November 18, 2024

Virulent E. Coli Strain Spreads in Germany and Puzzles Health Officials

The source of the outbreak, which has killed at least 16 people — 15 in Germany and a Swede who visited there recently — remained unknown.

Public health officials are alarmed because a startlingly high proportion of those infected suffer from a potentially lethal complication attacking the kidneys, called hemolytic uremic syndrome, which can provoke comas, seizures and stroke. Dr. Robert Tauxe, deputy director of food-borne disease at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, said the rate of cases of acute kidney failure in the outbreak was unprecedented. “That makes this an extraordinarily large and severe event,” he said.

While most of the infections were among people who had traveled to northern Germany, the authorities acknowledged that the outbreak had spread to virtually every corner of the country.

Shoppers and vegetable sellers in Berlin expressed a blend of confusion, anger and stoicism; about 20 cases of E. coli infection have been reported in the capital city. “A lot of people are afraid or worried,” said Nursan Usta, 43, who runs a fruit and vegetable stall in Berlin’s blue-collar Neukölln district. “They aren’t even buying cherries” — even though the authorities have mentioned only cucumbers, lettuce and tomatoes as potential sources of infection. In Motril, a town in Spain’s agricultural heartland, greenhouses were empty of workers as demand for vegetables collapsed after the German authorities initially — and most likely mistakenly — pointed to Spain as a source of the outbreak.

“Working in a greenhouse can be tough, but I’ve never felt more exhausted and empty inside than now,” said Miguel Rodríguez Puentedura, who had been picking cucumbers until Monday, when the greenhouse that employed him shut down.

Health officials in Hamburg, the center of the outbreak, appealed Wednesday for donors to contribute blood.

Scientists are at a loss to explain why this little-known organism, identified as E. coli 0104:H4, has proved so virulent.

The European authorities have reported several differences from previous outbreaks, including that women make up more than two-thirds of those affected and that young and middle-aged adults account for a very high percentage of the most severe cases. Dr. J. Glenn Morris, director of the Emerging Pathogens Institute of the University of Florida, said that the German strain might have undergone genetic changes or mutations to make it more potent.

The high number of cases of acute kidney failure represents a much higher percentage of the total number of illnesses than in previous outbreaks associated with different strains of E. coli. Generally, 5 to 10 percent of E. coli illnesses result in this complication. Among the confirmed cases, according to the Robert Koch Institute, Germany’s disease control agency, 470 people had been diagnosed with the kidney syndrome.

That could be because German doctors are using a broader definition of kidney failure that captures more cases. Or it could mean that the total number of illnesses is much greater than has so far been revealed, which ultimately would lower the percentage of acute cases. Or it could be a signature of this form of E. coli.

There are many types of E. coli, most of which are harmless. But a small number have come under increasing scrutiny as dangerous pathogens. These all produce a poison known as shiga toxin and generally have the ability to cling to a person’s intestinal wall, allowing them to release the poison in large enough amounts to make people sick.

Dr. Phillip Tarr, a professor of microbiology at the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, said that there were two main forms of shiga toxin found in E. coli, and that the strain detected in the outbreak in Germany appeared to have the more potent version. But he said the organism appeared to have other quirks that made it unusual, and potentially difficult to detect by conventional means.

“This outbreak is still evolving, and everyone is still in the fog of case definition,” Dr. Tarr said. With the source of the contagion unknown, the Robert Koch Institute on Wednesday warned against eating “raw tomatoes, cucumbers and lettuces to prevent further cases,” particularly in northern Germany.

European and German officials pledged to track down the cause of the outbreak and to pinpoint where in the food supply chain the contamination had taken place. “Hundreds of tests have been done,” the German agriculture minister, Ilse Aigner, said in a television interview. So far, those tests had determined that “most of the patients who have fallen ill ate cucumbers, tomatoes and leaf lettuce primarily in northern Germany.”

Alan Cowell reported from Berlin, and William Neuman from New York. Reporting was contributed by James Kanter from Brussels; Victor Homola, Stefan Pauly and Judy Dempsey from Berlin; and Raphael Minder from Motril, Spain.

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6 Held in Germany in Rebuilt Euro Fraud

Just an unusually heavy carry-on bag, which a female flight attendant struggled to carry through Frankfurt’s airport after arriving from China.

