Bacteria
              
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                  Escherichia coli (ETEC, EAEC, EHEC — traveler’s diarrhea; EHEC may cause HUS)
                  
 Symptoms: watery diarrhea, abdominal cramps; EHEC may cause bloody diarrhea and HUS. Treatment: Oral rehydration; loperamide for symptomatic relief if no fever or bloody stools; antibiotics (azithromycin or rifaximin) for severe traveler’s diarrhea. Avoid antibiotics if EHEC suspected—management is largely supportive and HUS needs hospital care.
                 
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                  Salmonella (non-typhoidal)
                  
 Symptoms: diarrhea (sometimes bloody), fever, abdominal cramps. Treatment: Usually supportive (fluids, electrolytes). Antibiotics (ciprofloxacin, azithromycin, ceftriaxone) reserved for severe disease, bacteremia, or high-risk hosts (infants, elderly, immunocompromised).
                 
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                  Shigella
                  
 Symptoms: high fever, bloody/mucoid diarrhea, tenesmus. Treatment: Rehydration and supportive care; antibiotics (azithromycin or ceftriaxone) recommended for severe cases or to shorten infectivity—choice guided by local resistance patterns.
                 
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                  Campylobacter
                  
 Symptoms: crampy abdominal pain, fever, sometimes bloody diarrhea. Treatment: Supportive care and fluids. Azithromycin is first-line for severe or prolonged cases; early antibiotic therapy shortens duration.
                 
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                  Vibrio parahaemolyticus
                  
 Symptoms: watery diarrhea, abdominal cramps, sometimes vomiting. Treatment: Mostly supportive (rehydration). Antibiotics (doxycycline or azithromycin) for severe infections.
                 
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                  Vibrio vulnificus (raw shellfish; severe in liver disease)
                  
 Symptoms: may cause severe wound infections, rapidly progressive cellulitis, septicemia; fever and blistering skin lesions are common. Treatment: Emergency care—doxycycline plus a third‑generation cephalosporin (e.g., ceftriaxone) or cefotaxime; surgical debridement for wound infections.
                 
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                  Yersinia enterocolitica
                  
 Symptoms: fever, abdominal pain (can mimic appendicitis), diarrhea. Treatment: Usually supportive; antibiotics (fluoroquinolones or third‑generation cephalosporins) for severe or systemic disease.
                 
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                  Aeromonas & Plesiomonas
                  
 Symptoms: watery diarrhea, sometimes bloody; associated with freshwater/seafood exposure. Treatment: Supportive for mild cases; ciprofloxacin or trimethoprim‑sulfamethoxazole for severe illness.
                 
               
              Toxin-mediated bacteria
              
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                  Staphylococcus aureus (preformed toxin — rapid vomiting)
                  
 Symptoms: abrupt onset of severe vomiting (1–6 hours after ingestion), nausea, sometimes diarrhea. Treatment: Supportive care—oral rehydration, antiemetics; antibiotics are not indicated.
                 
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                  Bacillus cereus (emetic & diarrheal types — e.g., fried rice)
                  
 Symptoms: emetic form—nausea and vomiting within hours; diarrheal form—watery diarrhea and cramps later. Treatment: Supportive (fluids, antiemetics); illness is usually self-limited.
                 
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                  Clostridium perfringens (cafeteria/stew outbreaks)
                  
 Symptoms: abdominal cramps and watery diarrhea 8–16 hours after ingestion. Treatment: Supportive care and hydration; antibiotics rarely needed.
                 
               
              Viruses
              
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                  Norovirus
                  
 Symptoms: sudden onset vomiting, watery diarrhea, abdominal cramps, low‑grade fever; highly contagious. Treatment: Supportive—oral rehydration, isolation/hygiene to prevent spread.
                 
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                  Rotavirus (children)
                  
 Symptoms: fever, vomiting, watery diarrhea—can cause dehydration in young children. Treatment: Supportive (ORS); vaccine is preventive.
                 
               
              Marine toxins / Chemicals
              
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                  Scombroid (histamine fish poisoning)
                  
 Symptoms: flushing, headache, palpitations, oral burning, occasionally GI upset shortly after eating spoiled fish. Treatment: Antihistamines (H1 ± H2), supportive care; symptoms usually resolve within hours.
                 
