Tuesday, September 9, 2014
What is the mystery respiratory enterovirus D68 making US children sick?
What is the mystery respiratory enterovirus D68 making US children sick?(Guardian).
Hundreds of children are showing symptoms of a rare respiratory illness, hospitals in at least 10 states report, and the CDC is investigating whether the trend could be an unprecedented outbreak of enterovirus D68.
Where is it?
About 475 children have been treated at Missouri’s Children Mercy Hospital in Kansas City, at least 60 of whom are in intensive care, according to a spokesman (CNN). The CDC confirmed at least 19 cases of enterovirus D68 were found at the hospital.
The Children’s Hospital Colorado in Denver told the Denver Post that more than 900 children have been treated for respiratory illnesses in the past three weeks, including 86 admitted to the hospital. At least five children at Rocky Mountain Hospital have been admitted to intensive care, but the CDC has not yet confirmed D68 in Colorado yet.
The CDC also confirmed 11 cases of the virus in Chicago, with patients ranging between 20-months-old to 15, and eight of whom with a history of asthma. The city’s hospitals have treated dozens of children with respiratory symptoms, and a University of Chicago spokesman told a local CBS affiliate that it was “as if winter flu season is starting early”.
No one has died from the outbreak in any state.
Anne Schuchat, director of the CDC’s center for immunization and respiratory diseases, told reporters “the situation is evolving quickly,” and that new outbreak clusters would not be surprising. Mark Pallansch, the CDC’s viral disease division director, said the agency was looking into underlying causes: “It’s not highly unusual but we’re trying to understand what happened this year in terms of these noticeable and much larger clusters of severe respiratory disease.”
Pallansch told CNN that the high number of reported hospitalizations could be “just the tip of the iceberg”. The states that have contacted the CDC are Missouri, Illinois, Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma, Iowa, Kentucky, Ohio, North Carolina and Georgia.
The virus’ most pronounced symptoms are wheezing, coughing and trouble breathing; fever, sneezing and cold-like symptoms are also possible. The virus also exacerbates asthma and pre-existing respiratory trouble, but it rarely affects adults. The rapid pace of symptoms also differentiates the virus from the common cold.Read the full story here.
Labels:
asthma,
CDC,
enterovirus D68,
respiratory virus,
sick kids
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