Close Menu
healthylife7.comhealthylife7.com

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    The future of national prosperity begins with family wellbeing

    July 17, 2026

    Wildfire smoke hits auto plants, sending some workers to hospitals

    July 17, 2026

    JB Fitness expanding to north Fresno with drive

    July 17, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • The future of national prosperity begins with family wellbeing
    • Wildfire smoke hits auto plants, sending some workers to hospitals
    • JB Fitness expanding to north Fresno with drive
    • The dirt on eating clean
    • NIH Awards OU College of Medicine $10.7 Million to Advance Sensory Biology Research
    • Healthy habits earn top marks at Terengganu school
    • Cyclosporiasis: What a Stanford Medicine expert says about the diarrheal outbreak
    • Trump Visit | New Fitness Gym | Mass School Shooting Update
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    healthylife7.comhealthylife7.com
    • Home
    • Fitness
    • Health
    • Nutrition
    • Lifestyle
    • Conditions
    • Mental Health
    • Weight Loss
    • Wellness Tips
    Friday, July 17
    healthylife7.comhealthylife7.com
    Home»Conditions»Cyclosporiasis: What a Stanford Medicine expert says about the diarrheal outbreak
    Conditions

    Cyclosporiasis: What a Stanford Medicine expert says about the diarrheal outbreak

    healthylife7By healthylife7July 17, 2026No Comments7 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
    Cyclosporiasis: What a Stanford Medicine expert says about the diarrheal outbreak
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

    The latest foodborne illness attacking bellies across the nation goes by the name cyclosporiasis (sigh-klo-spor-eye-uh-sis), and its reach is growing by the day

    Since the first known case in Michigan on June 22, the parasitic disease has stricken thousands with watery, sometimes explosive, diarrhea and hospitalized more than 100 people. Cases have now been reported in at least 34 states

    Compared with the usual gastrointestinal suspects — norovirus, salmonella, campylobacter, shigella and E. coli — cyclosporiasis is a much rarer foodborne disease in the United States

    To learn more about the infection and how to best diagnose, treat and avoid it, we reached out to David Relman, MD, professor of medicine and of microbiology and immunology at Stanford Medicine, whose work characterizing the parasitic organism that causes cyclosporiasis helped revolutionize diagnosis of this infection and outbreak tracing

    What are the symptoms of cyclosporiasis?

    The signature symptom of cyclosporiasis is copious, watery diarrhea. That extreme diarrhea can lead to dangerous dehydration and electrolyte imbalance, posing kidney damage risks and requiring hospitalization, with some patients experiencing as much as 10% weight loss

    “Cyclosporiasis is a potentially very serious infection, especially for people who are young, elderly, immune-impaired or sick for other reasons” said Relman, the Thomas C. and Joan M. Merigan Professor. “Even for healthy people, cyclosporiasis can be pretty debilitating.”

    David Relman

    Other common symptoms of cyclosporiasis include nausea, loss of appetite, cramping, bloating, gas, fatigue and weight loss. While these symptoms are common in many diarrheal diseases, one differentiating factor is that cyclosporiasis does not cause clinically significant inflammation. As a result, cyclosporiasis patients typically do not experience as much pain or bloody diarrhea as patients infected with cytotoxin-secreting, pro-inflammatory organisms like Clostridioides difficile and those causing dysentery.

    Overall, with cyclosporiasis, “you experience general discomfort,” Relman said, “and watery diarrhea like all get-out.”

    What causes cyclosporiasis?

    Nearly all foodborne illness in the U.S. stems from bacterial and viral infections. Cyclosporiasis, however, arises from a single-celled parasite called Cyclospora cayetanensis, which is more closely related to animals than to bacteria and viruses

    An individual cyclospora oocyst is spherical or ovoid and 8 to 10 micrometers (millionths of a meter) in diameter, requiring a microscope to see. The interior of cyclospora looks different depending on its life stage

    How do you get infected with cyclospora?

    Cyclospora enter our bodies when we eat food, usually fresh produce, that is contaminated with the microbe. Among the likeliest foods to harbor cyclospora are leafy greens, fruits such as raspberries, and herbs including basil and cilantro

    Because the parasite is not endemic to the United States, outbreaks are usually connected to food imported from other countries — for instance in Central America — where cyclospora is relatively common in the human population. The lifecycle of Cyclospora cayetanensis requires that it enter a human digestive tract to grow and reproduce. The parasite re-enters the environment and contaminates crops through traces of human feces that end up in water supplies for irrigation

    When cyclospora exit our bodiesppearing as a refractile sphere called an oocyst with tiny granules inside. In the environment, the cyclospora then mature, or “sporulate,” developing four, sausage-shaped structures called sporozoites in the cyst. The cyclospora oocyst is now infectious

    GLP-1s 101: What the science says

    1. Addiction

    What is the incubation period?

    The typical time it takes from consumption of sporulated cyclospora oocysts to active disease is about a week, though this so-called incubation period varies from patient to patient and may depend on how many cyclospora oocysts they ingest. “The incubation period is actually highly variable,” Relman said. “People often cite a week, but it can be quicker, especially if you get a huge infectious dose. The common understanding is that the incubation period can vary from two days to two weeks.”

    The delay occurs because first, the tough oocyst wall has to break down, presumably as a result of exposure to body temperature, bile salts, and digestive enzymes in the upper intestinal tract. Then the freed sporozoites invade the epithelial cells lining the small intestine. “When the sporozoites do this, they impair the function of those intestinal lining cells, and one of their functions is to absorb water and nutrients,” Relman said; in fact, 90% of the water we absorb is through the small intestine. “If you start messing with that,” Relman added, “then you’re going to have diarrhea.”