But when curious customs agents took a look, they found evidence that may have helped them crack one of the biggest frauds in history against the Bundesbank, Germany’s august central bank. Authorities say the fraud has cost the bank about 6 million euros, or $8.5 million.

Inside the flight attendant’s bag, the authorities say, were thousands of 1-euro and 2-euro coins that had supposedly been scrapped after years of use but had been methodically reconstructed so they could be cashed in.

According to prosecutors, in recent years a fraud ring involving flight attendants has toted 30 tons of supposedly scrapped euro coins back into Europe from China. Recyclers in China were supposed to have melted down the old coins, which had been removed from circulation and sold as scrap metal.

Instead, officials say, the band and its accomplices painstakingly restored the coins, then fooled the Bundesbank into redeeming them for paper currency or money transfers into bank accounts.

Last week, German authorities arrested six men in and around Frankfurt in connection with the case. The investigation is continuing, said Doris Möller-Scheu, a Frankfurt prosecutor.

No Bundesbank employees are suspected in the fraud, authorities said. But the case is an embarrassment for the central bank, long a symbol of German prudence and monetary stability.

Three of the six men arrested were flight attendants who worked for airlines with routes between China and Germany. The attendants took advantage of their exemption from baggage weight requirements to carry the coins from China to Frankfurt, prosecutors said.

The female flight attendant, who authorities said was not arrested because she had not redeemed any money, told them that Chinese friends had given her the coins to exchange abroad because domestic banks would not take them, according to Sing Tao, a Hong Kong newspaper.

All six suspects, ages 28 to 45, are being held awaiting trial, and so far none are cooperating with authorities, Ms. Möller-Scheu said. They face fraud and counterfeiting charges that carry maximum sentences of 10 years in prison. Under German law, the names of suspects are typically not released.

The fraud ring, which officials said had been operating since 2007, took advantage of the way the two-piece coins are made. The 2-euro coin has a nickel and brass alloy center, or “pill,” surrounded by a nickel and copper ring. The 1-euro coin has a copper and nickel pill surrounded by a nickel and brass ring.

When the coins were removed from circulation, a subcontractor separated the rings from the pills before the metal was sold to Chinese recycling companies.

Somehow, the thieves discovered that they could put the pills and rings back together, bring them to Germany and redeem them at the Bundesbank.

Prosecutors said they were just beginning to investigate how the scam worked in China. During raids of 10 buildings in and near Frankfurt on March 30, the police seized a machine that they think was used to reassemble coins. But Ms. Möller-Scheu said it was likely that most of the labor-intensive work of reassembling coins was done in China.

“It wouldn’t pay with the hourly wage here,” Ms. Möller-Scheu said. “It had to be a low-wage country.”

How does someone inconspicuously redeem tons of reassembled coins? It was not as hard as it might seem, the Bundesbank says. Chinese companies recycle enormous amounts of washing machines, autos and other worn-out goods from Europe, often finding euros, which they then send back for redemption.

“It wasn’t so unusual to get coins from China,” said Susanne Kreutzer, a Bundesbank spokeswoman. “That is a business model for some people.”

The thieves packed the coins in official-looking safe bags, which are used to trade coins for cash and are easily available on the Internet, prosecutors said. Some genuine coins were mixed in to fool inspectors, who make spot checks of redeemed coins.

The accomplices could turn in the coins at any of the Bundesbank’s 47 branches in Germany, although large amounts would be accepted only at the branch in Mainz, about 40 kilometers, or 25 miles, west of Frankfurt.

Ms. Kreutzer said there had been other occasions when the Bundesbank suspected that people were redeeming invalid coins, but last week was the first time authorities could make an arrest.

One question raised is why the coins were not more thoroughly damaged when they were taken out of circulation.

It is not clear which of Europe’s central banks might have been responsible for the coins involved in the Bundesbank scam. The Bundesbank said it could not have been the source of the coins, because it rendered old euro pieces unusable by crimping them with deep ridges.

Ms. Möller-Scheu said there was no evidence to support a report in the news magazine Der Spiegel that the coins had come from Italy and Greece.

In any case, Bundesbank officials said they did not think the scheme could be carried out in the future. In January, new European Union rules took effect placing tighter restrictions on the redemption of coins.

“This business model won’t work any more,” said Ms. Kreutzer of the Bundesbank.

Jon Kaiman contributed research from Beijing.

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