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The Power of Soil: Antidepressant Microbes and Infectious Outbreaks

This article discusses the benefits of soil microbes as natural antidepressants and their potential to improve mood and reduce stress. It also highlights recent infectious outbreaks caused by bacteria in San Jose and WellSpan York Hospital. In addition, it mentions the closure of Chipotle restaurants due to an E. coli outbreak.

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The Power of Soil: Antidepressant Microbes and Infectious Outbreaks

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  1. Infection PreventioneBug BytesNovember 2015 Influenza Virus

  2. Antidepressant Microbes In Soil: How Dirt Makes You Happy • Mycobacterium vaccae is the substance under study and has indeed been found to mirror the effect on neurons that drugs like Prozac provide. The bacterium is found in soil and may stimulate serotonin production, which makes you relaxed and happier. Studies were conducted on cancer patients and they reported a better quality of life and less stress. Lack of serotonin has been linked to depression, anxiety, obsessive compulsive disorder and bipolar problems. The bacterium appears to be a natural antidepressant in soil and has no adverse health effects. These antidepressant microbes in soil may be as easy to use as just playing in the dirt. Most avid gardeners will tell you that their landscape is their “happy place” and the actual physical act of gardening is a stress reducer and mood lifter. Antidepressant microbes in soil cause cytokine levels to rise, which results in the production of higher levels of serotonin. The bacterium was tested both by injection and ingestion on rats and the results were increased cognitive ability, lower stress and better concentration to tasks than a control group. • Gardeners inhale the bacteria, have topical contact with it and get it into their bloodstreams when there is a cut or other pathway for infection. The natural effects of the soil bacteria antidepressant can be felt for up to 3 weeks if the experiments with rats are any indication. So get out and play in the dirt and improve your mood and your life. • Source: “Identification of an Immune-Responsive Mesolimbocortical Serotonergic System: Potential Role in Regulation of Emotional Behavior,” by Christopher Lowry et al., published online on March 28, 2007 in Neuroscience

  3. California Shigella outbreak update:More than 180 people infected • An outbreak of Shigella bacteria believed to have originated from a seafood restaurant in San Jose, Calif., has now infected more than 180 people. Eleven patients had been admitted to ICUs as of Oct. 21 with symptoms of Shigellosis, including diarrhea and fever. Santa Clara County Public Health Department officials said the number infected has since risen to 188, of which 85 have been confirmed by laboratory tests. Of that number, 150 are Santa Clara County residents and the remaining 38 cases affect people who live in other counties. Health investigators believe nearly all the cases stemmed from Mariscos San Juan, on Fourth Street, which they state served contaminated food on two consecutive days, Oct. 16 and 17. Officials suspect the bacteria was spread by a contaminated food handler, but the food source remains under investigation. Shigella bacteria may cause severe diarrhea and fever. It can spread quickly in restaurant settings, most often when an infected person doesn't wash their hands after using the bathroom and then handles food. • At least three lawsuits have been filed in the case so far, alleging the restaurant served contaminated food on Oct. 16 and 17. Officials suspect a contaminated food worker was the initial cause of the contamination, but the source remains under investigation. Source:

  4. WellSpan York notifies 1,300 patients of possible bacterial exposure after 4 die from infection • WellSpan York (Pa.) Hospital is notifying about 1,300 patients who underwent open-heart surgery at its facility in the past four years that they may have been exposed to harmful bacteria from a medical device used during the procedure. A joint investigation by the CDC, the state Department of Health and WellSpan identified eight open-heart patients at WellSpan York Hospital who developed bacterial infections, and four of those patients have died. Less than 1 percent of patients who received open-heart surgery at the hospital in the last four years have presented signs of the infection, according to WellSpan. The bacteria in question, a nontuberculous mycobacterium, is commonly found in nature and typically is not harmful. However, in people with weakened immune systems, it can be a more serious concern. • The devices in question — heater-cooler machines — are used during open-heart surgery to regulate temperature. There is potential for the water used in the machine to become contaminated with the bacteria. The bacteria can become airborne through a vent on the device and then transmit to patients, according to the Food and Drug Administration. Source: http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/quality/wellspan-york-notifies-1-300-patients-of-possible-bacterial-exposure-after-4-patients-die-from-infection.html