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                  Ciguatera
                  
 Symptoms: GI symptoms followed by neurological complaints (paresthesias, temperature reversal, myalgias); can persist for weeks–months. Treatment: Supportive (fluids, symptomatic relief). Mannitol infusion has been used early in some cases; neuropathic pain medications for persistent symptoms; avoid alcohol and seafood thereafter.
                 
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                  Shellfish toxins (paralytic, diarrheic, amnesic)
                  
 Symptoms: vary by toxin—GI upset to neurological and respiratory compromise. Treatment: Mostly supportive; severe neurotoxic syndromes require intensive care and respiratory support.
                 
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                  Food additives, pesticides, heavy metals
                  
 Symptoms: variable GI and systemic effects depending on agent. Treatment: Supportive and toxin-specific management—seek urgent medical evaluation and toxicology advice.
                 
               
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              Bacteria
              
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                  Salmonella Typhi / Paratyphi (typhoid fever)
                  
 Symptoms: prolonged fever, headache, abdominal pain, sometimes constipation or diarrhea, rose spots. Treatment: Antibiotics guided by susceptibility—commonly ceftriaxone (IV for severe) or azithromycin (oral); vaccination is preventive. Chronic carriers may require prolonged antibiotics and sometimes cholecystectomy.
                 
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                  Listeria monocytogenes (pregnancy, neonates, immunocompromised)
                  
 Symptoms: fever, myalgias, GI symptoms; can progress to meningitis or sepsis, dangerous in pregnancy and neonates. Treatment: Ampicillin (often with gentamicin for severe disease); TMP‑SMX for penicillin-allergic patients.
                 
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                  Campylobacter (post-infectious GBS, reactive arthritis)
                  
 Symptoms: see acute Campylobacter (fever, crampy bloody diarrhea); may trigger Guillain–Barré syndrome or reactive arthritis weeks after infection. Treatment: Acute infection—supportive or azithromycin if indicated; complications (GBS, reactive arthritis) require specialist care (neurology/rheumatology) and supportive/immune therapies.
                 
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                  Shigella (reactive arthritis)
                  
 Symptoms: acute dysentery with possible long-term reactive arthritis in susceptible individuals. Treatment: Acute—rehydration and antibiotics (azithromycin/ceftriaxone) when indicated; reactive arthritis managed symptomatically and by specialists.
                 
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                  Helicobacter pylori (chronic gastritis/ulcer disease — possible food/water transmission)
                  
 Symptoms: dyspepsia, epigastric pain, peptic ulcer disease; chronic infection increases gastric cancer risk. Treatment: Eradication therapy—PPI-based triple therapy (PPI + clarithromycin + amoxicillin/metronidazole) or bismuth quadruple therapy depending on local resistance.
                 
               
              Viruses
              
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                  Hepatitis A (acute hepatitis; weeks → months)
                  
 Symptoms: fever, malaise, anorexia, jaundice, dark urine, abdominal discomfort; illness can last several weeks. Treatment: Supportive care (rest, hydration, avoid hepatotoxins). Vaccine and post-exposure immunoglobulin are preventive/mitigative options.
                 
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                  Hepatitis E (can be prolonged or chronic in immunocompromised)
                  
 Symptoms: similar to hepatitis A; higher risk of fulminant disease in pregnancy and chronic infection in immunocompromised. Treatment: Supportive for acute infection; ribavirin considered for chronic infection in immunocompromised patients (specialist management required).
                 
               
              Parasites
              
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                  Giardia lamblia (chronic/IBS-like symptoms)
                  
 Symptoms: greasy, foul-smelling stools, bloating, flatulence, abdominal cramps, malabsorption in chronic cases. Treatment: Tinidazole (single dose) or metronidazole; nitazoxanide is an alternative.
                 
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                  Cryptosporidium (weeks; longer if immunocompromised)
                  
 Symptoms: profuse watery diarrhea, cramps, sometimes nausea and low-grade fever. Treatment: Nitazoxanide in immunocompetent hosts; supportive care and immune restoration (e.g., ART in HIV) are central in immunocompromised patients.
                 