    The sporozoites replicate and undergo development in intestinal cells to form new, unsporulated cysts that leave the bodyinfection all over again

    How do you diagnose cyclosporiasis?

    If you live in an area that has reported cases of cyclosporiasis and you show up with watery diarrhea, your doctor is likely to suspect you have it. Definitive diagnosis requires a stool sample test. The conventional ova and parasite test, however, won’t suffice

    Instead, quick diagnosis is usually done in hospitals — and increasingly more in outpatient clinical settings — through modern molecular testing, which looks for the DNA or the RNA of infectious agents using a sensitive and rapid method such as polymerase chain reaction. Research by Relman in the early to mid-1990s pioneered the use of PCR for classifying and detecting cyclospora and other infectious agents

    “Today if someone rolls into the emergency room with a terrible case of diarrhea and looks sick, what the doctor would do is order a stool sample and send it to the laboratory for a battery of PCR tests for all of the most common diarrheal disease agents,” said Relman, who is also a senior fellow at the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies at Stanford University

    Most standard, so-called multiplexed tests include cyclospora on the suspect list. And while those tests are not necessarily available at urgent care clinics or typical lab facilities, collected samples are sent to labs where such testing is available

    “People should be reassured that most health care facilities are going to have a means of getting a sample to a place that will do this specific PCR test pretty quickly,” Relman said

    How do you treatcyclosporiasis?

    Thankfully, if properly diagnosed, cyclosporiasis is easily treatable with a seven- to 10-day course of the antibiotic trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, which disrupts the microbe’s ability to produce the folic acid needed to replicate itself. Most people start feeling better in a few days

    If the patient has a sulfa allergy, other antibiotics such as ciprofloxacin or notaxonide help too, though are less effective. Fluid replacement is also an integral part of successful treatment and recovery

    Does washing food get rid of cyclospora?

    Washing in cold water for at least a minute absolutely helps. But because cysts can still get stuck in nooks and crannies of fruits and veggies, a safter alternative can be cooking the food in question, as heat kills the parasite. “If you don’t have a strong need to immediately consume suspicious produce in a raw form and have the option of cooking it, why not?” Relman said

    Healthy habits for your 60s, 70s & beyond

    READ THE STORY HERE

    Healthy habits for your 20s & 30s

    READ THE STORY HERE

    Healthy habits for your 40s & 50s

    READ THE STORY HERE

    1. 8
    2. 9
    3. 2

    Does buying locally grown produce reduce risk of exposure to cyclospora?

    Yes. As mentioned prior, cyclospora usually comes to the U.S. through imported foods. For instance, a 1996 outbreak that coincided with Relman’s genetic work on cyclospora ultimately traced back to raspberries from Guatemala. Iceberg lettuce from Mexico is suspected in the current outbreak

    Buying from temperate-climate points of origin, however, is no guarantee, especially when produce is pooled from manyettuce is “often mixed from all over the place and then sorted into prepackaged bags and sold widely … that’s going to increase your chances [of exposure].”

    A good alternative is to buy produce at a local farmer’s market. “If you’re able to purchase produce locally from a known vendor who’s not sourcing it from all over the place but rather from one local farm, that’s probably a safer bet,” Relman said

    cyclosporiasis Expert medicine Stanford What
    healthylife7
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Wildfire smoke hits auto plants, sending some workers to hospitals

    July 17, 2026

    NIH Awards OU College of Medicine $10.7 Million to Advance Sensory Biology Research

    July 17, 2026

    ‘There’s no magic bullet’: how students are preparing for complex disease threats

    July 17, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Health
    Lifestyle

    The future of national prosperity begins with family wellbeing

    By healthylife7July 17, 20260

    Supporting parents helps attract talent, strengthen families and grow the economy

    Wildfire smoke hits auto plants, sending some workers to hospitals

    July 17, 2026

    JB Fitness expanding to north Fresno with drive

    July 17, 2026

    The dirt on eating clean

    July 17, 2026
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    Fitness

    Opinion: The FDA must put biotech at its center or continue to cede early research to China

    July 6, 2026

    Inside Elevance’s digital chronic disease management strategy

    July 6, 2026

    Best, Worst States For Well

    July 6, 2026

    What do the Middle Ages tell us about mental health then and now? VCU historian Leigh Ann Craig has answers

    July 6, 2026

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

    About Us

    Welcome to HealthyLife7.com, your trusted source for reliable health, wellness, fitness, and lifestyle information. Our mission is to help people make informed decisions about their health by providing clear, practical, and easy-to-understand content.

    At HealthyLife7.com, we believe that good health starts with the right knowledge. Whether you're looking for healthy eating tips, fitness advice, mental wellness strategies, weight management guidance, or information about common health conditions, our goal is to deliver valuable content that supports a healthier lifestyle.

    Fitness

    The future of national prosperity begins with family wellbeing

    July 17, 2026

    Wildfire smoke hits auto plants, sending some workers to hospitals

    July 17, 2026

    JB Fitness expanding to north Fresno with drive

    July 17, 2026
    Health

    Opinion: The FDA must put biotech at its center or continue to cede early research to China

    July 6, 2026

    Inside Elevance’s digital chronic disease management strategy

    July 6, 2026

    Best, Worst States For Well

    July 6, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • About Us
    • Contact us
    • Disclaimer
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    © 2026 healthylife7.com. Designed by Pro.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.