Several
outbreaks ciguatera fish poisoning have been confirmed in consumers who ate fish harvested
in the Northern Gulf of Mexico, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) said.
The FDA said that fish such as
grouper, snapper, amberjack and barracuda represent the most significant threat to consumers. They feed on fish that have eaten toxic marine algae. The toxin is stable in the tissue of living fish and does them no harm. But larger carnivores have higher concentrations of the toxin in their tissues. As a result, the greatest risk of
poisoning for humans comes from the largest fish.
Symptoms of ciguatera poisoning include nausea, vomiting, vertigo and joint pain. The most serious cases, neurological problems can last for months or even years. Several outbreaks of the illness were confirmed in Washington, D.C., and St. Louis, the FDA said. Overall, there have been at least 28 reported cases across the country, with the first case being reported in late November.
The fish linked to illness were
harvested near the Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary, an area of 56 square miles in the Northwestern Gulf. The FDA recommends that processors not purchase fish harvested near the sanctuary.
CIGUATERA is common in fish living in tropical and subtropical regions, including the
Caribbean Sea, the
South Pacific Ocean and the I
ndian Ocean. But FDA has considered it rare for fish in the Northern Gulf of Mexico to have been
TOXIN.