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                  Cyclospora (waxing/waning diarrhea weeks → months)
                  
 Symptoms: prolonged, intermittent watery diarrhea, weight loss. Treatment: Trimethoprim–sulfamethoxazole (TMP‑SMX, Bactrim) is the treatment of choice.
                 
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                  Entamoeba histolytica (dysentery, liver abscess)
                  
 Symptoms: bloody diarrhea, abdominal pain; liver abscess presents with fever and right upper quadrant pain.
                   Treatment: Metronidazole or tinidazole for invasive disease followed by a luminal agent (paromomycin or diloxanide) to eradicate cysts and prevent relapse. Drainage may be required for large liver abscesses.
                 
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                  Toxoplasma gondii (tissue cysts; reactivation if immunosuppressed)
                  
 Symptoms: usually asymptomatic or mild lymphadenopathy/flu-like symptoms; severe disease in immunocompromised or congenital infection (neurological/ocular disease). Treatment: For severe or symptomatic infections—pyrimethamine + sulfadiazine + folinic acid; alternatives exist and specialist input is needed for complex cases.
                 
               
              Marine toxins (long-term sequelae)
              
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                  Ciguatera (neurological symptoms can persist)
                  
 Symptoms and treatment noted under Short-Term marine toxins; neurological symptoms can persist and require symptomatic management and specialist input.
                 
               
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              Parasites
              
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                  Entamoeba histolytica (silent carriage → later liver abscess/dysentery)
                  
 Symptoms: may be asymptomatic for long periods or later present with dysentery or liver abscess (fever, RUQ pain). Treatment: Invasive disease—metronidazole or tinidazole followed by luminal agent (paromomycin/diloxanide) to eradicate cysts; asymptomatic carriers treated with luminal agents.
                 
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                  Giardia lamblia (intermittent flares)
                  
 Symptoms and treatment as noted above (tinidazole/metronidazole; nitazoxanide as alternative).
                 
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                  Taenia spp. (tapeworms) — intestinal persistence; Taenia solium → neurocysticercosis
                  
 Symptoms: intestinal infection may be asymptomatic or cause mild GI symptoms; T. solium cysts in the brain cause seizures, headaches, focal deficits years later. Treatment: Intestinal tapeworms—praziquantel or niclosamide. Neurocysticercosis requires specialist management with albendazole (± praziquantel), corticosteroids, and seizure control as indicated.
                 
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                  Strongyloides stercoralis (auto-infection; decades-long persistence; severe if immunosuppressed)
                  
 Symptoms: often asymptomatic; may cause intermittent GI symptoms, cough, or urticarial rashes; hyperinfection in immunosuppressed leads to severe disseminated disease. Treatment: Ivermectin is first-line (dose/duration guided by severity); severe or disseminated infection requires prolonged ivermectin and inpatient care.
                 
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                  Plasmodium vivax & ovale (malaria hypnozoites — relapses; travel-related but not foodborne)
                  
 Symptoms: fever, chills, anemia, systemic symptoms during blood-stage illness; relapses due to dormant liver hypnozoites. Treatment: Treat acute blood-stage infection per regional guidelines (chloroquine or ACTs depending on resistance). Radical cure to prevent relapses—primaquine or tafenoquine after G6PD testing.
                 
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                  Toxoplasma gondii (latent tissue cysts)
                  
 Symptoms and treatment summarized above; latent cysts can reactivate in immunosuppressed patients—specialist care required.
                 
               
              Bacteria / Chronic Carriage
              
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                  Salmonella Typhi (chronic gallbladder carriage)
                  
 Symptoms: carriers are often asymptomatic but can intermittently shed organisms and transmit infection. Treatment: Prolonged antibiotics guided by susceptibility (historically fluoroquinolones, but resistance is common); cholecystectomy is considered for persistent carriage. Public health follow-up is important.
                 
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                  Helicobacter pylori (long-term stomach colonisation)
                  
 Symptoms and treatment summarized above—eradication therapy with PPI-based regimens or bismuth quadruple therapy based on resistance patterns.
                 
               
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