Bacterial infection in
Wisconsin may have killed 18; CDC investigating
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[March 10, 2016]
By Justin Madden
(Reuters) - A blood infection known as
Elizabethkingia has been linked to 18 deaths in Wisconsin and local
health officials and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
are investigating the source, officials said on Wednesday.
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The infection has been found in 48 people between Nov. 1, 2015 and
March 9, according to the Wisconsin Department of Health Services
(DHS) website. Most of the patients, in southeastern and southern
Wisconsin, are older than 65 and have a history of at least one
underlying serious illness.
Health officials are unaware how the outbreak began, but were
working with eight CDC investigators to determine the cause, DHS and
CDC spokeswomen said.
Elizabethkingia are bacteria that are rarely reported to cause
illness in humans, and can sometimes be found in the respiratory
tract.
Symptoms of illness that can result from exposure to the bacteria
can include fever, shortness of breath, and chills or cellulitis.
Confirmation of the illness requires a laboratory test.
Officials are not sure whether Elizabethkingia contributed to or
caused the death of the 18 people, even though they tested positive
for the infection, according to the Wisconsin DHS.
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(Reporting by Justin Madden; Editing by Alan Crosby)
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