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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Chelonitoxism in Andaman and Nicobar Island: A report on mass poisoning including a death of an adult.

Journal:
Toxicon : official journal of the International Society on Toxinology
Year:
2016
Authors:
Singh, S S et al.
Affiliation:
GB Pant Hospital · India
Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

Chelonitoxism is a serious type of poisoning that can happen when people eat certain marine turtles, and unfortunately, there is no known treatment for it. In August 2012, a 56-year-old man on Great Nicobar Island in India became very ill after eating green turtle meat. He first experienced common stomach problems, but then developed serious neurological symptoms and sadly passed away four days later. Out of 30 other villagers who also ate the turtle, six got sick but recovered within a week, while two pets, a dog and a cat, died within 24 hours after eating the same food. This case highlights the need for better education and monitoring to prevent such dangerous incidents in the future.

Abstract

Chelonitoxism is a type of seafood poisoning which usually occurs due to consumption of certain marine turtle flesh. As the pharmacology or chemistry of the toxin is still unknown, antidote or treatment to chelonitoxism is unavailable. The symptoms can vary from common gastro-intestinal symptoms to neurological manifestations and even death. This case report of community poisoning following consumption of turtle meat includes the death of an adult male (56 yrs.) being reported for the first time in the Great Nicobar Island, Andaman and Nicobar (A&N) Islands, India in August 2012. The patient encountered common gastrointestinal symptoms after one day of ingestion of green turtle flesh and later, he developed neurological symptoms and did not respond to symptomatic treatment and expired after four days after the consumption. However, out of 30 villagers who took the same food, six others developed symptoms and recovered within a period of 3-7 days while two pets (a dog and a cat) died within 24 hours as they were fed with the same food. In spite of several existing wildlife protection acts, catching a turtle and making them a source of food-celebration is quite common in coastal areas of the Indian Ocean and the Bay of Bengal which includes A&N Islands. A proper monitoring and follow-up of the food-borne diseases along with a wide range of explorative health education protocol should be implemented especially for the people who are not reachable via media to avoid such incidents in future.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27103071/