:  pesticides  heavy metals  antibiotics and hormones  radio nuclides  preservatives  adulteration through hazardous chemicals.
  • 28. 1. Pesticides – they find their way through the crops into human diets. Consuming these pesticides is likely to cause health problems especially in people who handle these foods and in children playing with infected soil or eating unwashed fruits or vegetables. E.g. dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT), Alpha BHC (benzene hexachloride) etc. 2. Heavy metals - many of the heavy metals such as zinc, copper, chromium, iron, and manganese are essential for proper body function in a very small amount. But, sometimes it may exceed the normal level due to industrial exposure, air and water pollutions, intake of metal-contaminated foods or food of improperly coated food containers may cause serious damages to the body.
  • 29.
  • 30. 3. Antibiotics and hormones - antibiotics such as tetracyclines, lincosamides, polypeptides, penicillins, sulfonamides, aminoglycosides, and fluroquinolones. which lead to increase in the emergence and spread of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Another type of residue is Sterol (hormone), used for increasing growth in animals raised for meat which has been found to be carcinogenic 4. Radio nuclides - naturally occurring radioisotopes of chemical elements that is unavoidable and considered to be one of the inherent risks in life. The long-term adverse health effects associated with radionuclides include genetic mutations, teratogenic effects, and cancer. Deposition increases due to heavy rainfall Direct exposer Cultivation through contaminated water Contaminated fishes Cattles are eating contaminated grass Radioactive wastes are mixing with fresh water and contaminating drinking water and fishes Nuclear reactor Radioactive smokes are mixing with the winds and causing dense cloud and heavy rainfall
  • 31. 5. Additives and preservatives - Preservatives are the substances or chemicals widely used in food products as well as in pharmaceutical drugs, cosmetics, and biological samples to prevent microbial decompositions and adverse chemical changes. Artificial preservatives causes negative side effects rather than preserving freshness. 6. Adulteration Through Hazardous Chemicals - Hazardous chemicals such as calcium carbide, sodium cyclamate, cyanide, and formalin are widely used for ripening green tropical fruits, to keep them fresh, and for preserving until sale such types of chemically treated food may cause complex diseases and has direct consequences such as liver and kidney failure, autism, metabolic dysfunctions, and cancer