Washington - Arabstoday
Uncooked organic meat
Organic meat may carry a dangerous parasite which can transmit to people eating the products, if not cooked properly, a new study has warned.
Researchers in the US found that a food-borne illness called
toxoplasmosis, which is not as well known as salmonella or E. Coli outbreaks, is caused by the toxoplasma parasite mostly found in organic meats.
\"The new trend in the production of free-range, organically raised meat could increase the risk of Toxoplasma gondii contamination of meat,\" the authors said.
The researchers point out that eating undercooked meat ? whether organic or conventionally raised ? especially pork, lamb and wild game such as venison, is one of the main ways people become infected with the toxoplasma parasite.
People can also contract the infection by not washing raw fruits and vegetables, which may have come in contact with soil contaminated by cat feces, they said.
Cats, they said, can spread toxoplasmosis after eating other infected animals and then passing the parasite along in their feces.
This can contaminate not only home litter boxes, but the soil or water if a cat goes outside, LiveScience reported.
Although perhaps as many as one in five Americans carry the parasite, few people have symptoms because the immune system in healthy people does a good job of preventing T. gondii from causing illness.
Toxoplasmosis presents more of a threat to pregnant women and people with a weakened immune system, especially if they change cat litter boxes or touch contaminated soil when gardening.
In its earliest stages, the illness causes flu-like symptoms, and if severe, can cause damage to the brain, eyes and other organs.
The new research, published in the journal Clinial Infectious Diseases, reviewed the foods most likely to carry the parasite and how people can prevent becoming sickened by it.
The foods with the greatest chance of carrying toxoplasmosis parasites in the US include raw ground beef or rare lamb; unpasteurised goat`s milk; locally produced cured, dried or smoked meat; and raw oysters, clams or mussels.
Growing consumer demand for \"free-range\" and \"organically raised\" meats, especially pork and poultry, will probably increase the prevalence of T. Gondii when people undercook and eat these foods, according to the study authors, Dr Jeffrey Jones of the parasitic diseases branch of the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and Prevention and J P Dubey of the USDA`s Animal ParasiticDisease Laboratory.
That`s because as more pigs or chickens are raised in less confined, more animal- friendly environments, they have greater access to grass, soil, feed or water that may be in contact with infected cat feces, or to rodents or wildlife infected with T. Gondii.
Compared with chickens raised indoors, the prevalence of the parasite in free-range chickens is much higher, anywhere from 17 per cent up to 100 per cent, in some estimates.
But the risk is low for chicken eggs, the authors noted.
Other research has shown that more organically raised pigs have tested positive for T. Gondii than conventionally raised pigs.
Sheep also have a higher likelihood of being contaminated with toxoplasma, as do game meats such as deer, elk, moose and wild pig.
Beef and dairy products have not yet played a main role in transmitting the infection, except for eating raw or undercooked ground beef.
\"Toxoplasmosis in an under-recognized source of food-borne illness and attracts little public attention,\" said Douglas Powell, a professor of food safety at Kansas State University in Manhattan, Kan.
\"People are not as familiar with this parasite, so we think it doesn`t happen much,\" he explained.
Yet, toxoplasmosis is one of five \"neglected parasitic diseases\" targeted by the CDC as a public health priority.
According to a recent US estimate, toxoplasmosis was the second-leading cause of food-borne illness deaths (salmonella is first), claiming more than 300 lives a year.
The parasite was also responsible for more than 4,000 hospitalisations annually, ranking it fourth among food pathogens.
Cooking meat thoroughly should reduce the risk of becoming infected, Powell said, because parasites are usually found on the insides of animals, not on the meat`s surface.
He said people should be very careful when eating rare meat and always verify cooking temperatures with a tip-sensitive digital thermometer placed in the meat`s thickest part.