Saturday, October 04, 2014

Ebola News October 4, 2014

Mysterious outbreak of hemorrhagic fever syndrome in Venezuela kills ten 

 "An outbreak of a mysterious hemorrhagic fever syndrome in the Venezuelan state of Aragua and the country’s capital Caracas has left ten people dead in the last three weeks." 
Similar to Ebola, this syndrome causes patients to experience high fever, skin rashes and bleeding. It has been described as an aggressive disease that leads to a fatal deterioration of health within 72 hours. 
Doctors have urged government authorities to declare a state of emergency in Aragua state; however they have received resistance from a surprising source. 
The state Governor, Tareck El Aissami, has not only denied medical reports of the disease, but has accused the president of the Aragua state Medical Association, Angel Sarmiento, of “creating anxiety.” 
More on dear Governor: Tarek Al-Aissami, the Venezuelan Minister of Interior and Justice, one of the key figures of the Chavez's government, is accused by the media of having used this position to issue passports to members of Hamas and Hezbollah.

Born in Lebanon of Syrian descent in 1980; his father, Carlos Al-Aissami, was the head of the Venezuelan branch of the Iraqi Baath political party. According to reports, before the invasion of Iraq his father held a press conference in which he described himself as a Taliban and called Osama Bin Laden, "the great Mujahedeen, Sheik Osama bin Laden."[1] The Minister's great-uncle Shibli Al-Aissami was a prominent ideologist and assistant to the secretary general of the Baath party in Baghdad during the Saddam Hussein regime.[2] 



50 people being observed for Ebola in US

Immigrants from Ebola outbreak nations caught along the border

The Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has issued a level three warning for US citizens to avoid traveling to West African countries experiencing an outbreak of Ebola.

Immigrants from West African countries have entered the US illegally, according to Chris Cabrera with the National Border Patrol Council.


Officials plan for possible Ebola outbreak in US

5 comments:

Always On Watch said...

The Obama Administration White House refuses to consider a travel ban to prevent people in West African countries from coming to the United States.

We might get the Duncan case and those that he exposed under control, but how many more are being let into our nation in the meantime?

Always On Watch said...

Ebola has not been ruled out for the patient in D.C.'s Howard University Hospital. I saw that information just now on one of our local channels.

Anonymous said...

In Venezuela, doctor flees after being accused of terrorism amid fever outbreak 23 September 2014

Eleven days after news broke that an unknown disease had killed eight people in the city of Maracay, Venezuela, doctors have concluded that the deaths were caused by chikungunya, a mosquito-borne virus. Meanwhile, Ángel Sarmiento, the doctor who first announced the deaths, has fled the country after being accused of terrorism by President Nicolás Maduro.

Although officials initially speculated that the deaths were caused by an unknown hemorrhagic fever, six of the eight original fatalities tested positive for chikungunya when samples were analyzed in nongovernmental labs, says Julio Castro, the health minister of the municipality of Sucre and a professor in the Institute of Tropical Medicine at the Central University of Venezuela (UCV). “We don’t think these deaths are due to an unknown or rare disease,” he told ScienceInsider, adding that “I have no doubt” that chikungunya is responsible.

After arriving in the Caribbean late last year, chikungunya has been sweeping the Americas. As of 19 September, the Pan-American Health Organization reported 729,178 suspected and 9537 confirmed cases in the region. There is no vaccine or cure for the disease, which is similar to dengue fever and causes joint pain. It is fatal in about one in 1000 cases.

Maracay’s cluster of nine fatalities, reported between 30 August and 15 September, has raised questions about exactly how many people are infected. The deadly cases are “the tip of the iceberg,” Castro believes. In a press conference on Monday, Castro and two other health professionals—Gustavo Villasmil, health minister of the state of Miranda, and Manuel Olivares, a doctor at UCV’s hospital—estimated that between 65,000 and 117,000 people in Venezuela are infected with chikungunya. They reached that figure by using World Health Organization standards for calculating the spread of epidemics. But it is dramatically higher than the official tallies released by Venezuela’s federal health ministry, which recognizes just 398 cases of chikungunya and three deaths.

Many infectious diseases, including malaria and dengue, are on the rise in Venezuela, where the public health system has been crippled by a lack of funds and medicine (including antifever drugs that can help treat the symptoms of chikungunya). Sarmiento’s comments about the deaths in Maracay appear to have been the straw that broke the camel’s back when it came to criticism of the government’s public health record, Villasmil says. Now facing prosecution, Sarmiento fled to an undisclosed location in Central America. Villasmil and Castro remain in Venezuela but have left their homes after participating in the press conference, as a precaution against retaliation.

Posted in Health, Latin America

Anonymous said...

Read the comments at the link to comment posted @3:06:00

no2msmBS • 9 days ago

Chikungunya? Early reports said epidemiologists ruled that out in the first eight cases... Another report said autopsy revealed multiple complications in victims:
hepatomegaly, strong steatosis, congestive spleen, pale kidneys,
hemorrhagic enterocolitis, erosive pleuritis and petechiae in the upper
limbs… (they didn't die from a fever). All had same symptoms [hemorrhagic fever] all died within 72 hours... seems they've got more of a problem if chikungunya now causes such a virulent form of hemorrhagic fever... (US too since it's now in Florida) The government was too quick to go after the doctors, they suppress information and I don't trust them at all...chikungunya? I don't know but I think not.
Kathy Stuart no2msmBS • 7 days ago

I do have to agree with you that the information that this Chikungunya does seem a bit specious as it was one of the first diseases that the medical spokesperson said had been ruled out. It is also, as far as I have read not known to cause the terrible symptoms from which these patients died. There is a Dengue varient that does cause hemorrhagic symptoms.

As for the US having a problem with Chikungunya it is all over the country, initially brought home by travelers and is now spreading through mosquitoes. There are at this time around 600 known cases in the US. Most so far imported but some locally acquired.

******for more detailed information on location of reports on Chikungunya in the US see interactive map and select Disease outbreaks map

Anonymous said...

Autopsy reveals multiple complications in victims of fever syndrome
The Medical Association of Aragua state is still waiting for the test results of the samples taken from the dead patients

Tuesday September 16, 2014 05:52 PM
Pictures, medical reports and autopsy data are being gathered by members of the Medical Association of Aragua state, central north Venezuela, where nine people have died in the last few days reportedly from a hemorrhagic fever syndrome. Another person died in Caracas on Sunday from the same condition.

To date, doctors do not know whether the disease is caused by a virus or bacteria. This will be determined by the test results of the samples sent last week to the National Institute of Hygiene (INH) in Caracas, the only place in Venezuela that has the adequate reagents.
[snip]
The doctors attending the meeting insisted that government authorities must declare a health emergency in Aragua state. They reported on 10 deaths from hemorrhagic fever syndrome, including one patient who died in Caracas on Sunday. Sources said that some culture samples were sent to a private laboratory to determine the causes of the disease.

For professional ethics, doctors would not disclose the names of the patients involved, but they provided details of the autopsy of one of the deceased that reveal the aggressiveness of the disease.

The autopsy report shows hepatomegaly, strong steatosis, congestive spleen, pale kidneys, hemorrhagic enterocolitis, erosive pleuritis and petechiae in the upper limbs.

Representatives of the Medical Association of Aragua state remarked that all the deceased had the same symptoms (high fever, skin rashes and bleeding).