Vibrio vulnificus , a bacteria sometimes found in sensitive oysters , is the cause of an count on 100 deaths and 80,000 illnesses in the United States each year , consort to the CDC .

If someone wants to make brunch plans with me, usually all they have to say is “oysters and mimosas,” and I’m there.

But there’s recently been somediscoursesurrounding oysters that’s made me a bit more apprehensive about ordering the tasty mollusks. There’s a deadly bacteria found in oysters, as well as the waters they inhabit, that has led to at least four deaths and one hospitalization in the United States this summer.

Two people in Connecticut died from a bacterial infection after swimming in the Long Island Sound, one Connecticut resident was hospitalized after eating raw oysters, and another person in New York died in July following their consumption of oysters, according toPeople MagazineandCNN.

In June, a 54-year-old mandiedafter eating oysters from a food stand in Missouri. Meanwhile, various doctors on TikTok have made videos over the past few months, warning people about the risks of consuming raw oysters.

Every microbiologist and doctor on TikTok keeps begging people not to eat them raw!https://t.co / hxAKgXEcvS

This doctor warned viewers about the dangers ofVibrio vulnificus, the same bacteria that the various victims contracted — and died from this summer — after eating raw oysters and swimming in coastal waters. According toCNN, anyone can get Vibrio vulnificus, but it’s most commonly contracted from swimming if the swimmer has an open wound.

If you palpate crazy after deplete oysters , go to the hand brake room#fyp#oysters#viral#sick#medtok#trending#doctor#emergencyroom

I reached out to this creator — aka Dr. Alexander Thomopulos, a resident of Mount Sinai South Nassau’s Internal Medicine Residency and social media educator at@medicineandfood.fam, for more information on Vibrio vulnificus and its relation to oysters.

Dr. Thomopulos told BuzzFeed that Vibrio vulnificus is an “aerobic bacteria that lives/exists in saltwater marshes/wetlands, river estuaries, or coastal areas. It can cause serious wound infections, GI infections, and bacteremia (blood-stream infection), with any of those leading to sepsis. Infections due to V. vulnificus can occur in anyone, but more commonly in people who have chronic, underlying illnesses such as diabetes mellitus, rheumatoid arthritis, thalassemia major, chronic renal failure, and lymphoma. People with liver disease — i.e. cirrhosis, chronic hepatitis, hereditary hemochromatosis — are at the greatest risk.”

You’re probably wondering, “Why oysters?” Dr. Thomopulos said it’s because they “concentrate bacteria and likely carry more V. vulnificus than the surrounding water. Basically, this means it is generally everywhere; in the water, soil/sediment/mud, seaweed, and therefore, most highly-concentrated in oysters, since they are filter feeders and draw in water and macro and micro particles from their surroundings. Vibrio will be most prevalent/populous during summer and fall, when water temperatures are highest. The saltier the water, the more vibrio there may be, and vice versa.”

Dr. Thomopulos said the symptoms of Vibrio vulnificus include malaise, fever, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and swelling/redness/warmth of an area of skin/limb. The limb symptoms could be a sign of “necrotizing fasciitis” — a “bacterial infection that affects the tissue under your skin called fascia. It’s treated with antibiotics and surgery to remove damaged tissue,” according to the Cleveland Clinic. Apparently, this is referred to by some people as the “flesh-eating disease.”

This obviously freaked me the hell out, so I asked the doctor how common it is for medical professionals to see this. “It’s generally rare, but an emergency physician or trauma surgeon around theChesapeake Baywill see it far more than the once or twice in a lifetime event of an emergency physician in the Midwest,” he said. This is because Vibrio vulnificus is most prevalent in brackish coastal waters — aka bodies of water that have more salt than freshwater, but not as much as seawater.

And in case you were wondering if global warming has an impact on Vibrio vulnificus… Yes. Yes it does. A study in theScientific Reports journalfound that there has been an increase of infections in more northern locations, like the Delaware Bay, due to warming coastal waters.

When it comes to medical intervention for Vibrio vulnificus, Dr. Thomopulos said, “Treatment in mild to moderate cases of patients without co-morbidities or underlying risk factors includes local wound care plus or minus oral antibiotics. … In moderate to severe cases and in patients with underlying risk factors/co-morbidities, ICU or intermediate care unit admission with IV antibiotics plus or minus surgical debridement (cleaning and disinfecting infected areas and removing dead/non-viable tissue). ICU or intermediate care unit will allow for closer monitoring to not only help prevent deterioration, but catch it faster so that more aggressive interventions can be initiated (surgery for necrotizing fasciitis) and more aggressive supportive care (pressors for hypotension/septic shock, medication drips, etc.).”

I asked Dr. Thomopulos how to know if you need serious medical attention; he said, “If you have eaten any raw seafood including oysters and get nausea, vomiting, or diarrhea, notify your primary doctor or go to urgent care to help evaluate if you have routine food poisoning or vibrio infection. If you get a tattoo, acupuncture, or anything else that may have caused a skin break, and get redness, swelling, pain around an area after getting into coastal water around the summer or early fall, go to your primary doctor or urgent care. If you are a person with any of the co-morbidities/underlying conditions mentioned above, skip the primary care doctor and urgent care and go to the emergency department.”

According to theCDC, the guidelines for reducing your chances of infection are as follows: Don’t eat raw or undercooked oysters or other shellfish, separate your cooked seafood from raw seafood to avoid cross-contamination, wash your hands after handling raw seafood, stay out of both saltwater and brackish water if you have a wound or fresh piercing/tattoo, and wash your wounds carefully if they came into contact with saltwater, brackish water, or raw seafood and its juices. “An oyster that containsVibriodoesn’t look, smell, or even taste different from any other oyster. You can killVibrioin oysters and other shellfish bycooking them properly,” the website states.

I also reached out toDr. Jennifer Caudle, a board-certified Osteopathic Family Medicine Physician based in New Jersey, for guidance on how to move forward with all this information if you’re an oyster lover like myself. “Regarding what to do about oysters, it is important for people to make an individual choice based on their underlying medical conditions (are you in a high risk group?), personal preference, and an understanding that eating raw or undercooked shellfish, oysters, and other things such as meats, eggs etc. could put them at risk for getting certain infectious diseases. Also, I recommend people talk to their doctor as well for more information and guidance.”

As with many good things in life, raw oysters clearly have their risks. I probably won’t be giving them up completely, but I definitely will be taking all of this information into consideration, and won’t be so blasé about my consumption of them. For more information on Vibrio vulnificus and oysters, visit theCDCwebsite or speak directly to your physician about your concerns.

Mickey chugging a mimosa in "The Mick"

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Dr. Alexander Thomopulos

The virus under a microscope

A tray of raw oysters

A 3D rendering of the bacteria

Someone holding their own wrist and checking their pulse

Coastal waters

"This is fine."

A patient in a hospital bed

A tattoo artist working on someone's arm

Oysters cooking on a grill