Showing posts with label human. Show all posts
Showing posts with label human. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Rabies, Human - United Kingdom (04) : (Northern Ireland) ex South Africa

RABIES, HUMAN - UNITED KINGDOM (04): (NORTHERN IRELAND) ex SOUTH AFRICA
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A ProMED-mail post

ProMED-mail is a program of the
International Society for Infectious Diseases


Date: Wed 7 Jan 2009
Source: Daily Telegraph online [edited]


A woman who contracted rabies while working in an African animal
sanctuary has become the 1st Briton to die from this virus infection
in the past 4 years. The woman, from Northern Ireland, had been in a
critical condition in the intensive care unit of Belfast's Royal Victoria
Hospital since the condition was diagnosed in December [2008]. It is
thought she was infected with the virus -- which is invariably fatal
if not treated immediately -- after being scratched or bitten by a
rabid dog she had been helping to look after.

The woman had traveled to Africa a number of times over the last
couple of years but began to feel unwell after being home for several
months after her last trip in March 2008.

A statement from her brothers said: "We are devastated by the loss of
our sister. We are extremely proud not only of all she achieved in
life but also of the bravery with which she fought her illness. Her
courage was inspiring and typical of the passionate and determined
way in which she led her life. Her loss will leave a huge hole in all
our lives, and her family and friends will miss her terribly."

Since 1946, there have been 23 deaths among Britons infected with
rabies abroad. The most recent human case was in 2005 when a woman
became infected after being bitten by a dog in Goa, India and later
died in hospital in Liverpool. It is believed the Belfast patient may
have been infected as far back as December 2006 while working in an
animal sanctuary in South Africa. She sent home emails at the time
detailing how she had been scratched while separating 2 dogs. One of
the animals later had to be put down after it started foaming at the mouth.

The woman, who was in her 30s, worked as an adoption manager at the
Cats Protection centre at Dundonald [in Northern Ireland]. She is
believed to be the 1st person in Northern Ireland to have contracted
rabies for 70 years. The Eastern Health and Social Services Board in
Belfast led a multi-agency investigation into her case and insisted
the risk to the community was negligible; there is no documented case
of human-to-human transmission of rabies anywhere in the world. In
the UK, the last human death from [canine] rabies contracted
domestically was in 1902. The World Health Organization has estimated
the annual number of human rabies deaths to be between 40 000 and as
high as 70 000. Most of these deaths take place in developing
countries, particularly in South and Southeast Asia.

Communicated by:
ProMED-mail

[The length of the presumed incubation period is surprising but not
exceptional and probably contributed to the late diagnosis of the
unfortunate woman's condition. The vaccination status of the victim
is not revealed, but it must be presumed that she had not sought or
been offered post-exposure vaccination after sustaining a bite from a
aggressive canine while working in South Africa. The deceased woman
should have been offered protective anti-rabies vaccination prior to
her employment in an animal sanctuary, a high risk environment in a
rabies-endemic country.

Northern Ireland and the city of Belfast can be located on the
HealthMap/ProMED-mail interactive map of the United Kingdom at:
.
- Mod.CP]

Monday, December 29, 2008

Rabies, Human - Kazakhstan, Tajikistan

RABIES, HUMAN - KAZAKHSTAN, TAJIKISTAN
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A ProMED-mail post

ProMED-mail is a program of the
International Society for Infectious Diseases


[1] Kazakhstan South
Date: Tue 23 Dec 2008
Source: Kazakhstan Today News Agency [trans. by Corresp.BA, edited]


Fatal case of rabies in a child in Chimkent in Southern Kazakhstan
------------------------------------------------------------------
According to the Press Service of the Kazakhstan Ministry of
Emergency Situations a 4-year-old boy has been admitted to hospital
as a result of rabies in Chimkent. The information came from the
Sanitary Epidemiological Surveillance Center confirming that a child
had been hospitalized on 13 Dec 2008 with a preliminary diagnosis of
rabies. Despite intensive therapy, the child died on 22 Dec 2008 with
a confirmed diagnosis of rabies; 6 people who were in contact are
under observation.

