Beijing's public health authority has traced the sources of the
apple snails from south China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, which
poisoned 131 people in the city, Beijing News said
today.
The Amazonian snail, a large freshwater snail, carried
angiostrongylus cantonensis, a parasite that can cause meningitis,
and passed on the disease when it was served raw in a Sichuan
cuisine restaurant in Beijing, the newspaper said.
The restaurant supplier purchased the apple snails from a
wholesale market named Yuegezhuang in Guilin, capital city of
Guangxi, where the snails originated, said the statement issued by
the authority yesterday.
Yuegezhuang once have bought some snails from another local
wholesale market, Tianmin market, because of a supply shortage, the
statement said.
An investigation into the 85 clinic cases shows that most of the
victims can recall the restaurants where they caught meningitis
after they ate undercooked or raw apple snails or seafood,
including the Sichuan restaurant and another Japanese restaurant
near Olympic Village, Gao Xing, a director from the Beijing Health
Bureau, told the newspaper.
However, the source of one case among the 85 is harder to trace,
as the victim regularly eats raw fish and snails and he couldn't
specify which restaurant he dined in before he was sent to the
hospital, Gao said.
The municipal health supervision authority is busy collecting
the victims' information, which will be the foundation of
administrative punishments for the restaurants, he said.
Shanghai halted the sale of the apple snails in two major local
aquatic products wholesale markets soon after the food poisoning
cases were reported, said a previous report. The municipal food and
drug administration said it didn't come across the parasite which
causes meningitis in the snails served in local restaurants.
Fishery experts remind the public to not buy shellfish from
unlicensed vendors and to never eat raw snails.
(Shanghai Daily September 4, 2006)