  5. Chipotle Closes 43 Restaurants Amid E. Coli Outbreak • Chipotle closed 43 of its restaurants in Washington state and Oregon as health officials investigated an E. coli outbreak that appears to be linked to the fast casual chain. • As of Saturday, there were three cases of E. coli in Oregon and at least 19 in Washington, said state health officials. One-third of those sickened were hospitalized, officials said. "While the outbreak appears to be linked to food served at Chipotle restaurants, the food or other source of contamination hasn't yet been determined and remains under investigation," the Washington State Department of Health said. The illnesses were reported in Clark, King, Skagit and Cowlitz Counties in Washington, as well as Clackamas and Washington Counties in Oregon, officials said. "Anyone who thinks they may have become ill from eating at a Chipotle restaurant in the past three weeks should consult their healthcare provider," said Dr. Scott Lindquist of the Washington State Department of Health. "The elderly and very young children are more likely to become severely ill from this kind of E. coli infection.” • Source: http://abcnews.go.com/Health/chipotle-closes-43-restaurants-amid-coli-outbreak/story?id=34890437

  6. Introduction: Millions of U.S. residents become ill from foodborne pathogens each year. Most foodborne outbreaks occur among small groups of persons in a localized area. However, because many foods are distributed widely and rapidly, and because detection methods have improved, outbreaks that occur in multiple states and that even span the entire country are being recognized with increasing frequency. (MMWR 11-3-15) Methods: This report analyzes data from CDC’s Foodborne Disease Outbreak Surveillance System to describe multistate foodborne outbreaks that occurred in the United States during 2010–2014. Results: During this 5-year period, 120 multistate foodborne disease outbreaks (with identified pathogen and food or common setting) were reported to CDC. These multistate outbreaks accounted for 3% (120 of 4,163) of all reported foodborne outbreaks, but were responsible for 11% (7,929 of 71,747) of illnesses, 34% (1,460 of 4,247) of hospitalizations, and 56% (66 of 118) of deaths associated with foodborne outbreaks. Salmonella (63 outbreaks), Shiga toxin-producing E. coli (34), and Listeria monocytogenes (12) were the leading pathogens. Fruits (17), vegetable row crops (15), beef (13), sprouts (10), and seeded vegetables (nine) were the most commonly implicated foods. Traceback investigations to identify the food origin were conducted for 87 outbreaks, of which 55 led to a product recall. Imported foods were linked to 18 multistate outbreaks. Conclusions: Multistate foodborne disease outbreaks account for a disproportionate number of outbreak-associated illnesses, hospitalizations, and deaths relative to their occurrence. Working together, food industries and public health departments and agencies can develop and implement more effective ways to identify and to trace contaminated foods linked to multistate outbreaks. Lessons learned during outbreak investigations can help improve food safety practices and regulations, and might prevent future outbreaks. CDC

  7. Up to 4,800 patients potentially exposed to hepatitis C at Utah hospital • The Utah Department of Health has been investigating a recent Hepatitis C infection of a patient who received treatment in the Emergency Department at McKay-Dee Hospital. Through this review, it was learned that some of the patients treated in the McKay-Dee Hospital Emergency Department may have been exposed to Hepatitis C. The nurse, Elet Neilson, was fired from the hospital in November 2014 after she admitted to stealing emergency department drugs intended for patient use, according to information the hospital released on Friday. In September 2014, the Utah Department of Health informed McKay-Dee that a patient being treated in the hospital's emergency department and Ms. Neilson were both infected with the same hepatitis C genotype and that the two infections might be related. The 2b genotype, found in both the nurse and patient, is rare, accounting for only 10 percent of cases. The hospital identified every patient who may have come into contact with Ms. Neilson or the infected patient out of an abundance of caution, Mr. Dallin told the Tribune. He also said it is possible that most patients receiving care at that time were not at risk, and that it is possible no patients were infected. The investigation is ongoing and McKay-Dee representatives told the Standard Examiner that any patients who may have contracted the infection would have their treatment paid for by the hospital. The Utah Department of Health has set up a web page for updates on the investigation. Source: Salt Lake City Tribune

