The Lancet Global Health on Tuesday, has identified a surprising culprit: the lychee fruit itself, when eaten on an empty stomach by malnourished children.
A man comforted his sick daughter at a hospital in Muzaffarpur, India, in 2013. Kuni Takahashi for The New York Times |
Dangerous Fruit: Mystery of Deadly Outbreaks in India Is Solved
New York Times | 31 January 2017
NEW DELHI
— Three years ago, Dr. Rajesh Yadav, an investigator with the India Epidemic
Intelligence Service, moved to the city of Muzaffarpur, the site of one of the
country’s most mysterious outbreaks. And he waited.
Every year in mid-May,
as temperatures reached scorching heights, parents took children who had been
healthy the night before to the hospital. The children awakened with a
high-pitch cry in the early morning, many parents said.
Then the youths began
having seizures and slipping into comas. In about 40 percent of cases, they
died.
Every
year in July, with the arrival of monsoon rains, the outbreak ended as suddenly
as it began.
Beginning
in 1995, investigations variously ascribed the phenomenon to heat stroke; to
infections carried by rats, bats or sand flies; or to pesticides used in the
region’s ubiquitous lychee orchards. But there were few signposts for
investigators.
Instead
of occurring in clusters, the illness typically struck only one child in a
village, often leaving even siblings unaffected.
A joint
investigation by India’s National Center for Disease Control and the India
office of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, published
in the British medical journal The Lancet Global Health on Tuesday, has identified a surprising
culprit: the lychee fruit itself, when eaten on an empty stomach by
malnourished children.
In 2015,
as a result of the investigation, health officials began urging parents in the
area to be sure to feed young children an evening meal and to limit their
consumption of lychees (sometimes spelled litchi).
In two
seasons, the number of reported cases per year dropped to less than 50 from
hundreds.
“It was
an unexplained illness for so many years,” said Padmini Srikantiah, a senior
epidemiologist with the C.D.C. and the senior author of the paper. “This is
kind of emblematic of why we collaborate, to build this kind of systematic
approach.”
The
Lancet article walks through a two-year medical detective story, as epidemiologists
like Dr. Yadav closely examined the lives of hundreds of afflicted children,
trying to understand everything they had eaten, drunk and breathed.
“It was a
very intense situation, because we witnessed children dying in front of our
eyes every day, as soon as they arrived at the hospital,” said Dr. Yadav, who
now works with the C.D.C. in Atlanta. Especially difficult were the detailed
interviews of parents, many of whom had carried a convulsing or comatose child
for hours to get to the hospital.
“They
were in a kind of panic,” he said. “Their children were dying, and it was an
unknown thing.”
The first clue: There
was no evidence the children had infections.
For 20
years, clinicians were unable to determine if the disease, which led to acute
brain swelling known as encephalopathy, was caused by an infection — the
immediate assumption in many outbreaks here.
Investigators
pored over records from the previous year’s outbreak and were struck by the
fact that many of the sick children did not have a fever. Analysis of spinal
fluid samples overwhelmingly showed that the affected children did not have
elevated counts of white blood cells, a sign the body is fighting infection.
The second clue: Most
of the victims had very low blood sugar levels.
Having collected
biological samples from more than 300 children, the researchers were able to
scan a large number of markers — including some they hadn’t suspected.
Glucose
had never been a particular concern for investigators. But some of the affected
children had strikingly low levels, and those with low blood glucose were twice
as likely to die, Dr. Srikantiah said.
“It
seemed to be a little signal,” she continued. “One of the things we heard
multiple times from the children’s mothers was that they didn’t really eat
dinner properly.”
The third clue: Outbreaks had been associated with the ackee fruit.
It was in
the fall of 2013, during a conference call with colleagues in Atlanta, that
someone mentioned “Jamaican vomiting sickness,” an outbreak in the West Indies
that for many decades caused brain swelling, convulsions and altered mental
states in children.
The
outbreak turned out to be tied to hypoglycin, a toxin found in the ackee fruit
that inhibits the body’s ability to synthesize glucose, leading to acute
hypoglycemia, or low blood glucose levels. “It had been going on for a decade,
if not a century, before people really figured out what it was,” Dr. Srikantiah
said. “Now, the grandmothers and the mothers teach their kids, ‘Don’t eat the
unripe ackee fruit.’ ”
By late
2014, laboratory tests confirmed that lychees also contain high levels of
hypoglycin, as well as a similar toxin known as methylenecyclopropyl glycine,
or MCPG.
This was
an answer hiding in plain sight. The Muzaffarpur area, in India’s east,
produces about 70 percent of India’s lychee harvest, and around the affected
villages, “you really couldn’t go 100 meters without bumping into a lychee
orchard,” Dr. Srikantiah said, referring to a distance of 330 feet.
Though
orchards were typically guarded by caretakers, children often ate lychees that
were unripe or that had fallen to the ground. But because everyone in the
region eats them, it was difficult for many to believe that, in isolated cases,
it could set off a catastrophic illness.
The fourth clue: Affected children had huge metabolic imbalances.
By early
2015, C.D.C. laboratories had developed a test to measure hypoglycin in urine.
They found extraordinary abnormalities in the affected children. “The folks in
the genetic labs said ‘We haven’t seen anything like this,’ ” Dr. Srikantiah
said. “This was clearly abnormal.”
With that
established, the investigators asked participants if they would be comfortable
issuing recommendations based on their findings: that young children in the
affected areas be encouraged to always eat an evening meal, and that
consumption of lychees should be limited.
Everyone
agreed. And it was done.
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