Old virus causing new disease in United States

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Pastor Dale Morgan

unread,
Oct 13, 2007, 1:18:50 AM10/13/07
to Bible-Pro...@googlegroups.com
*Plagues, Pestilences and Diseases

Old virus causing new disease in United States*

12 Oct 2007 19:16:32 GMT
Source: Reuters

By Maggie Fox,
Health and Science Editor

WASHINGTON, Oct 12 (Reuters) - A strain of virus best known for causing
colds and "stomach flu" is becoming more common and more dangerous, U.S.
researchers report.

They said that adenovirus 21 was surprisingly common and was causing an
unexpected level of severe disease and deaths.

The researchers used a new test developed by the U.S. Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention and said the wider use of such tests
might help doctors and health officials better understand what diseases
are making people sick.

"It makes the case that if you did survey regularly and routinely for
adenoviruses you would get more information and a little advance
information on where the bad ones are likely to pop up and to be ready,"
said Dr. Catherine Laughlin of the National Institute of Allergy and
Infectious Diseases, which paid for the study.

Adenoviruses cause colds, bronchitis and stomach upsets, but can also
cause chronic airway obstruction, a heart infection called myocarditis,
a sometimes deadly bowel condition called intussusception and sudden
infant death at birth.

Gregory Gray of the Center for Emerging Infectious Diseases at the
University of Iowa and colleagues were trying to get a handle on which
types of adenoviruses were most common and which were causing serious
outbreaks of disease.

This had not been easy to do because the old diagnostic tests were slow
and could not differentiate easily among the different strains of
adenovirus. And doctors rarely test patients to see what infection they
have.

"The new test is very elegant and specific," Laughlin said in a
telephone interview.

Gray's team used the test on 2,200 samples from 22 U.S. medical
facilities, including eight military sites. Military personnel are
especially susceptible to outbreaks of all kinds of disease, including
adenoviruses.

KILLER VIRUS

Adenovirus 21 was found in 1 percent of specimens in 2004, but in 2.4
percent in 2006. And it was making people much sicker than the other
strains, killing 50 percent of bone marrow transplant patients, for
instance.

These patients are at extra risk from infections as their entire immune
systems are destroyed before they get transplants of new bone marrow tissue.

"For both populations, we observed a statistically significant
increasing trend of adenovirus type 21 detection over time," Gray and
colleagues wrote in their report.

And half of them were sick enough to be hospitalized.

"The high prevalence of hospitalization among the patients with
adenovirus infection was surprising," Gray's team wrote in their report,
published in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases.

Laughlin said the test would need to be commercialized, but having it
available might encourage companies to develop better drugs and vaccines
against adenoviruses.

"I think there will also be more effort in drug and vaccine development,
especially because the numbers of immunosuppressed people that we have
around really has been increasing," she said -- including cancer
patients, organ recipients and people infected with the AIDS virus.

The Department of Defense has also contracted for a new vaccine against
adenovirus types 4 and 7.

Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages