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It Aint Like I Haven't Warned Y'all About Tilapia

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  • baboon

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    Out here by the lake!
    (KRON) — There’s a warning about a dangerous bacteria that might have infected a local woman who’s still recovering after nearly two months in the hospital. An online fundraising effort says she contracted the bacterial infection after eating fish and is now a quadruple amputee.

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    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recently issued a warning about a bacterial infection that people can get by eating raw or undercooked fish or by exposing an open wound to coastal waters. A friend tells us this San Jose woman likely got this specific infection after eating undercooked tilapia.

    A San Jose mother’s life is changed forever. Laura Barajas, 40, has had her limbs amputated while battling a bacterial infection.

    “It’s just been really heavy on all of us. It’s terrible. This could’ve happened to any of us,” said Barajas’ friend Anna Messina.

    Messina says back in late July Barajas had bought tilapia from a local market for dinner. She cooked it and ate it alone. Within days, she got very ill and was then hospitalized.

    “She almost lost her life. She was on a respirator,” Messina said. “They put her into a medically induced coma. Her fingers were black, her feet were black her bottom lip was black. She had complete sepsis and her kidneys were failing.”

    Now, a month and a half later, Barajas is without her arms and legs.

    Messina believes the infection was caused by Vibrio vulnificus — a bacterial infection the CDC has been warning about.

    “The ways you can get infected with this bacteria are one-you can eat something that’s contaminated with it the other way is by having a cut or tattoo exposed to water in which this bug lives,” said UCSF Infectious Disease Expert Dr. Natasha Spottiswoode.

    Spottiswoode says the bacteria is especially concerning for people who are immunocompromised.

    The CDC says about 150-200 cases of the infections are reported each year and about one in five people with the infection die — sometimes within one to two days of becoming ill.

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    “People should take sensible precautions like if you have a cut avoid getting immersed in water until it’s well healed,” Spottiswoode said. “If you are someone immunocompromised keeping an eye on these things and avoiding those high-risk activities and foods.”

    Messina says she and Barajas’ family are still waiting to learn more about what happened. She hopes people realize how precious life can be.

    “Be thankful for what we have right now because it can be taken away so quickly so easily,” Messina said.

    https://www.kron4.com/news/bay-area...bs-battling-bacterial-infection-from-tilapia/
    DK Firearms
     

    LabRat

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    In truth, any fish, especially shellfish (filter feeders), can harbor a contamination. Vibrio is bad, but there are other pathogens one can encounter eating contaminated fish. To lessen the possibility; cook it thoroughly.

    For example: Paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP) is a serious illness caused by eating shellfish contaminated with algae that contains Paralytic Shellfish Toxin (PST), a toxin harmful to humans. This toxin is extremely poisonous; as little as one milligram (0.000035 ounce) is enough to kill an adult.

    I agree with Lonesome Dove; tilapia is not a good fish to eat.
    I'll pass on it every time.
     

    Mowingmaniac 24/7

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    I love oysters...cooked.

    Eat em raw and it's like playing russian roulette - you might get away with doing it, but it's 'always' a crap shoot with possibly getting 'vibrio'...eat raw and maybe die or become an amputee...

    Oysters for me...cooked.
     

    baboon

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    Out here by the lake!
    Years ago Dirty Jobs with Mike Rowe was at a fish farm in Commiepornia. After they harvested the stripped bass from the tanks the put the tilapia in to eat IIRC 80 of the fecal matter. And that over regulated Commiepornia.

    While I was working fresh tilapia fame mostly from Costa Rica or Honduras. The frozen was always from China. Besides smaller sized fillets the Chinese had a green color to it. The fresh had a decent red color, but farmed raised fish is notorious for color added.

    I always joked about the farm raised shrimp from Vietnam being raised in ponds from Arc Light bombing runs.

