In Brazil, foodborne Illness is managed by infectious diseases. Foodborne illness — commonly called food poisoning — is acute gastrointestinal disease caused by bacterial, viral, parasitic, or toxin-mediated contamination of food. CDC estimates 48 million Americans (1 in 6) develop a foodborne illness every year, with 128,000 hospitalizations and 3,000 deaths.
Foodborne illness (ICD-10: A02-A05 for bacterial; A08 for viral; A09 for unspecified infective gastroenteritis) is any disease resulting from contaminated food or beverage. The category spans three mechanisms. Infection — proliferation of a pathogen in the gastrointestinal tract after ingestion (Salmonella, Campylobacter, pathogenic E. coli, Listeria, norovirus, hepatitis A).
The key symptoms of Foodborne Illness are: Nausea and vomiting starting within 1-6 hours of eating — classically points to preformed toxin (Staphylococcus aureus enterotoxin or Bacillus cereus emetic toxin) and resolves within 24 hours., Watery diarrhea starting 12 hours to 3 days after exposure — suggests viral (norovirus, rotavirus) or toxico-infectious bacterial (Clostridium perfringens, ETEC) causes; stool typically returns to normal within 1-5 days., Bloody or mucoid diarrhea (dysentery) starting 1-4 days after exposure — suggests invasive bacterial cause (Shigella, Campylobacter, Salmonella, STEC including O157:H7) and requires evaluation., Crampy abdominal pain often localized to the periumbilical or lower abdomen — typical of most infectious gastroenteritis and usually proportionate to diarrhea volume., Fever (38-39°C) suggesting invasive bacterial infection — Salmonella, Shigella, Campylobacter, or systemic infection such as Listeria or typhoidal salmonella., Dehydration signs in severe disease: thirst, dry mouth, decreased urine output, dizziness on standing, sunken eyes, tachycardia — children and elderly decompensate rapidly., Headache, body aches, and fatigue accompanying many viral and bacterial enteritis episodes, often persisting beyond the gastrointestinal symptoms..
Most foodborne illness is mild, self-limited, and managed clinically without laboratory testing. Stool testing is recommended for severe disease (dehydration, severe abdominal pain), dysentery (bloody diarrhea), prolonged illness over 7 days, fever over 38.5°C, immunocompromise, recent travel, occupational risk (food handler, healthcare worker, daycare worker), suspected outbreak, or extremes of age. Modern stool diagnosis increasingly uses multiplex PCR panels (BioFire FilmArray GI panel, Verigene GI) that simultaneously detect 20+ bacterial, viral, and parasitic pathogens with results in hours. Stool culture remains essential for antibiotic susceptibility, public health subtyping, and outbreak investigation in suspected bacterial cases. Stool antigen tests are available for norovirus, rotavirus, Cryptosporidium, and Giardia. Routine ova-and-parasite microscopy has been largely replaced by antigen and PCR testing in high-income settings. Specific clinical scenarios trigger pathogen-directed testing: bloody diarrhea warrants screening for STEC (including non-O157), Shigella, and Campylobacter; fever with hepatosplenomegaly in a returned traveler warrants blood cultures for typhoidal Salmonella; pregnancy with febrile gastroenteritis warrants Listeria blood cultures; flaccid paralysis warrants botulism serum and stool toxin assay. Imaging is reserved for complications: abdominal CT for suspected perforation or ileus, ultrasound or CT for suspected hemolytic uremic syndrome (renal findings). Lactate, CBC, electrolytes, and renal function guide severity assessment. Outbreak investigation involves case-finding, exposure history (specific meals, ingredients, restaurants), environmental sampling, and public health reporting.
Most foodborne illness resolves within 1-5 days with supportive care alone. Complications are uncommon but can be serious. Salmonella, Shigella, and Campylobacter case-fatality rates are under 0.5% in healthy adults but rise sharply in extremes of age, immunocompromise, and pregnancy. Hemolytic uremic syndrome complicates 5-10% of pediatric STEC O157 infections and has acute mortality of 3-5% plus risk of chronic kidney disease in 20-30% of survivors. Listeriosis carries 20-30% mortality even with antibiotics, and pregnancy listeriosis causes fetal loss in 20% of cases. Botulism has historic mortality of 25% but modern care with timely antitoxin and intensive supportive care reduces this to under 10%. Post-infectious complications include reactive arthritis (Reiter syndrome) following Salmonella, Shigella, Campylobacter, or Yersinia; Guillain-Barré syndrome following Campylobacter (about 1 in 1000 Campylobacter cases); irritable bowel syndrome in 10-30% of patients following acute bacterial gastroenteritis; and chronic carriage of Salmonella Typhi or Paratyphi in approximately 5% of typhoidal infections. Most patients return to baseline health within 1-2 weeks.
Seek infectious disease or gastroenterology consultation for prolonged diarrhea over 14 days, persistent dysentery, suspected hemolytic uremic syndrome, complicated listeriosis, suspected botulism, immunocompromised patients with severe gastroenteritis, complex outbreak investigation, or any case requiring antimicrobial stewardship guidance. Emergency department evaluation is warranted for severe dehydration, suspected sepsis, neurological symptoms, or pregnancy with febrile diarrhea.
Find specialists →Norovirus: 24-72 hours of acute illness, full recovery within 1-3 days. Salmonella, Campylobacter, Shigella: 4-7 days of acute illness; full recovery within 1-2 weeks. Staphylococcal toxin: 12-24 hours. Botulism: months to over a year for full neuromuscular recovery. STEC: 5-10 days of diarrhea; if HUS develops, weeks to months for renal recovery. Post-infectious IBS may persist for months to years in 10-30% of patients.
Rest during acute symptoms and for 24 hours after they resolve. Gradual return to light activity over 3-5 days. Vigorous exercise during dehydration is hazardous. Athletes should avoid contact sports until at least 48 hours after symptom resolution for both their own recovery and to prevent transmission.
For mild illness, primary care is appropriate and most physicians handle uncomplicated foodborne disease effectively. For severe or complicated cases, look for an infectious disease specialist with access to modern molecular stool diagnostics and contacts at the local public health department. Outbreak suspicion should always trigger public health notification. Travel medicine clinics specialize in returned-traveler diarrhea and prevention counseling for upcoming trips.
Medically reviewed by AIHealz Medical Editorial Board · May 13, 2026
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