--Communicated by:
ProMED-RUS


[This is the 3rd case of rabies in Chimkent during the past 3 months.
The previous 2 cases were reported in October [2008]; a 52-year-old
woman and a 21-year-old man died as a result of rabies virus
infection. The worst epizootic situation for rabies virus infection
is in the southern part of Kazakhstan (Chimkent in particular).
During the last 10 years more than 30 people have died as a result of
rabies in Kazakhstan. - Corresp.BA]

The HealthMap/ProMED-mail interactive map of Kazakhstan is available at:
-, showing the location
Chimkent close to the southern border with Kirgistan. - Mod.CP]

******
[2] Tajikistan
Date: Sat 27 Dec 2008
Source: AP Asia Plus News Agency [edited]


Tajik medical authorities concerned over increasing rabies cases
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Tajik medical authorities are concerned over incre
asing number of rabies cases in the country. According to Navrouz
Jaffarov, head of the center for sanitary and epidemiologic
supervision within the Ministry of Health (MoH), 13 cases of rabies
have been registered in the country over the first 10 months of this
year [2008], which is 7 cases more than in the same period of last
year. Specialists note that in 70-80 percent of cases, the [fatal
outcome] is caused by delay in seeking medical aid [i.e. post-exposure
vaccination]. Another reason is insufficient financing of medical
facilities for purchase of necessary medical preparations and rabies
vaccines.

Rabies, also known as hydrophobia, is a viral zoonotic neuroinvasive
disease that causes acute encephalitis (inflammation of the brain) in
mammals. It is most commonly caused by a bite from an infected
animal, but occasionally by other forms of contact. If left untreated
in humans it is almost invariably fatal. In some countries it is a
significant killer of livestock.

The rabies virus makes its way to the brain by following the
peripheral nerves. The incubation period of the disease depends on
how far the virus must travel to reach the central nervous system,
usually taking a few months. Once the infection reaches the central
nervous system and symptoms begin to show, the untreated infection is
almost inevitably fatal within days.

In non-vaccinated humans, rabies is almost invariably fatal after
neurological symptoms have developed, but prompt post-exposure
vaccination may prevent the virus from progressing. Rabies kills
around 55 000 people a year, mostly in Asia and Africa.

[Byline: Mavjouda Hasanova]

Thursday, December 25, 2008

Rabies, Human, Bat - Brazil (Goias)

RABIES, HUMAN, BAT - BRAZIL (03): (GOIAS)
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A ProMED-mail post

ProMED-mail is a program of the
International Society for Infectious Diseases


Date: Thu 18 Dec 2008
Source: Globo.com [Portuguese, trans. Mod.TY, edited]


This Thursday [18 Dec 2008], the Health Secretariat in the Federal
District confirmed a case of human rabies in a child 9 years of age
hospitalized for 3 weeks in the Base Hospital. The disease was
confirmed by laboratory tests.

The boy is from Goias state and had been bitten by a bat in that
state. He was brought to the hospital in Brasilia, and his condition
was considered serious. He is in an induced coma in the pediatric ICU
and is undergoing a treatment developed by U.S. doctors.

According to Dr Antezana Disney, Secretary of Health Monitoring in
the DF, the hospitalization of the child does not bring risks of
transmission of the disease.

The Department of Health does not have numbers of human rabies cases
attended to in other states, only those cases of rabies contracted in
the DF; there is only one record from 1978. At the time, the person
died.

--
Communicated by:
ProMED-PORT

[It will be interesting to see whether the patient survives, and, if
so, without serious neurological sequelae. A previous case in October
2008 (see ProMED archive no. 20081122.3689) did survive and was
treated according to the Wisconsin protocol that was developed to
treat a rabies case in Wisconsin, USA, who also survived (see ProMED
archive no 20041231.3459).

A map of Brazil showing the location of Goias state and the Federal
district can be accessed at
.
A HealthMAP/ProMED interactive map of Brazil can be accessed at
.
- Mod.TY]

submitted in the interests of improved public health by: Walter M Woolf, V.M.D. Air Animal Pet Movers .