    Lots of heavy metals in high explosives.
     

    vmax

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    Tilapia is and always has been a trash fish in my view
    ..some of them are raised in sewage ponds in places like Viet Nam
    Never understood how they made it into the menu of some nice restaurants with the other good food.
    I've never had any and don't want any
     

    Moonpie

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    Gunz are icky.
    Vibrio is nothing to mess around with.
    I live down near the coast. Every year around here there are cases of it that cost people their limbs and even their lives.
    One lady I know got a little prick on her finger from a live shrimp while fishing. In one day she was laid up in the ICU. Lost her fingers on that hand.
    It’s especially dangerous to folks with weakened immune systems like diabetics and alcoholics.
    That stuff can kill with a quickness.
     

    baboon

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    Out here by the lake!
    Never understood how they made it into the menu of some nice restaurants with the other good food.
    Very simple Tilapia is very cheap when bought wholesale. A restaurant is all about making a profit.

    I like sweet breads (veal thymus gland). At at the time the store paid .99 cents a pound for them. The wife & I go out for our anniversary to Cafe Annie In Houston. Back then Cafe Annie was a big deal & chef Robert Del Grande was one of Houstons top chef's.

    I see Sweetbreads on the menu at $23.99 for the meal. I ask the waiter ow much comes on the plate? He says a lot, but won't give a weight. I blew them of for some that I knew as not .99 cents a pound.
     

    Glenn B

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    Messina believes the infection was caused by Vibrio vulnificus — a bacterial infection the CDC has been warning about.
    I had it at least four times (not sure of which species) when I lived in NY. I got mine from the baitfish I trapped in a brackish water estuary on Long Island in the summertime. I had trapped many small minnows and killies, brought them home and dumped them into an aquarium in which I had a couple of turtles. The turtles had a feast and got plenty of exercise trying to catch the fish. Some of the fish survived several weeks. While the tank had filters, I also did a water change at least once per week. After doing so, I got sick a day or two later with what amounted to explosive arse piss. This happened at least four times. I went to my gastro doc and explained I kept getting the runs which lasted a couple to few days each time and that they were debilitating me. He must have run 15 or 20 different tests - both of us thinking I got sick due to eating in Brooklyn's version of Chinatown. He did not check for Vibrio subspecies because I had not eaten any seafood in that time. Then he remembered I had aquatic turtles & fish and such and he ran a test for Vibrio. That was it. It was only then that I realized I had gotten ill shortly after each time I had cleaned out the turtle tank with those minnows & killies in it. Once I got rid of them and did a complete water change and disinfection of the tank, I did not get it again.

    As far as tilapia being a problem, they are not a specific carrier of Vibrio sub-species. Any fish living in warm water can be infected as far as I am aware. Shellfish are another vector. Recently a guy in TX died after consuming raw clams or oysters. It is a warm water problem; Vibrio thrives in the warm waters of the summer; they must have had a population explosion this year. You don't need to eat seafood to get it, nor does it have to enter your body through a cut or abrasion. All you need to do is handle the seafood with bare hands, not wash properly and later touch something else you eat, put a finger in your mouth, or whatever to transfer the bacteria to yourself.

    I would not want to get it again but may have had it twice since here in Texarkana from eating raw oysters. It is not nice but I luckily I overcame it each time in NY and also quickly got better after whatever it was here in Texarkana that had me running to the throne after eating those oysters. Vibrio is likely the reason that decades ago the rule was to eat oysters only in months with an R in the name of the month. Down this way, I'd also exclude September and April. A good wee dram of whisky or gin, after eating raw seafood, might be a good idea to kill of the bacteria but why take chances.
     

    baboon

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    Out here by the lake!
    Never eat Texas oyster in months with R's in them! I remember the store in their wisdom would offer Shell On Oysters in summer months. Try explaining to a supervisor why they do not sell.
     

    Whistler

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    Never heard of any bacteria like that growing up, I'd always heard swimming in the salt water actually helped heal a wound. We'd catch and cook fish on the beach and shrimp just past the breakers.
    Only issue I recall was only harvesting oysters a couple months of the year and the occasional oil spill.
    Where/when did all these rot your arm off bacteria and such come from? Is it just we were kids and got lucky?
     
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