Iran Daily

Potential link between undercooke­d chicken and urinary tract infections

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Could ingesting undercooke­d poultry give you a urinary tract infection (UTI)?

Maybe. Although exactly how it might happen isn’t clear, say researcher­s at the University of California, Berkeley and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention who investigat­ed a possible foodborne source of these common infections, UPI reported.

Their interest was sparked by earlier Berkeley research suggesting a link between some drug-resistant UTI cases and a certain strain of E. coli bacteria.

E. coli are a type of bacteria that live in the intestines of humans and animals. Most of these bugs are harmless. But some types of E. coli cause infection. In the worst cases, E. coli infection can lead to kidney failure and even death.

Researcher­s used E. coli from meat products and urine samples from people with UTIS to look for a possible mechanism of transmissi­on.

“When we compared the fingerprin­ts of the E. coli from the poultry and the human UTI cases, we found there’s an overlap of some genotypes,” said study author Dr. Lee Riley, a professor of infectious disease at Berkeley’s School of Public Health.

“We need to somehow explain why UTI cases have the same E. coli we find in poultry,” said Riley.

His hypothesis? Some of the UTI patients are getting infection from meat.

UTIS cause pelvic pain or burning with urination, a frequent urge to urinate, possible fever and other symptoms. Women have shorter urethras than men, and they tend to experience UTIS more often, according to the American Urological Associatio­n.

Dr. Aaron Glatt is chairman of the department of medicine at South Nassau Communitie­s Hospital in Oceanside, NY. He wasn’t involved in the study, but said the results are interestin­g. They show a link but don’t prove cause and effect, however. “It’s certainly something that requires additional study,” he added. Researcher­s don’t yet know how the infection might be transmitte­d from the meat to people. Both Glatt and Riley suspect that UTI patients are consuming poultry that either isn’t fully cooked or they’re not using appropriat­e guidelines for handling raw meat.

Riley and his team collected urine specimens from UTI patients — mostly women — at one health center in Northern California between September 2016 and May 2017. During the same time, they recovered E. coli from meat samples acquired through a federal meat surveillan­ce program, also in Northern California.

Of 1,020 urine samples in the study, 21 percent had E. coli. The infection-causing bacteria was also found in 38 percent of 200 meat samples examined. About a third (32 percent) of the chicken samples and 14 percent of turkey samples contained bacterial strains identical to those found in UTI patients.

“For some reason, poultry seems to be contaminat­ed more than other meat samples,” Riley said.

The bacteria found in poultry could account for a substantia­l proportion of UTI cases, Riley said. But since the study was based on findings in one region of California, he and his team were unable to extrapolat­e the findings nationwide.

Glatt advised people who are prone to recurrent UTIS to practice proper hand hygiene and safe food preparatio­n. Wash cutting boards and knives used to slice raw meat. Avoid cross-contaminat­ion that may occur when using the same utensils to cut meat and chop veggies.

Any type of poultry should be cooked to an internal temperatur­e of 165°F, according to Foodsafety.gov.

 ??  ?? media.healthday.com
media.healthday.com

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