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"Very Aggressive" Dengue Fever Outbreak in Mexico
El Universal (Mexico) and original reporting ^ | April 27, 2007 | Greg C.

Posted on 04/26/2009 10:39:17 PM PDT by FreedomFighter1013

So far this year there have been 200 confirmed cases of an extremely aggressive strain of dengue virus in Mexico's Pacific coast state of Sinaloa. The new strain has prompted that state's Secretary of Health to issue a warning to residents to take precautions to reduce its potential spread, by eliminating standing water where mosquitoes breed. Sinaloa encompasses the resort town of Mazatlan.

Secretary Héctor Ponce Ramos, indicated that this year's strain of dengue fever is more lethal than in previous years and may be based on DENV-3 AND DENV-4 strains of the disease, which in theory would yield very deadly results and has only rarely been seen before.

Mr. Ponce said this new strain is more deadly than dengue fever or dengue hemorrhagic fever which the state had experienced in the past. The virus is so severe, patients... (continued here)

(Excerpt) Read more at gregcontreras.us ...


TOPICS: Front Page News; Mexico; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: dengue; fever; hemorrhagic; immigration; mexico
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To: FreedomFighter1013

http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=46579

HEALTH-LATIN AMERICA: Dengue Spreading and Increasingly Lethal
By Marcela Valente*

The Aedes aegypti mosquito feeding on human blood.

Credit:Public domain

BUENOS AIRES, Apr 21 2009 (Tierramérica) - The population’s susceptibility to suffering more severe forms of dengue is worrying health experts, as the epidemic in South America expands in Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil and Paraguay.

Dengue is a viral illness that manifests itself in different ways for each person, and can be much more severe for some than others, depending on risk factors. The biggest danger, say experts, is falling ill with dengue a second time.

According to the Pan-American Health Organisation (PAHO), the total cases of infection reported in the Americas fell 5.5 percent last year with respect to 2007, from 900,754 to 850,769, with most of the cases occurring in Brazil and Bolivia.

However, in the same period, the proportion of serious cases jumped 46 percent, and the number of deaths increased 84 percent – from 317 to 584 -, revealing a greater presence of severe manifestations of the fever caused by one of dengue’s four virus strains.

That trend has continued this year. From January to early April, PAHO reported more than 215,000 cases in the Americas, many of them in South America - in Argentina, the epidemic is in full swing - and a new hike in deaths, from 1.2 percent of those infected in 2007 to 2.2 percent so far in 2009.

People are infected with dengue by a virus-carrying Aedes aegypti mosquito, which breed in clean, stagnant water in tropical and subtropical regions around the world.

It is thought that after recovering from an initial infection of dengue, the individual is immune to that strain for life. However, that person becomes even more vulnerable to the other strains of dengue.

An estimated 20 to 50 percent of dengue cases are asymptomatic or go undiagnosed because the symptoms - fever, headache, and muscle and joint pain - are confused with the flu.

But other patients develop slight haemorrhaging, a rash or bleeding gums. The most severe cases, of dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF) and dengue shock syndrome, are more frequent among those who are suffering a second infection.

In Brazil, the Ministry of Health reported that in the first 10 weeks of this year, there were 114,355 cases, of which 603 were severe and 23 ended in death.

In Bolivia, Juan Carlos Arraya, head of the Health Ministry’s vector-transmitted diseases, confirmed for Tierramérica that there have been 56,530 cases, the greatest number recorded in the last 20 years in that country. “Likely dengue hemorrhagic fever” affected 174 people, and 25 people died.

PAHO reported 2,277 cases in Paraguay, five of them severe, although they were not diagnosed as DHF. That country has suffered severe epidemics in recent years, with 28,000 cases, 17 of which were fatal, in 2007.

Paraguay’s Ministry of Health says that because those who have already overcome a first infection are vulnerable, there are 600,000 people (10 percent of the population) in danger of contracting DHF.

Health authorities in Argentina had recorded more than 12,500 cases by mid-April, although provincial governments and hospital staff believe the real total is three times higher.

This year’s is the worst epidemic since the disease reappeared in Argentina in 1998, with five confirmed deaths so far. There have been multiple complaints of delays in releasing official information.

