Vibriosis
| Vibriosis | |
|---|---|
| Other names | Vibrio infection, Bath-sore fever |
| A swimming jetty in Sweden, where vibriosis is associated with swimming during warm years and good weather. | |
| Undercooked shellfish can also be a source of vibrio infection, often leading to the milder form of gastrointestinal vibriosis. | |
| Specialty | Infectious disease |
| Symptoms | Diarrhea, abdominal cramps, nausea, vomiting, fever, wound infections |
| Complications | Dehydration, septicemia, necrotizing fasciitis |
| Usual onset | 12 to 72 hours after exposure |
| Duration | Several days to weeks |
| Causes | Infection by Vibrio species (V. parahaemolyticus, V. vulnificus, V. alginolyticus) |
| Risk factors | Consuming raw/undercooked seafood, exposure to contaminated seawater or brackish water |
| Diagnostic method | Stool test, wound culture, blood culture |
| Differential diagnosis | Shewanella-infection (though with longer incubation time) |
| Prevention | Cooking seafood thoroughly, avoiding exposure of wounds to brackish water or seawater |
| Treatment | Oral rehydration therapy, intravenous fluids, antibiotics |
| Medication | Doxycycline, ceftazidime |
| Prognosis | Generally good with treatment; higher risk of severe outcomes in immunocompromised individuals |
| Frequency | Thousands of cases annually in the US |
| Deaths | Variable, higher in severe cases involving septicemia |
Vibriosis or vibrio infection is an infection caused by bacteria of the genus Vibrio. About a dozen species can cause vibriosis in humans, with the most common in multiple countries across the Northern Hemisphere being Vibrio parahaemolyticus, Vibrio vulnificus, and Vibrio alginolyticus. Vibrio cholerae, can also commonly cause vibriosis, though only those strains that do not produce cholera-specific toxins: non-O 1 or non-O 139. Bacteria that produce these toxins are classified by the World Health Organization as causing cholera, which is a more severe disease. Vibriosis is also an animal disease, and can cause harm to wild and farmed fish among others.