Sask. reports 339 cases of West Nile Virus, one death

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Aug 26, 2007, 11:58:50 PM8/26/07
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Plagues, Pestilences and Diseases

Sask. reports 339 cases of West Nile Virus, one death

Updated Fri. Aug. 24 2007 3:32 PM ET

CTV.ca News Staff

Saskatchewan has had what is believed to be the first death related to
West Nile virus in the province this summer.

Chief medical health officer Dr. Ross Findlater says the person was in
their 80s and lived in the Sun Country Health Region. The person
tested positive for West Nile virus but officials don't have enough
information to say whether the illness was the direct cause of death.

There are now 339 confirmed or suspected human cases of West Nile
virus in Saskatchewan. That's up dramatically from only 20 confirmed
or suspected cases throughout all of last year.

Earlier this week, Manitoba announced that it had confirmed 213 cases.
Two West Nile virus-related deaths were also reported in Manitoba. In
one, West Nile was the likely cause of death; in the other, it is the
suspected cause.

Of the new Manitoba cases, 18 were identified by Canadian Blood
Services routine screening. The donated blood units were discarded.

Alberta has had more than 90 West Nile cases as of Aug. 18, with more
than half reported the week before. And Ontario health officials
confirmed two cases of West Nile, the province's first cases this
year.

This year's numbers are a significant jump from 2006, when there were
only 127 cases across the whole country.

The Prairies have seen ideal weather conditions this year for Culex
tarsalis mosquitoes, the type that carries West Nile virus. Weather
conditions have been hot and humid, providing the mosquitoes with lots
of places to breed.

Many of the cases being identified now were likely contracted weeks
ago. Peak exposure to west Nile is late-July to mid-August and the
infection can take up to three weeks to surface.

Most people who contract West Nile -- about 80 per cent -- have no
symptoms. Those who do fall ill develop flu-like symptoms such as
fever, headache, fatigue and body aches. Children, the elderly and
people with weakened immune systems are at greater risk of developing
symptoms.

In rare cases, it can cause a serious neurological disorder that can
lead to death. The number of severe cases usually ranges from one to
35 cases per summer.

It is too early to predict the number of severe cases that will be
reported this year.

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