The general outlook has put epidemiologists and virologists on alert. But experts in Argentina and Brazil consulted by Tierramérica disagree on the factors that make people vulnerable to the most serious type of dengue.

The main concern in Argentina is the threat of second infection, because of the higher risk of contracting DHF, which is difficult to control in children ages two to 14, the elderly, or the chronically ill, especially if they do not receive immediate treatment.

But Brazil’s Oswaldo Cruz Foundation (Fiocruz) warns that the most serious cases can also manifest in a first-time infection.

In serious cases, the infected individual requires hospitalisation due to increased vascular permeability, loss of plasma and reduced platelets, which are needed to help blood coagulate.

Although PAHO underscores that studies demonstrate that sequential infection heightens the risk of DHF, infectious disease expert Dr. Rogério Valls de Souza of Fiocruz says “there is no definitive data” about how many people are vulnerable to a severe case of dengue because they already had the disease.

“Dengue is related to the type of virus that is circulating. For example, in the Rio de Janeiro epidemic - in the 2008 southern hemisphere summer - the virus that circulated most was type 3, and the most serious cases, not necessarily hemorrhagic, were manifest in the first infection,” he noted in a Tierramérica interview.

He said that even in PAHO, there are attempts at analysing how to avoid differentiating between “classic” and “hemorrhagic” for being a strict categorisation that does not always include the most serious manifestations of the disease.

In Argentina, however, the experts maintain that differentiation.

“In the Americas we have four strains of dengue. Once a person has fallen ill, the next time, no matter how much time has passed, if he or she is infected by another strain there is a full chance of developing the hemorrhagic type,” Dr. Jorge Gorodner told Tierramérica. Mortality in that case is 15 to 35 percent, he said.

Gorodner, a professor of infectious medicine at the National University of the Northeast and lead researcher at the Institute of Regional Medicine, says this is the first time an epidemic of hemorrhagic cases has occurred in Argentina.

“Almost 100 percent of the infected are susceptible (to DHF). But the severity of the disease depends on each person,” said Gorodner, complaining that the lack of epidemiological oversight means the epidemic causes even more harm.

Dr. Alfredo Seijo, head of the dengue unit at the Muñiz Hospital in Buenos Aires, explained to Tierramérica that “the outbreak in Argentina is important due to the number of people who are left vulnerable to DHF.”

According to Seijo, the number of DHF cases is on the rise in all countries where dengue has spread.

Experts say the only effective weapon is to reduce the presence of the Aedes aegypti mosquito, especially by eliminating sites and containers where water collects, which are ideal for larvae to develop. In parallel, community prevention campaigns are essential.

Controlling the disease-spreading vector is the key, until a vaccine has been developed. PAHO and the experts consulted agree that despite advances towards developing a vaccine, it is difficult to find a formula that is effective against all four strains of the dengue virus.

Partial immunity could in fact be dangerous, because infection with another strain in a vaccinated individual could manifest in the most severe form, thus generating an even greater risk.

(*Fabiana Frayssinet in Rio de Janeiro, Natalia Ruiz Díaz in Asunción, and Franz Chávez in La Paz contributed reporting for this article. This story was originally published by Latin American newspapers that are part of the Tierramérica network. Tierramérica is a specialised news service produced by IPS with the backing of the United Nations Development Programme, United Nations Environment Programme and the World Bank.) (END/2009)


41 posted on 04/27/2009 1:28:32 AM PDT by stlnative
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To: pillut48; Bobalu

Dengue has always been very dangerous. It has not been reported internationally, but a virulent strain appeared in northern Australia this summer. At least two people died and the authorities have been on the hop trying to prevent it.


42 posted on 04/27/2009 1:45:10 AM PDT by BlackVeil
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To: FreedomFighter1013

Coming soon to a Home Depot parking lot near you...


43 posted on 04/27/2009 2:00:16 AM PDT by Redcloak ("Oh, bother!" said Pooh, as he chambered his last round.)
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To: FreedomFighter1013

I’d take the Dengue Fever over the Mandingo Fever that’s been rampant in this country for the last year or so. A lot less lethal....


44 posted on 04/27/2009 2:04:05 AM PDT by Electric Graffiti (Yonder stands your orphan with his gun)
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To: stlnative
People are infected with dengue by a virus-carrying Aedes aegypti mosquito, which breed in clean, stagnant water in tropical and subtropical regions around the world.

