Posted on 09/09/2012 7:38:53 AM PDT by blam
A 7-Year-Old Girl Caught Bubonic Plague On A Camping Trip
Allison Jackson, GlobalPost
Sep. 8, 2012, 3:03 PM
A seven-year-old girl is lucky to be alive after contracting the bubonic plague during a family camping trip in southwest Colorado.
Sierra Jane Downing became sick a few days after the outing in Pagosa Springs.
Her parents Darcy and Sean thought she had the flu until she started having seizures, the Associated Press reported.
They rushed her to hospital where doctors eventually diagnosed the bubonic plaguethe first confirmed case of the deadly disease in Colorado since 2006.
"I didn't know what was going on. I just reacted," Sean Downing was quoted by the AP as saying.
"I thought she died."
CBS Denver reported that Downing was moved out of the intensive care unit on Monday.
"I had never seen it," Jennifer Snow, one of the treating doctors, was quoted as saying.
"You learn about it in medical school during microbiology, but I had never seen a case of it before.
If she would have stayed at home she could have easily died within 24 to 48 hours."
Doctors believe Downing contracted the Black Death from infected fleas near a dead squirrel, 9 News reported.
The bubonic plague wiped out nearly one-third of Europe during the 14th century, but is now easily treated with antibiotics.
(Excerpt) Read more at businessinsider.com ...
Until the germs become resistant, as in Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). Even in 1958 when my wife and I had it, penicillin wouldn't stop it -- it took tetracycline.
Now its three who have died from Hanta virus in Yosemite. And there are people all over the world now ill with it from traveling this summer to Yosemite.
What treatment for this virus (not stopped by antibiotics)?
>>Doctors believe Downing contracted the Black Death from infected fleas near a dead squirrel, 9 News reported.<<
Children shouldn’t play with dead things.
I agree 100% and already have a sizeable stash of it. (I keep it cool, dark and dry and expect it to still be good after fifteen years)
I don't bother the doctor any more, I get mine here.
With time, probably much less than the 15 years you are planning, tetracyclines like doxycyline degrade into toxic products. In rare cases, expired tetracylines can cause Fanconi syndrome, renal failure and, potentially, death.
Doxycyline is safer than other tetracycline in this regard, but the potential for renal damage from expired Doxycycline is something to consider when intentionally using 15 year old antibiotics.
Just buy some new stuff every now and then, already, so you don’t have to rely on 15 year old antibiotics when the time comes!
"Studies performed by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) revealed that 90% of medications tested were perfectly fine to use 8-to-15 years after the expiration date. There was apparently no danger in the grand majority of cases. The FDA tested more than 100 medications, both prescription and non-prescription, and continues to study the issue today. The exceptions were mostly in liquid form (antibiotics included, but also insulin, nitroglycerine and some others). What is true is that the potency of an antibiotic could possibly decrease over time, so it is important that your medication cache is in a cool, dry place if at all possible. Refrigeration is an excellent method to maintain the full potency of many drugs."
"There is a lot of evidence that suggests that Yersinia pestis may not have been the causative agent for the Black Death, and it was likely something else, and something else that is out there right now," said Brian Bossak, an environmental health scientist at Georgia Southern University.
He is among those who suspect a hemorrhagic virus which causes bleeding and fever, like ebola swept through 14th-century Europe. The high lethality, rapid transmission and periodic resurgences seen in the Black Death are characteristic of a virus, according to Bossak, who frames this as a question in urgent need of resolution.
Striped ground squirrels all over the Sierra Nevada have been diagnosed with bubonic plague. There are millions of the little pesky things. They make tunnels the Viet Cong would be proud of.
There are warning signs everywhere to NOT touch them or try to pick one up or to try to feed one.
Thanks.
Good advice and easy to heed.
Oops-should have read all the posts....bad here.
Thanks for that link!
Skip the doctor and the vet. Click on the link in post #25.
PING!
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