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April 30 2000
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Pork Causes More Illness

 

Some diabetics and others with weakened immune systems may do well to steer clear of chitterlings, a dish consisting of boiled pig intestines that is served up as traditional holiday fare in the Southern US. A 12-year-old boy with poorly controlled diabetes became seriously ill after eating the food in three separate Christmas dinners.

The child was hospitalized with enteritis necroticans, a potentially life-threatening intestinal infection that is rare in America and causes severe stomach pain, vomiting of blood and low blood pressure. The boy eventually had to have surgery to restore his intestinal function. The culprit turned out to be a chitterlings-contaminating bacterium known as Clostridium perfringens type C, which produces a toxin that is lethal to tissue in the digestive tract. Even cooking the chitterlings, however, may not rid them of bacteria.

More common in developing countries, enteritis necroticans can occur in children who eat large amounts of pork or in those who consume large meals after a period of starvation. Other factors that can contribute to the illness are protein malnutrition, and the consumption of sweet potatoes, which can interfere with the breakdown of the bacterial toxin in the intestines.

The New England Journal of Medicine April 27, 2000;342:1250-1253



Dr. MercolaDr. Mercola's Comments:
This may seem like some rare arcane unimportant issue, but I take it as a confirmation of the importance of avoiding scavenger animals like pigs. I have included other references from previous newsletters which also medically support avoiding pork and ham to avoid the risk of parasites and viruses which are frequently not destroyed with cooking.

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Community Comments ( 2 )
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Jayne B
[ Joined on 07/08 ] [ Posted on July 12, 2008 ]
       
   
 
Novice User

I think pork is a poor choice for consumption.   A few medical and researcher types have told me that the viruses are dangerous particularly to those with a compromised immune system, providing the precursor for damaging DNA and turning on cancer cells.  I tend to avoid it, but that is a personal choice.  

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fennydendron
[ Joined on 06/06 ] [ Posted on April 3, 2008 ]
       
   
 
Novice User

Hi,

Any meat that is produced commercially in the U.S.has numerous health issues.This is true for beef from cattle feedlots,chicken from poultry factory farms and pork which is produced in a confinement situation where the animals could never be anything but sick and the resulting meat can't be made healthy.

But,like in the case of grass fed beef,there is such a thing as naturally raised hogs which spend most of their time on pastures and are even allowed to wallow in mud and they will never be fed commercial feed.This type of animal husbandry has produced meat for many country families all over the world for centuries.I definetely agree with Dr.Mercola that pork or any other commercially produced meat is a major health risk,but I respectfully disagree with condemning an entire animal species as unfit for human consumption because of the misguided production methods of a few factory farms.The problem,in my opinion,is not the the pig or the pork,it is the method how the animal is raised,slaughtered and processed  

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