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Background During a college football game in Florida, diarrhea and vomiting developed in many of the members of a North Carolina team. The next day, similar symptoms developed in some of the players on the opposing team.
Methods We interviewed those who ate the five meals served to the North Carolina team before the game and some of the players on the opposing team who became ill. Patients with primary cases were members or staff of the team who had vomiting or diarrhea at least 10 hours after but no more than 50 hours after eating a box lunch served the day before the game. Patients with secondary cases had a later onset of symptoms or had symptoms without having eaten the box lunch. Stool samples were examined by electron microscopy and by a reverse-transcriptionpolymerase-chain-reaction (RT-PCR) assay.
Results The two football teams shared no food or beverages and had no contact off the playing field. Of five meals served to the North Carolina team before the game, only the box lunch was associated with a significant risk of illness (relative risk of illness, 4.1; 95 percent confidence interval, 1.6 to 10.0). The rate of attack among those who ate the box lunch was 62 percent. There were 11 secondary cases among the members and staff of the North Carolina team and 11 such cases among the Florida players. All four stool samples obtained from North Carolina patients were positive for Norwalk-like virus on electron microscopy. All four samples as well as one of two stool samples from players on the Florida team were positive for a Norwalk-like virus of genogroup I on RT-PCR assay; the RT-PCR products had identical sequences.
Conclusions This investigation documents person-to-person transmission of Norwalk virus among players during a football game. Persons with acute gastroenteritis should be excluded from playing contact sports.
Source Information
From the Epidemic Intelligence Service (K.M.B.) and the National Center for HIV, STD and TB Prevention (K.L.S.), Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta; the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill (C.L.M.); and the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, Raleigh (K.M.B., K.L.S., J.N.M.).
Address reprint requests to the Department of Health and Human Services, Office of International and Refugee Health, Rm. 18-105, Parklawn Bldg., 5600 Fishers Ln., Rockville, MD 20857, or to Dr. Becker at kbecker{at}osophs.dhhs.gov.
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