  8. Why We Come To Work Sick Healthcare workers are at risk for infection while providing care to patients.  They are also at risk for spreading infection when they fail to use appropriate personal protective equipment or practice hand hygiene.  However, when a healthcare worker provides care while they themselves have a symptomatic infectious disease, they put their colleagues and patients at even higher risk. Previous studies have focused on the reasons nurses and physician trainees come to work while symptomatic. Szymczak et al. surveyed all attending physicians and APCs at The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia to determine how frequently and why they (we) come to work sick. Over 95% of respondents (502 of 529) believed that working while sick puts patients at risk. However, 83% of respondents reported working while sick at least once in the past 5 years and 50 respondents (9.3%) reported coming to work sick at least 5 times in the past year. Similar rates were seen among attendings and advanced practice clinicians (APCs). Attendings were more likely to say they would work with each of the symptoms than APCs. Rates of symptoms with which respondents would come to work were lowest for "vomiting only" (7.5% of attendings, 2.7% of APCs) and highest for "cough and rhinorrhea only" (79.6% of attendings and 69.1% of APCs). The explanations for why people come to work sick include "I do not want to let my colleagues down" (98.7%), "concern that not enough staff would be available to care for patients" (94.9%) and "I do not want to let my patients down" (92.5%). APCs were more likely to report "fearing ostracism from colleagues" (71% vs 57.8%;P=.001) and "unsupportive leadership" (68.1% vs 45%; P<.001). Attendings were more likely to report being worried about continuity of care (69.1% vs 57.8%; P=.007). Source: Reasons Why Physicians and Advanced Practice Clinicians Work While Sick: A Mixed-Methods Analysis. Szymczak JE, Smathers S, Hoegg C, Klieger S, Coffin SE, Sammons JS. JAMA Pediatr. 2015 Sep 1;169(9):815-21.

  9. FDA Panel Says Fluoroquinolones Need Stronger Warnings Fluoroquinolone labels need much stronger warnings about the risks for serious adverse events, including tendinitis and tendon rupture, prolongation of the QT interval, and peripheral neuropathy, according to a joint panel of the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The FDA's Antimicrobial Drugs Advisory Committee (ADMAC) and the Drug Safety and Risk Management Advisory Committee met jointly to discuss the use of fluoroquinolone antibacterial drugs for treatment of acute bacterial sinusitis (ABS), acute bacterial exacerbation of chronic bronchitis in those with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (ABECB-COPD), and uncomplicated urinary tract infection. Fluoroquinolone labeling currently has warnings about the risks for tendonitis, tendon rupture, central nervous system effects, peripheral neuropathy, myasthenia gravis exacerbation, QT prolongation and Torsades de Pointes, phototoxicity, and hypersensitivity. But panel members called for stronger wording, with some suggesting the risks be called out with a black box warning. Fluoroquinolones currently approved for one or more of these illnesses are ciprofloxacin, levofloxacin, moxifloxacin, ofloxacin, and gemifloxacin. The Infectious Diseases Society of America recommends fluoroquinolones for second-line treatment of patients with allergies to other antibiotics, patients with treatment failure to primary antibiotics, and patients with pathogens that are resistant to first-line antibacterials. Source:http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/854067?src=wnl_edit_medn_wir&uac=163482EZ&spon=34&impID=888128&faf=1