Just in case people think that it won't happen here because most of the U.S. is not tropical or subtropical, here are the regions of the United States that support Aedes aegypti growth: Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Florida, Tennessee, Kentucky, South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, New York, Delaware, Maryland and the District of Columbia. Western states i n c I u d e Arkansas, Illinois, Kansas, Louisiana, Missouri, Oklahoma, New Mexico and Texas. Densities are greatest in the Gulf Coastal states.

But dengue fever, yellow fever, and chikungunya are not the only mosquito-borne illnesses we have to worry about. The Anopheles freeborni mosquito is the principal species that carried malaria even in Siberia, throughout northern Europe, and here in the United States (eradicated in 1951) and Canada. And this isn't because of global warming since malaria was rampant in these regions back during the cold period between the Medieval Warming Event and the late 19th century. The reason that malaria and other mosquito-borne diseases have been increasing recently (the late 20th century and this decade) is because DDT was banned back in the early 1970s. Now we're paying the price for yet another environmentalist crackpot scheme. Thank you, Algore, Rachel Carson, William Ruckelshaus, and all you other anti-human freaks.
45 posted on 04/27/2009 2:18:45 AM PDT by aruanan
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To: FreedomFighter1013

This is making things easier for Chris Simcox....McCain, La Raza, US Chamber of Comm. cant be too happy now


46 posted on 04/27/2009 2:27:30 AM PDT by UCFRoadWarrior (The Biggest Threat To American Soverignty Is Rampant Economic Anti-Americanism)
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To: stlnative
The other principal vector is An. quadrimaculatus. Both species are still here in the United States. All we need to get American malaria going again is enough malarial visitors to the United States getting bitten in the summertime.

More on the mosquito-borne chikungunya virus, also described as a "reemerging disease" (reemerging because the most effective control, DDT, was discontinued because of the environmentalist wacko Ruckelshaus, then-head of the EPA*)
Chikungunya Symptoms and Treatment
Chikungunya virus infection can cause a debilitating illness, most often characterized by fever, headache, fatigue, nausea, vomiting, muscle pain, rash, and joint pain. The term ‘chikungunya’ means ‘that which bends up’ in the Kimakonde language of Mozambique.

Acute chikungunya fever typically lasts a few days to a few weeks, but as with dengue, West Nile fever and other arboviral fevers, some patients have prolonged fatigue lasting several weeks. Additionally, some patients have reported incapacitating joint pain, or arthritis which may last for weeks or months. The prolonged joint pain associated with chikungunya virus is not typical of dengue. No hemorrhagic cases related to chikungunya virus infection have been conclusively documented in the scientific literature. Co-circulation of dengue fever in many areas may mean that chikungunya fever cases are sometimes clinically misdiagnosed as dengue infections, therefore the incidence of chikungunya fever could be much higher than what has been previously reported.

The incubation period (time from infection to illness) can be 2-12 days, but is usually 3-7 days. “Silent” chikungunya virus infections (infections without illness) do occur; but how commonly this happens is not yet known. Chikungunya virus infection (whether clinically apparent or silent) is thought to confer life-long immunity. Fatalities related to chikungunya virus are rare.
*EPA, another pestilence wrought on the United States by environmentalists coming out of the Barry Commoner-led movement against what they called the flood of man-made carcinogens saturating our technological society that would, if nothing was done immediately, cause the destruction of the Western world by 2000 by a cancer epidemic. The EPA was one of those knee-jerk, "we gotta do it now or it'll be too late" solutions that continues to put an economic brake on the United States with its outmoded science and technology. It is to cutting-edge science and technology what the public school system is to excellence in education. Barry Commoner's movement was focused on "remaking" the United States, turning it, through government control, from a free market, technological society, into a socialist "community." (read more about this whole travesty in The Apocalyptics by Edith Efron You'll see exact parallels to the global warming movement now, especially since some of the same people are involved). What is it about people named Barry wanting to inflict socialism on the United States?

47 posted on 04/27/2009 2:45:43 AM PDT by aruanan
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To: BagCamAddict

My understanding is recently the feds don’t want petitions, online or paper. You have to literally get in their faces screaming.


