2010
DOI: 10.1016/j.toxicon.2010.02.006
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Scombroid poisoning: A review

Abstract: Scombroid poisoning, also called histamine fish poisoning, is an allergy-like form of food poisoning that continues to be a major problem in seafood safety. The exact role of histamine in scombroid poisoning is not straightforward. Deviations from the expected dose-response have led to the advancement of various possible mechanisms of toxicity, none of them proven. Histamine action levels are used in regulation until more is known about the mechanism of scombroid poisoning. Scombroid poisoning and histamine ar… Show more

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Cited by 417 publications
(332 citation statements)
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References 150 publications
(203 reference statements)
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“…Usually, the levels of l-histidine in marine fishes would gradually increase with prolonged storage time due to proteolysis by endogenous and exogenous proteases Hungerford, 2010). Then, histamine can be formed through the microbial decarboxylation of l-histidine during storage.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Usually, the levels of l-histidine in marine fishes would gradually increase with prolonged storage time due to proteolysis by endogenous and exogenous proteases Hungerford, 2010). Then, histamine can be formed through the microbial decarboxylation of l-histidine during storage.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Once formed in a food, histamine is literally indestructible, but its production can be thwarted with proper food handling techniques [12]. Placing fresh foods on ice dramatically slows microorganism metabolism and hence histamine production.…”
Section: Prevention Of Histamine Exposurementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Secondary symptoms, gastrointestinal, may appear: nausea, stomach pain, vomiting, diarrhea. (McLauchlin et al, 2006;Hungerford, 2010).In general, the incubation period is short, it ranges from minutes to hours. The symptoms usually disappear spontaneously within three hours.…”
Section: Issn: 2320-5407mentioning
confidence: 99%