Don’t eat spoiled fish.

Histamine fishnext term poisoning revisited

Leigh Lehanea, Corresponding Author Contact Information, E-mail The Corresponding Author, June Olleyb

a National Office of Animal and Plant Health, Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry – Australia, GPO Box 858, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia
b School of Agricultural Science, University of Tasmania, GPO Box 252–54, Hobart, Tasmania 7001, Australia

Received 29 February 2000; revised 11 March 2000; Accepted 16 March 2000. Available online 25 May 2000.

Abstract

Histamine (or scombroid) previous termfishnext term poisoning (HFP) is reviewed in a risk-assessment framework in an attempt to arrive at an informed characterisation of risk. Histamine is the main toxin involved in HFP, but the disease is not uncomplicated histamine poisoning. Although it is generally associated with high levels of histamine (≥50 mg/100 g) in bacterially contaminated previous termfishnext term of particular species, the pathogenesis of HFP has not been clearly elucidated. Various hypotheses have been put forward to explain why histamine consumed in spoiled previous termfishnext term is more toxic than pure histamine taken orally, but none has proved totally satisfactory. Urocanic acid, like histamine, an imidazolecompound derived from histidine in spoiling previous termfishnext term, may be the “missing factor” in HFP. cis-Urocanic acid has recently been recognised as a mast cell degranulator, and endogenous histamine from mast cell degranulation may augment the exogenous histamine consumed in spoiled previous termfishnext term. HFP is a mild disease, but is important in relation to food safety and international trade. Consumers are becoming more demanding, and litigation following food poisoning incidents is becoming more common. Producers, distributors and restaurants are increasingly held liable for the quality of the products they handle and sell. Many countries have set guidelines for maximum permitted levels of histamine in previous termfishnext term. However, histamine concentrations within a spoiled previous termfishnext term are extremely variable, as is the threshold toxic dose. Until the identity, levels and potency of possible potentiators and/or mast-cell-degranulating factors are elucidated, it is difficult to establish regulatory limits for histamine in foods on the basis of potential health hazard. Histidine decarboxylating bacteria produce histamine from free histidine in spoiling previous termfishnext term. Although some are present in the normal microbial flora of live previous termfishnext term, most seem to be derived from post-catching contamination on board fishing vessels, at the processing plant or in the distribution system, or in restaurants or homes. The key to keeping bacterial numbers and histamine levels low is the rapid cooling of previous termfishnext term after catching and the maintenance of adequate refrigeration during handling and storage. Despite the huge expansion in trade in recent years, great progress has been made in ensuring the quality and safety of previous termfishnext termproducts. This is largely the result of the introduction of international standards of food hygiene and the application of risk analysis and hazard analysis and critical control point (HACCP) principles.

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