81 Monday, May 10, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com E. coli From page 1 ure. All of the patients affected by the bacteria reported symptoms of their sickness between April 9 and April 16, according to a Washtenaw County Public Health press release issued on May 6. Most strains of E. coli do not cause illness, but ingestion of those that produce Shiga toxin - like the E. coli 0145 found in the lettuce - can cause symptoms of illness that include diarrhea and stomach cramping. In severe cases, afflicted patients may contract hemorrhagic colitis - an infection characterized by abdominal cramps, bloody diar- rhea and kidney failure. The USDA currently only recog- nizes E. coli 0157 as a harmful bac- terial strain, leading most bacterial laboratories to test for only the one type. Susan Cerniglia, the public information officer for Washtenaw County Public Health, said the lack of USDA regulations on non-0157 Shiga toxin-producing strains may have been partially responsible for the outbreak. "A lot of (laboratories) didn't have the capacity in place to detect this bug," Cerniglia said. "Thatkind of hampered things." Bill Marler, a Seattle-based per- sonal injury lawyer with experi- ence in food-borne illness litigation, said this outbreak could help push the USDA to consider implement- ing testing regulations for non-0157 strains of E. coli. "Not that I wish illness on peo- ple, but the timing of the 0145 out- break...is certainly going to get the USDA to have to respond," Marler said. "Over the last 15 years, there (have been) a lot of cases of ill and sick and dead people who haven't been linked to E. coli 0157 but cer- tainly had symptoms consistent with an E. coli illness." According to Marler, testing for other harmful strains would be neither difficult nor unreasonably expensive. The recent outbreak, he said, should serve as a wake-up call. "If no one forces you to do some- thing, you tend not to do it," Mar- ler said. "I think government and industry have gotten comfortable doing 0157 testing, and those other bugs are the devil you don't know. If you're not testing for it, you don't find it, and if you don't find it, you're not doing anything for it." Marler said he was "frustrated BECOMING ONE WITH THE BEAT yur 45~ ~ MARISSA MCCLAIN/Daily Michigan fans dancing to Ludacris song "Stand Up" at game against Eastern Michigan University on Wednesday in the Wil- pon Baseball and Softball Complex. and a bit incredulous" that the government still wasn't testing for non-0157 strains, so he started his own research into the prevalence of these unregulated bugs in 2008. After hiring a lab to run tests for non-0157 strains in hamburg- er meat, Marler said the results showed that 1.9 percent of the first 1,000 samples contained the harmful bacteria. The lab, he said, sent the results to the USDA at the time but did not receive a response. The testing, which extended to 5,000 samples, will conclude in June, and the study's results willbe published in July, Marler said. The results consistently showed that about 2 percent of the meat con- tained non-0157strains of E. coli. "(Two percent) may not sound like a lot," he said. "But if you think about it and extrapolate it...it's a pretty big number." Marler said he filed a petition with the USDA in October last year to label the top five non-0157 strains, including 0145, as adulter- ants, but the USDA has been slow to respond to the request. U.S. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D- NY), who is another advocate for regulations in the testing of the other harmful strains, said she has been urging U.S. Secretary of Agri- culture Tom Vilsack to take action on the issue as well. Marler added that it is crucial to get these regulations in place now because of the way bacteria evolve. In 50 years, he said, 0157 could be one of the less prominent strains and one of the currently unregulat- ed ones could move to the forefront. "Like they adapt, we have to adapt," Marler said. "That's the relationship we have with patho- genic bacteria, and if we don't adapt, they kill us - that's their job." According to Cerniglia, whether or not the USDA changes its regu- lations, local labs in Washtenaw County will be more wary of the non-0157 strains in the future. Some labs, she said, will- even be equipped to deal with the harmful types of bacteria like E. coli 0145 within the next few months. "We're more aware of some of the problems detecting this type of bug," Cerniglia said. 0 T H E O R I G I N A L 512 E. William (734) 663-3379 LIMITED TIME OFFER For Our Friends at The U CUSTOMER APPRECIATION Lunch Buffet M-F 11-2pm $ $95 6.95 $2 OFF our Lunch Buffet With Beverage Included Just Present Your U of M I.). Offer Expires: 7/2/2010 As i',atofM,'hn'""A""" We've been supporting the uI Communitysince 1939.. DanUJ a I RI ne Coming this week to MichiganDaily.com Construction finance restrictions could prevent the University from pursu- ing future projects. Erika Mayer discusses how she is preparing to study abroad in the United Kingdom. The Michigan Daily's baseball beat will cover the Wolverines as they face MSU this week. The National's High Violet is a grower album, but ultimately the lazy lyr- ics leave us feeling bored. WWWJCI AS(f lAIARJIERS.COM WALK-INS WELCOME! Check in online for daily updates