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Suspcted Monkeypox In Paducah, Kentucky
Paducah Sun ^ | June 13, 2002

Posted on 06/13/2003 8:56:54 PM PDT by I_love_weather

Suspected monkeypox case investigated in Purchase area The owner and the location where the case was reported were not identified to protect the owner's anonymity.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Staff Report --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

MAYFIELD, Ky.--The Purchase District Health Department said Thursday that state officials are investigating one suspected case of monkeypox in western Kentucky. Sharon Godec, nursing director for the department, said the animal that is suspected to be infected is being tested by the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources. She would not identify the owner or the location where the case was reported, she said, to protect the owner's anonymity.

Godec said she did not know how long it would take to get results of the test. Fish and Wildlife Resources officials were unavailable for comment Thursday night.

The Purchase District Health Department will become directly involved only if a human is infected with monkeypox, Godec said. The Center for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta said 54 possible cases have been reported in Illinois, Indiana, Wisconsin and New Jersey, though not all involve people.

One Wisconsin case involves a federal consumer safety inspector at a Milwaukee slaughterhouse and meat processing plant, U.S. Department of Agriculture spokesman Scott Cohen said. However, he added, the disease cannot be spread through contact with food.

The Kentucky Cabinet for Health Services announced Thursday that it is asking anyone who has had contact with a prairie dog, Gambian giant rat or other recently acquired exotic animals to seek medical attention if a fever, cough, rash or swollen lymph nodes develop within three weeks of contact. They also asked doctors who treat such symptoms in humans or animals to report the case immediately to the local health department.

Health services said species susceptible to the virus may include primates, rabbits and some rodents. Though monkeypox is not usually fatal, a skin rash, similar to, but less infectious than, smallpox may develop, health services said. The incubation period for humans and animals is about 12 days.

The Kentucky cabinet said that in May, a Milwaukee distributor sold prairie dogs to two nearby pet shops at an animal swap meet. The distributor acquired the infected prairie dogs, and a Gambian giant rat, from a northern Illinois distributor.

Denise Marshall, owner and manager of Neptune's Castle pet store on Broadway, is asking anyone who bought a prairie dog from her store since April 15 to contact her. She said the U.S. Department of Agriculture is trying to collect as much information as possible about prairie dog sales in Kentucky to see if the monkeypox outbreak is isolated.

Marshall said her store has sold 12 prairie dogs and that eight owners have been contacted. Each of those prairie dogs was tested and shown to be free of disease. She said all of the prairie dogs her store has sold came from Bensenville, Ill., and not from the infected dealer in Villa Park, Ill. She said she is certain the other four prairie dogs are disease-free, as well.

Marshall said anyone who purchased a prairie dog from any other dealer may also contact her and she will forward their information to the USDA, as well.


TOPICS: Front Page News
KEYWORDS: kentucky; monkeypox

1 posted on 06/13/2003 8:56:54 PM PDT by I_love_weather
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To: I_love_weather
Well, it looks like Monkey Pox is the latest in the media's LOVE AFFAIR with exotic virus/sickness. First it was West Nile, then SARS, now Monkey Pox. Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt. Why does anyone pay attention to the media anymore? Why don't they put deaths from Monkey Pox in relation to deaths from heart disease? It would make things a bit more clear...
2 posted on 06/13/2003 9:11:30 PM PDT by xrp
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To: xrp
Because this exotic disease thing really is new. A new and deadly disease hasn't poped up out of nowhere since AIDS, and SARS is much more contagious than AIDS. AIDS might be 100% fatal over 10 or 20 years but SARS seems to be around 15% fatal over 10 or 20 weeks. Monkeypox has NEVER been seen in the western hemisphere, open festering pussy sores covering the body, including the mouth and throat. Media hype? I wish.
3 posted on 06/13/2003 9:34:24 PM PDT by IYAAYAS (Live free or die trying)
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To: I_love_weather
Damned killer groundhogs.

http://www.boners.com/content/790122.1.jpg
4 posted on 06/13/2003 9:59:00 PM PDT by South40
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To: I_love_weather; All
-Strange new disease outbreaks--
5 posted on 06/13/2003 11:16:59 PM PDT by backhoe (Just an old keyboard cowboy, ridin' the trackball into the sunset...)
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To: South40
ROTFL.....that's classic!
6 posted on 06/14/2003 12:06:04 AM PDT by cherry_bomb88 (Are you on the right side of the wrong issue or the wrong side of the right issue?)
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