PLoS ONE (Mar 2010)

Fatal outbreak from consuming Xanthium strumarium seedlings during time of food scarcity in northeastern Bangladesh.

  • Emily S Gurley,
  • Mahmudur Rahman,
  • M Jahangir Hossain,
  • Nazmun Nahar,
  • M Abul Faiz,
  • Nazrul Islam,
  • Rebeca Sultana,
  • Selina Khatun,
  • Mohammad Zashim Uddin,
  • M Sabbir Haider,
  • M Saiful Islam,
  • Be-Nazir Ahmed,
  • Muhammad Waliur Rahman,
  • Utpal Kumar Mondal,
  • Stephen P Luby

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0009756
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 3
p. e9756

Abstract

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An outbreak characterized by vomiting and rapid progression to unconsciousness and death was reported in Sylhet Distrct in northeastern Bangladesh following destructive monsoon floods in November 2007.We identified cases presenting to local hospitals and described their clinical signs and symptoms. We interviewed patients and their families to collect illness histories and generate hypotheses about exposures associated with disease. An epidemiological study was conducted in two outbreak villages to investigate risk factors for developing illness. 76 patients were identified from 9 villages; 25% (19/76) died. Common presenting symptoms included vomiting, elevated liver enzymes, and altered mental status. In-depth interviews with 33 cases revealed that 31 (94%) had consumed ghagra shak, an uncultivated plant, in the hours before illness onset. Ghagra shak was consumed as a main meal by villagers due to inaccessibility of other foods following destructive monsoon flooding and rises in global food prices. Persons who ate this plant were 34.2 times more likely (95% CI 10.2 to 115.8, p-value<0.000) than others to develop vomiting and unconsciousness during the outbreak in our multivariate model. Ghagra shak is the local name for Xanthium strumarium, or common cocklebur.The consumption of Xanthium strumarium seedlings in large quantities, due to inaccessibility of other foods, caused this outbreak. The toxic chemical in the plant, carboxyatratyloside, has been previously described and eating X. strumarium seeds and seedlings has been associated with fatalities in humans and livestock. Unless people are able to meet their nutritional requirements with safe foods, they will continue to be at risk for poor health outcomes beyond undernutrition.