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It was the first bubonic plague case Snow and her colleagues had seen. "I credit them for thinking outside the box," said Dr. Tracy Butler, medical director of the hospital's pediatric intensive unit. It's not clear why Colorado hasn't seen another human case until now, state public health veterinarian Elisabeth Lawaczeck said. By the night of Aug. 25, Sierra Jane's heart rate was high, her blood pressure was low, and a swollen lymph node in her left groin was so painful it hurt to undergo the ultrasound that detected the enlarged node, Snow said. Doctors say the girl could be discharged from the hospital within a week. On Wednesday, Sierra Jane flashed a smile with two dimples as she faced reporters in a wheelchair, her pink-toed socks peeking out from the white blanket enveloping her as she held a brown teddy bear. "She's just a fighter," said her mother, Darcy Downing.
Darcy Downing said her daughter may have been infected by insects near a dead squirrel she wanted to bury at their campground on U.S. Forest Service land, even though Darcy had warned her daughter to leave it alone. She remembered catching her daughter near the squirrel with her sweat shirt on the ground. Her daughter later had the shirt tied around her torso, where doctors spotted insect bites. The bubonic plague, or Black Death, killed an estimated 25 million people in Europe in the Middle Ages. Today, it can be treated with antibiotics, but it's important to catch it early. "If she had stayed home, she could've easily died within 24 to 48 hours from the shock of infection," Snow said.
[Associated
Press;
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