Accra Jan. 20, - The Food and
Drugs Authority (FDA) as part of its food safety tips publications to ensure
public safety has provided 14 facts about Puffer Fish needed to be known by the
public.
This comes as a result of
reported deaths due to the consumption of Puffer Fish in the Volta Region
locally known as"Gedde". Hence this statement to alert the public on
its danger.
The statement said: “Always remember, you are what you eat, and
so let’s make food safety our lifestyle a collective responsibility.
Below are the 14 facts
1. Puffer fish belong to the
family Tetraodontidae which are primarily marine and estuarine fish of the
order Tetraodontiformes. It has an average lifespan of around 10 years.
2. Other names used for familiar
species in the family includes pufferfish, puffers, balloonfish, blowfish,
blowies, bubblefish, swellfish, toadfish, toadies, honey toads, sugar toads, and
sea squab.
3. The puffer fish has the
remarkable ability to expand its body extremely quickly when faced with danger,
unavailing it's long poisonous spikes that cover its body.
4. When puffed-up, the shape more
than double its original size, round and sometimes covered in spines making it
much more difficult to bite and unappetizing to a predator. This behaviour
isn't a puffer's only means of defence.
5. Pufferfish contain tetrodotoxin, a substance that makes them foul tasting and often lethal to its predators including humans.
6. To humans, tetrodotoxin is
deadly, up to 1,200 times more poisonous than cyanide.
7. There is enough toxin in one
pufferfish to kill 30 adult humans, and there is no known antidote.
8. The poison tetrodotoxin is
mostly found in its inner organs, especially the liver, the ovaries, eyes, and
skin of the fish.
9. The poison, tetrodotoxin, is
produced by the bacteria that the fish allows to colonize its various parts.
Tetrodotoxin is a neurotoxin, meaning it takes out the nervous system as it
moves through the body.
10. Symptoms of Pufferfish
poisoning generally occur 10-45 minutes after eating fish containing the
tetrodotoxin.
11. The toxin starts with the
extremities and this is noticed first with the lips. Then the fingers. There's
a tingling numbness, and a loss of control. This is a sign that it's time to
get to the hospital quickly.
12. The toxin moves inwards,
taking out the muscles, often causing weakness, while bringing on vomiting and
diarrhoea. Then the tetrodotoxin hits the diaphragm (which is the large,
muscular membrane in the chest that lets the lungs breathe in and out).
13. The respiratory system is
paralyzed while the person is still fully conscious. Eventually the toxin does
get to the brain, but only after the person involved has felt their body being
paralyzed completely, entombing them inside. Even then, some people aren't
lucky enough to completely lose consciousness. There are people who report
being conscious, either occasionally or continually, throughout their coma.
14. Some people still eat puffer
fish around the world, despite it having such deadly venom. In Japan it is a
delicacy and it’s called Fugu. The meat of the pufferfish is a highly prized
dish that is prepared by specially trained and licensed chefs. Because of the
high risk, chefs must undergo two to three years of training to obtain a
Fugu-preparing license and must taste the fish each time it is prepared.
GNA

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