  10. Sharp increase in U.S. babies born with syphilis: CDC • As syphilis cases increase among U.S. women, doctors are seeing more babies born with the serious infection, health officials report. • Congenital syphilis cases, which are transmitted from an infected mother to her unborn child, increased 38 percent between 2012 and 2014, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Last year, 458 newborns were diagnosed with the infection. This spike represents a rapid turnaround from just a few years ago. Rates of the sexually transmitted infection dropped between 2008 and 2012, and reports of syphilis-infected infants decreased from 10.5 cases per 100,000 live births to 8.4 cases per 100,000 live births. But syphilis cases in women jumped 22 percent between 2012 and 2014, likely foreshadowing the jump in infant infections. A child born with syphilis can have major health problems, including brain damage, or die. Last year, congenital syphilis caused 25 stillbirths and eight deaths within 30 days of delivery, the researchers said. These women should have had prenatal care that included testing for syphilis in the first trimester. But of the 458 syphilis-infected babies born in 2014, 22 percent of the mothers had no prenatal care. Among women who had at least one prenatal visit, 43 percent were not treated for syphilis, although nearly half were diagnosed with the disease. In addition, 15 percent were never tested for syphilis during their pregnancy. Source: https://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/news/fullstory_155687.html

  11. Custom Ultrasonics scope-washing machines investigation showed ongoing problems • The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) said Friday it ordered Custom Ultrasonics had continued to recall their endoscopic reprocessors because they violated federal law and those lapses could result in an increased risk of infection for patients. The agency said an estimated 2,800 automated endoscope reprocessors made by Custom Ultrasonics are used by hospitals and outpatient clinics in the U.S. • UCLA has used Custom Ultrasonics washers for its duodenoscopes and called in the company as part of its outbreak investigation earlier this year. The university found "there was no functional issue with the units." The FDA said several healthcare facilities with confirmed or possible duodenoscope-associated infections used the System 83 Plus unit made by Custom Ultrasonics. Custom Ultrasonics machines can cost $30,000 to $50,000 and typically take about 30 minutes to wash scopes with disinfectant following some manual cleaning. In a recent inspection in April, the FDA said it found numerous violations at a Custom Ultrasonics facility. Regulators said the company couldn't validate that its equipment can adequately wash and disinfect endoscopes. The FDA also cited Custom Ultrasonics for failing to report adverse events in a timely manner. • Source: http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-fda-recall-scope-washers-20151113-story.html

  12. FDA new rules aim for clean fruit, veggies • The FDA released new rules aimed at making sure that fresh produce and imported foods are free of dangerous germs and other contaminants. The new rules require importers and producers to make sure the food is clean, and provide for outside auditors to check into procedures at foreign food suppliers. Currently, the FDA waits until there are outbreaks and then responds to them - often far too late to save people from eating food that makes them sick. Now, the industry has a responsibility to stop outbreaks before they happen. The recent multistate outbreak of Salmonella in imported cucumbers that has killed four Americans, hospitalized 157 and sickened hundreds more, is exactly the kind of outbreak these rules can help prevent. Contaminated food is an extremely common problem. The CDC estimates that germs in food make 48 million Americans sick every year - that's one out of six people. About 128,000 are made sick enough to be hospitalized, and 3,000 die. • Some of the worst examples in recent years include an outbreak of listeria traced to Colorado cantaloupe that sickened at least 147 people and killed 33 of them in 2011, and an outbreak of cyclospora disease from Mexican cilantro that made more than 380 people sick this past summer. Most recently, an outbreak of E. coli traced to Chipotle outlets in Washington and Oregon made at least 42 people sick. Health officials haven't been able to find the source. In fact, the source of such outbreaks is often never identified. That's one reason the FDA and other agencies want to stop them at the source, before food ever gets into stores. Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/food-drug-administrations-new-rules-aim-clean-fruit-veggies-n463076

