KOTA KINABALU: State Health
Director Dr Christina Rundi confirmed, Saturday, that two out of six people who
were down with poisoning due to Red Tide after consuming shellfish on Jan. 1,
have died.
She said according to
investigations done the same day (Jan. 1) all the patients ate cockles (kerang)
which they collected from Sepanggar waters at noon that day.
"Between 3pm and 6pm on
Jan. 1, they started to show symptoms of food poisoning with tingling in the
neck, vomiting, drowsiness and short of breath. All the patients were sent to
hospital for treatment where two were admitted while four received outpatient
treatment," she said.
She said the two patients
suffered critical symptoms of unconsciousness with severe anaphylactic shock
and were diagnosed with Paralytic Shellfish Poisoning (PSP).
"The first victim, aged
14, was discharged from the ward upon his family's request and passed away in
his home on Jan. 2, while the second victim a nine-year-old boy, passed away
while being warded on Jan. 4," she said.
The Fisheries Department,
meanwhile, advised people to refrain from consuming any type of shellfish or
bivalves.
Its Director Rayner Stuel
Galid said there was a positive toxic sample from Papar northwards to Tuaran as
high as 6,000 Mouse Units (Mus).
"The level is evidently
very high because a reading of 400 MU is already toxic and dangerous," he
said. Rayner said the red tide phenomenon had also been detected in waters off
Papar, Putatan, Kota Kinabalu and Tuaran as well as Sitompok Lake in Kuala
Penyu.
He said the sample collected
from Sepanggar early Saturday detected type Beliung with 3,300 MUs.
"This included oysters,
mussels, cockles and any type of clam-like seafood, however, fish, prawns and
crabs are safe for consumption," he added.
The department had in early
December last year issued a Red Tide warning advising the people from consuming
any type of shellfish or bivalves obtained from the sea.
Eating toxic shellfish can
cause paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP) in humans. PSP is caused by saxitoxin,
which is produced by the dinoflagellate, Pyrodinium bahamanse (var. compressum)
and is one of the most potent toxins known to scientists.
"Deep sea fishes,
squids, and crabs can be consumed but they must be cleaned thoroughly and the
gills must be discarded," he said.
The first recorded PSP case
in Sabah was in 1976 where 202 victims suffered and saw seven deaths.
Since then, PSP occurrences
have been detected every few years off the West Coast.
Early symptoms of PSP
include tingling of the lips and tongue, which may begin within minutes of
eating poisonous shellfish or may take an hour or two to develop.
Depending on the amount of
toxin a person has ingested, symptoms may progress to a sensation of
"pricking of pins and needles" of the skin and then loss of control
of arms and legs, followed by difficulty in breathing.
Some people have experienced
a sense of floating or nausea, he said, adding if a person consumes enough
poison, muscles of the chest and abdomen become paralysed.
He said death could result
in as little as two hours, once the muscles used for breathing become
paralysed.
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