Outbreak of hantavirus infections kills
three in Washington state
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[July 07, 2017]
By Laura Zuckerman
(Reuters) - Five people have been stricken
with the rare, rodent-borne hantavirus illness in Washington state since
February, three of whom have died, in the state's worst outbreak of the
disease in at least 18 years, public health officials reported on
Thursday.
The three fatal cases also mark the highest death toll from hantavirus
pulmonary syndrome in Washington state during a single year since the
respiratory ailment was first identified in the "Four Corners" region of
the U.S. Southwest in 1993.
The disease has been found to be transmitted to humans from deer mice,
either through contact with urine, droppings, saliva or nesting
materials of infected rodents or by inhaling dust contaminated with the
virus.
Victims in the latest outbreak were men and women ranging in age from
their 20s to their 50s from four counties across the state, said David
Johnson, spokesman for the Washington State Department of Health.
The first diagnosed case this year was in February and the most recent
was last month, when the infection killed a resident of Spokane County
in the eastern part of the state near Washington's border with Idaho.
Three of the five cases, including another one that proved fatal, were
confirmed in the Puget Sound region of King and Skagit counties.
The only common factor among those infected by the disease, which
typically kills more than a third of its victims, is that they were all
exposed to infected mice, Johnson said.
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A micrographic study of liver tissue seen from a Hantavirus
pulmonary syndrome (HPS) patient seen in this undated photo obtained
by Reuters, July 6, 2017. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention/Handout via REUTERS
The last time five confirmed hantavirus cases were diagnosed in
Washington state in a single year was in 1999, although just one of
those proved fatal, Johnson said.
Washington has reported 49 of the 690 hantavirus cases tallied
nationwide from 1993 to January 2016, ranking fifth among 10 Western
states that account for the bulk of all documented infections,
according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC) in Atlanta.
Eighteen infections with four deaths were reported nationally in
2015. The year before, the CDC counted 35 cases, of which 14 were
fatal.
The most highly publicized hantavirus outbreak occurred in 2012,
when 10 visitors to Yosemite National Park in California were
diagnosed with the infection, three of whom died, prompting a
worldwide alert. All but one of those were linked to tent cabins
later found to have been infested by deer mice.
(Editing by Steve Gorman; Editing by Paul Tait)
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