  13. Too much traffic in OR may put patients at risk, study finds • Many operating rooms have too many people coming and going during surgeries, which puts patients at increased risk for infections, a new study suggests. Most operating rooms in U.S. hospitals have special ventilation systems meant to keep out potentially contaminated air from surrounding corridors. But every time the doors open, outside air can get into the operating room. In this study, researchers recorded the number and length of door openings during nearly 200 knee and hip surgeries at the Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center in Baltimore. In one-third of the operations, there were enough door openings to potentially defeat the safety effects of the doorway airflow system, according to the study published in the journal Orthopedics. It's likely this is a common problem nationwide, the Johns Hopkins University researchers said. The researchers conducted their study without the knowledge of operating room staff, so they couldn't ask why so many people went in and out during surgeries. Only one of the patients in the study developed an infection after surgery, and the cause of that infection was unknown. Source: Orthopedics. 2015; 38(11):e991–e994 • Also check out AORN Journal. STOP: Can We Minimize OR Traffic? October 2015, Vol. 102, No. 4

  14. New SARS-like virus can jump directly from bats to humans, no treatment available • Researchers from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill have discovered a new bat SARS-like virus that can jump directly from its bat hosts to humans without mutation. However, researchers point out that if the SARS-like virus did jump, it is still unclear whether it could spread from human to human. The discovery, reported in Nature Medicine, is notable not only because there is no treatment for this newly discovered virus, but also because it highlights an ongoing debate over the government's decision to suspend all gain of function experiments on a variety of select agents earlier this year. The move has put a substantial standstill on the development of vaccines or treatments for these pathogens should there be an outbreak. Studies have predicted the existence of nearly 5,000 coronaviruses in bat populations and some of these have the potential to emerge as human pathogens. SARS first jumped from animals to humans in 2002-2003 and caused a worldwide outbreak, resulting in 8,000 cases, including one case in Chapel Hill. With nearly 800 deaths during that outbreak, SARS-CoV presents much like flu symptoms but then can accelerate, compromise breathing and bring on a deadly form of pneumonia. The outbreak was controlled through public health interventions and the original virus was thought to have been extinct since 2004. This virus is highly pathogenic and treatments developed against the original SARS virus in 2002 and the ZMapp drugs used to fight Ebola fail to neutralize and control this particular virus. Source: http://uncnews.unc.edu/2015/11/09/new-sars-like-virus-can-jump-directly-from-bats-to-humans-no-treatment-available/

  15. Costco Points to Vegetable Mix as Possible Source of Bacterial Infections • Costco Wholesale Corp. COST 0.12 % said federal investigators are examining whether the celery and onion mix used in the retailer’s rotisserie chicken salad was the source of an E. coli outbreak that infected 19 people. Costco vice president responsible for food safety Craig Wilson said there is no problem with the retailer’s rotisserie chickens which it continues to sell. No further infections have been reported, Mr. Wilson said. The CDC said five people had been hospitalized and two developed hemolytic uremic syndrome, a type of kidney failure. Costco’s Mr. Wilson said all of the hospitalized people have been discharged. The majority of the infections were in the western U.S., the CDC said. The retailer removed the chicken salad from its shelves after the CDC notified the company of the issue on Friday. Another recent E. coli outbreak, linked to Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc., CMG 0.53 %widened from the Pacific Northwest to other states, the CDC said Friday. The CDC said 45 people have become ill from the E. coli strain linked to Chipotle. Chipotle said it has conducted deep cleaning at the restaurants that have been linked to the incident, replaced ingredients in those restaurants and changed food-preparation procedures. The Costco product being investigated is labeled “Chicken Salad made with Rotisserie Chicken” with item number 37719. • Source: http://www.wsj.com/articles/costco-points-to-vegetable-mix-as-possible-source-of-bacterial-infections-1448486087?tesla=y&alg=y

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