Dead Illinois resident
had bacteria linked to Wisconsin outbreak
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[April 13, 2016]
(Reuters) - A northern Illinois
resident who died after being diagnosed this year with a blood infection
known as Elizabethkingia had the same strain of the bacteria linked to
more than a dozen deaths in Wisconsin, health officials said on Tuesday.
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Neither the resident's age nor many other details were released, but
Melaney Arnold, spokeswoman for the Illinois Department of Public
Health (IDPH), said the individual had suffered from underlying
health issues.
IDPH officials have sent alerts to hospitals requesting they report
all cases of Elizabethkingia and save any specimens for possible
laboratory testing, Arnold added in a statement.
The infection has infected 48 mostly elderly people in Wisconsin,
killing 15. Both Michigan and Illinois have each reported one death
and one person infected, the statement said.
The patients who died in Wisconsin had serious underlying
conditions, health officials have said, and it remains unclear
whether the bacteria caused all the fatalities.
Wisconsin, Michigan and Illinois investigators are working with
Atlanta-based The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to
determine the possible source of the bacteria.
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Elizabethkingia bacteria are rarely reported to cause illness in
humans, and can sometimes be found in the respiratory tract.
Symptoms can include fever, shortness of breath and chills or
cellulitis. Confirmation of the illness requires a laboratory test.
(Reporting by Justin Madden; Editing by Daniel Wallis and James
Dalgleish)
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