• Ann Dermatol Vener · Jan 2018

    Case Reports

    [Three cases of scombroid poisoning].

    • Y Harmelin, T Hubiche, M Pharaon, and P Del Giudice.
    • Service de dermatologie-infectiologie, hôpital de Fréjus-Saint-Raphaël, 240, avenue de Saint-Lambert, 83600 Fréjus, France.
    • Ann Dermatol Vener. 2018 Jan 1; 145 (1): 29-32.

    IntroductionScombroid poisoning is a poorly known type of food poisoning due to the presence of histamine in spoiled fish of the Scombridae family. We report 3 cases of scombroid poisoning seen at the Fréjus-Saint-Raphaël hospital in the Var region.ObservationsWithin around thirty minutes of eating a meal containing tuna, three patients presented varied symptoms: malaise, itchy rash, headache, and for two of them, nausea. The diagnosis of scombroid poisoning was based on the circumstances in which the clinical signs appeared and on the signs themselves. The patients were given antihistamines and one injection of intravenous corticosteroids, and symptoms regressed rapidly within a few hours.DiscussionThe symptoms of scombroid poisoning appear within a few minutes after eating fish of the Scombridae family and related species. The first symptoms are cutaneous, with flush, pruritus, and erythema of the face and trunk having an urticarial appearance, together with faintness. Gastrointestinal symptoms include nausea, vomiting, abdominal cramps and occasionally diarrhea. Symptoms subside within a few hours. Histamine is present in the flesh of these fish due to decarboxylation of histidine through the action of Gram-negative bacteria whose development is enhanced by heat and sun. Scombroid poisoning is one of the most common types of poisoning caused by eating fish but it is underdiagnosed by dermatologists. The diagnosis is made by measuring histamine levels in the incriminated fish or in the patient's plasma.Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.

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