Botulism
Last Updated: 2023-07-07
Author(s): Anzengruber F., Navarini A.
ICD11: 1A11.Z
Notifiable infection with Clostridium botulinum.
- Transmission
- Smoked foods, canned foods, honey
- C. botulinum secretes toxins, inhibiting the presynaptic release of acetycholine
- Muscle paralysis
- Mouth dryness
- Visual disturbances
- Anamnesis (what was eaten?)
- Clinic
- Mandatory reporting
- Hospitalisation (CAVE: renal insufficiency)
- Treatment with a botulism antitoxin (A-G) and/or B. immunoglobulin
- Note:
A lack of botulinum toxin has become unthinkable in beauty medicine today. Through the mode of action described above, wrinkles, torticollis and hyperhidrosis are treated today.
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- Chalk CH, Benstead TJ , Keezer M. Medical treatment for botulism. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2014;2:CD008123.
- Brown N , Desai S. Infantile botulism: a case report and review. J Emerg Med 2013;45:842-5.
- Moreira GM, Cunha CE, Salvarani FM, Goncalves LA, Pires PS, Conceicao FR et al. Production of recombinant botulism antigens: a review of expression systems. Anaerobe 2014;28:130-6.
- Webb RP , Smith LA. What next for botulism vaccine development? Expert Rev Vaccines 2013;12:481-92.
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