48 posted on 04/27/2009 3:01:17 AM PDT by Buddygirl
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To: Bobalu

You know I hate to even say it, but Glenn Beck a few weeks ago was talking about the collapse of Mexico....

they called him crazy.

Poor country, little to no money in the people or government other than drug cartel money, corruption...


49 posted on 04/27/2009 3:02:36 AM PDT by EBH (May God Save the Republic!)
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To: 444Flyer
>>>Danmit Janet, close the border<<<
—She'll likely close the Canadian border to nip this in the bud.
50 posted on 04/27/2009 3:28:13 AM PDT by Shqipo ((A new tagline is currently under construction))
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To: EBH

Good point, and now Swine Flu. They were just talking on Fox and Friends about the economic impact of people not traveling this summer to avoid the flu. Gas prices will rise as well if the Mexican gov’t loses control of their state run oil co.’s or countries close ports to Mexico. Bird flu turned out to be all talk but so many things are happening right now, I just have a bad feeling about this. Glenn’s been saying it for a long time: the perfect storm. Batten down the hatches, folks.


51 posted on 04/27/2009 3:31:58 AM PDT by athelass (Proud Mom of a Sailor & 2 Marines! Obama is going through the country like flu through Mexico)
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To: aruanan
Thanks, bfl.

Cheers!

52 posted on 04/27/2009 3:41:49 AM PDT by grey_whiskers (The opinions are solely those of the author and are subject to change without notice.)
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To: Shqipo

Canadians will be fleeing the country for decent health care too. A Canadian woman who is ill in Mexico has been refused entry to Canada because THERE ARE NO ICU BEDS AVAILABLE IN THE GTA. And this is the FIRST evacuation request..


53 posted on 04/27/2009 4:16:14 AM PDT by Appleby
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To: BagCamAddict
It’s bizarre that you can’t take a dog or fruits/vegetables to, OR FROM, most other countries without quarantine, but people? What diseases? What parasites? Come one, come all !!

In the US, some diseases have "constitutional rights."

Mark

54 posted on 04/27/2009 4:51:15 AM PDT by MarkL (Do I really look like a guy with a plan?)
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To: FreedomFighter1013

bttt


55 posted on 04/27/2009 4:55:09 AM PDT by Guenevere (coram Deo)
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To: FreedomFighter1013

Mexico is a giant petri dish.


56 posted on 04/27/2009 4:56:28 AM PDT by TADSLOS
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To: Buddygirl

Yeah, but fork the feds. It isn’t about what they want, it’s about what WE, THE PEOPLE want.

And even if they don’t “want” an online petition, I BET someone would take notice if it got 10 million signatures. The TEA parties got over a million people, and they had to physically go somewhere. An online petition shouldn’t have any trouble getting 1 million, or 10 million signatures.

Someone needs to start one. (I can’t on a blackberry.)


57 posted on 04/27/2009 5:19:13 AM PDT by BagCamAddict ("Wolverines!!")
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To: Larry381
Our government which was supposed to protect American citizens has all but turned a blind eye and is allowing third world peoples, and their native diseases, to sneak into this country in huge numbers.

Amen, absolutely amen. It's all about political power to our ruling class. Nothing that happens to us peasants matters to these people as long as they maintain their power.

There was a whooping cough epidemic here several years ago that went essentially unreported. You and I know good and well where that epidemic came from. I'm sure it killed some people, but mostly it just scared the hell out of a bunch of us. Your scenario has already happened.

58 posted on 04/27/2009 5:23:11 AM PDT by Hardastarboard (I long for the days when advertisers didn't constantly ask about the health of my genital organs.)
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To: Bobalu
WTF is going on in Mexico.... It’s like the phukin Middle Ages down there. What’s next? the Black Plague and Spanish Inquisition...Nobody expects the Inquisition!
59 posted on 04/27/2009 5:54:28 AM PDT by Hawk1976 (It is better to die in battle than it is to live as a slave.)
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To: BagCamAddict; All

Good idea...but I have absolutely no idea how to do it!

Anyone???


60 posted on 04/27/2009 6:02:07 AM PDT by Kimberly GG (Add (MEXICAN SWINE FLU) to titles/keywords on new threads!!)
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