PEDIATRICS Vol. 94 No. 3 September 1994, pp. 381-384
This Article
Right arrow Full Text (PDF)
Right arrow P3Rs: Submit a response
Right arrow Alert me when this article is cited
Right arrow Alert me when P3Rs are posted
Right arrow Alert me if a correction is posted
Services
Right arrow E-mail this article to a friend
Right arrow Similar articles in this journal
Right arrow Similar articles in PubMed
Right arrow Alert me to new issues of the journal
Right arrow Add to My File Cabinet
Right arrow Download to citation manager
Right arrow reprints & permissions
Citing Articles
Right arrow Citing Articles via HighWire
Right arrow Citing Articles via CrossRef
Right arrow Citing Articles via Google Scholar
Google Scholar
Right arrow Articles by Askew, G. L.
Right arrow Articles by Spitalny, K. C.
Right arrow Search for Related Content
PubMed
Right arrow PubMed Citation
Right arrow Articles by Askew, G. L.
Right arrow Articles by Spitalny, K. C.

Boilerbaisse: An Outbreak of Methemoglobinemia in New Jersey in 1992

George L. Askew MD1, Daniel M. Sosin MD, MPH1, Lyn Finelli DrPH2, Carol A. Genese MBA, CIC2, Faye E. Sorhage VMD, MPH2, and Kenneth C. Spitalny MD2

1 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Epidemiology Program Office, Epidemic Intelligence Service, Division of Field Epidemiology
2 New Jersey Department of Health, Division of Epidemiology, Environmental, and Occupational Health Services

Background. On October 20, 1992, > 40 children from one elementary school visited the school nurse due to the acute onset of blue lips and hands, vomiting, and headache during and after the school lunch periods. Forty-nine children were seen by physicians that day and 14 were hospitalized. Laboratory analysis revealed methemoglobinemia in many of the children. All recovered in 36 hours.

Objective. A case-control study was supplemented by environmental and laboratory investigations to determine the outbreak source.

Methods. Cases were selected based on the laboratory diagnosis of methemoglobinemia (methemoglobin level > 2%). Children whose methemoglobin levels were missing or < 2% were excluded from analysis. Controls were obtained by selecting every third name from a school roster. The parents of 29 students who met the case definition and 52 controls were interviewed.

Results. All 29 cases and 33% (17/52) of the controls ate soup during the school lunch (odds ratio undefined, lower 95% confidence limit 16.1). Two pots of soup were prepared from ready-to-serve cans, which were diluted with water and enriched with a commercially prepared flavor enhancer. The school's boiler, dormant during the previous 5 months, was restarted on the morning of the outbreak. The boiler also served as a tankless hot water heater. Laboratory analysis of the soup identified abnormally high quantities of nitrite (459 ppm) and sodium metaborate, major components of the boiler water treatment solution. Undiluted soup from the same lot had 2.0 ppm nitrites; the flavor enhancer had 2.2 ppm nitrites. Nitrites were present in the hot potable water system (4 to 10 ppm) and absent in the cold potable water system.

Conclusions. This outbreak of methemoglobinemia due to nitrite poisoning was traced to soup contaminated by nitrites in a boiler additive. Nitrites are ubiquitous and potentially hazardous inorganic ions. Extreme caution should be used when the possibility for toxic human exposure to nitrites exists.

Submitted on October 29, 1993
Accepted on January 18, 1994




This article has been cited by other articles:


Home page
BMJHome page
A. Finan, P. Keenan, F. O' Donovan, P. Mayne, and J. Murphy
Lesson of the week: Methaemoglobinaemia associated with sodium nitrite in three siblings
BMJ, October 24, 1998; 317(7166): 1138 - 1139.
[Full Text]


Home page
Arch. Dis. Child.Home page
N. Kennedy, C. P Smith, and P. McWhinney
Faulty sausage production causing methaemoglobinaemia
Arch. Dis. Child., April 1, 1997; 76(4): 367 - 368.
[Abstract] [Full Text]