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Thread: Eating a virus

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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
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    Western Canada-prairies, mountain & ocean
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    Eating a virus

    Seems like I've had this happen several times over past few years..after eating something, I get a flu/cold-like symptoms.

    I just got out of a 24 hr. like fever/flu ..just shortly after I ate seafood paella that I had made for both of us. There was shrimp, mussels, clams and halibut chunks amongst the risotto plus abit of white wine. Everything was well-cooked and served hot.

    'Course I cursed that perhaps my body was in overdrive with too much carbs to drive my sugar level up too fast.

    Another year I ate an apple that I washed in advance ..and ended up with a sore throat for a few days.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
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    492
    I don't have any medical background at all, but I wonder if you could just consider this a coincidence? Perhaps you already had picked up the illness (stomach bug, sore throat virus), and then just happened to develop the symptoms after you ate those particular things? After all, you have to eat SOMETHING before you get sick from normally contracted illnesses. Maybe the food had nothing to do with your sickness at all, and you would have had the same symptoms even if you had nothing to eat. Just an idea.


    Grits

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  3. #3
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
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    Vancouver, BC
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    Sorry about that, I hope you feel better by the time you leave home for your trip.

    If somehow there was something wrong with the seafood (I'm thinking about the mussels and clams in particular) it's likely that cooking wouldn't have made a difference anyway. Don't beat yourself down.

    Take care!

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Sep 2005
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    Switzerland
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    You could be developing an "allergy" to shellfish. Shrimps, oysters and such - lots of people develop it & get nauseous from it.

    (I'd like to tell you to try it again, experimentally eat a load of shrimp - but I don't want you to feel bad).

    I had it once, I don't think there was anything wrong with the oysters, maybe it was a reaction to stress - ever since oysters don't really appeal to me anymore.

    Regular flu viruses are only contracted via your nasal mucosa, and unless someone sneezed on that apple - very unlikely...
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  5. #5
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
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    Quote Originally Posted by alpinerabbit View Post
    I had it once, I don't think there was anything wrong with the oysters, maybe it was a reaction to stress - ever since oysters don't really appeal to me anymore.
    Although it's not the case here because there were no oysters in Shootingstar's paella, British Columbia oysters (and presumably those from Washington state too) have had a few episodes of toxicity these last few years. I can't remember the exact problem (the bacteria Vibrio parahaemolyticus turns up upon a google search but it might be something else too). Problem is, the oysters look and smell fine, they just make you really sick. Probably doesn't kill anyone though, but maybe that's because pregnant women and immunocompromised folks don't eat many oysters at a time... (!) If the oysters are cooked, in theory, it should be fine, but if they have contaminated kitchen instruments and stuff like that you might still get sick.



    This being said, I still eat oysters whenever I can. And I had wonderful fresh prawns on Christmas day (a relative of ours is a fisherman).

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Concord, MA
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    It sounds like a developing shellfish allergy. I ate all shellfish until my late 30s. Then I started getting severe gastric distress when eating clams, shrimp, and lobster.
    The next year, I had a clam roll and started having trouble breathing and my lips swelled up. That was it. I can eat scallops, but nothing else.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    Western Canada-prairies, mountain & ocean
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    Well..am better. But cough is persisting.

    We cancelled our train trip to Jasper for snowshoeing. Our train wasn't running anyway..and decided not to opt for later one a few days later.

    Amazing how one can get weakened by this sort of thing.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Posts
    3,176
    Bummer that you got sick.

    My vote is coincidence for the apple, and probably for the seafood too. If it's of any interest, I think I've had food poisoning more than anyone else I know, and I've never had a residual cough from it.

    Hope you feel better soon.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    around Seattle, WA
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    3,238
    Shootingstar - go see an allergist, and until you do, avoid eating the seafood, or avoid eating at that restaurant. You need to be checked for food allergies. Either that or you had food poisoning. Most cases of "stomach flu" is not influenza virus but mild cases of food poisoning. I had full blow anaphalytic shock, and had my sorry butt hauled out of a restaurant by ambulance last year. The ER doc said that it was one of two things - I have a food allergy, or I'm allergic to something my food ate. When I was tested for allergies to all sorts of seafoods - I had a seafood paella as well - I did not show positive for any of the ingredients in the paella and they tested me (a blood sample) for ALL of them. Which leads my doctors to believe the ER Doc's theory - it was the sea bed the seafood came from - so we'll probably never know what exactly I'm allergic to. So I no longer eat squid, squid ink, or octapus, or any dish that contains them, all the other ingredients in the paella I've eaten frequently without trouble. And I don't try anything new if I'm more than 20 minutes away from a hospital. Takes all the fun out of trying new things too.

    While you system is weakened that makes you vunerable to random bugs, which doesn't help matters.

    Hope you're feeling better!
    Beth

 

 

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