A young man in south China's Guangdong Province has fallen ill after eating
raw snails, believing it can treat his insomnia.
The 23-year-old guy, surnamed Wen, was diagnosed with a type of
angiostrongyliasis, a disease caused by parasites that affects the
brain and spinal cord, and can lead to meningitis, the Disease
Prevention and Control Center in Jiangmen City announced
Saturday.
Wen's disease is the same as the 87 patients in Beijing, who had
fallen ill after eating raw or half-cooked Amazonian snails
contaminated with parasites at a Beijing restaurant serving
Sichuan-style dishes.
Amazonian snails originate in South America and first came to
China in the 1980s as a delicacy. The first patient to fall ill
after eating the snails was reported in Guangzhou, capital city of
south China's Guangdong Province.
The large, black snails are a hot-selling aquatic product in big
Chinese cities like Beijing.
But the snails sending Wen to hospital are native species in
Guangdong, which are twice bigger than Amazonian snails.
Wen, a migrant farmer worker from east China's Jiangxi Province,
found on Aug. 1 a few snails in the grass and wall near the factory
where he works in Jiangmen. He took out the snail meat and ate it
raw.
Wen did so because his colleagues told him that eating raw snail
meat can treat his insomnia.
He was sent to hospital limply on Aug. 5 with severe bellyache
and low fever. He showed syndrome of meningitis and fell into deep
coma on Aug. 15. His case was reported to the Jiangmen Disease
Prevention and Control Center on Aug. 21, which later confirmed it
to be a type of angiostrongyliasis,.
Three out of the four snails collected from around Wen's factory
showed that one is containing about 6,000 parasites and the other
two, at least 1,000, according to a research institute with the
Guangzhou-based Zhongshan University.
Currently, a special medical team has been set up in Jiangmen's
Wuyi Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine to treat Wen's
disease which was described by experts as "severe."
(Xinhua News Agency August 28, 2006)