Sewa Motor Jogja 2023 Batara Kresna Rental Motor Wisata Tarif Sewa Murah Mulai 50rb / 24jam Fasilitas 2 Helm 2 Jas Hujan Free Antar Untuk Varian Matic Dan Jemput Motor Ke Hotel, Stasiun Tugu, Stasiun Lempuyangan, Dan Lokasi Dimana Anda Berada. Bisa Sewa Harian, Mingguan Maupun Bulanan Pesan Lewat WA 081213359726
WHO: Deadly E. coli is New Strain of Bacteria, Source Still Unknown
WHO: Deadly E. coli is New Strain of
Bacteria, Source Still Unknown Outbreak More Severe than
Ever Seen Before, Experts Say
The lethal E. coli bacteria that has left
18 dead and more than 1,500 sick in
Europe is a new strain that experts
have never seen before, the World
Health Organization announced
Thursday.
Early investigations suggest that the strain is an altered type of two
E. coli bacteria with deadly genes that, experts said, could explain
the widespread and dangerous nature of the illness.
"This is a unique strain that has never been isolated from patients
before," Hilde Kruse, a food safety expert at the WHO, told The
Associated Press. "[It has] various characteristics that make it
more virulent and toxin-producing."
The source of the bacteria remains unknown, continuing to baffle
experts.
The strain has hit eight countries in Europe, but has been
concentrated in Germany.
Two cases have surfaced in U.S. hospitals, said Lola Russell, a
spokeswoman for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Russell did not disclose the names or locations of those who had
fallen ill, but she did say their illnesses were associated with recent
travel to Germany. Both are expected to survive.
Moreover, a local Texas health department confirmed Wednesday
that seven cases of E. coli appeared in the Amarillo area this
week, but Russell said those cases were not associated with the
European outbreak.
Donna Makkhavane, a spokeswoman for the city of Amarillo, said
that all seven cases were found in children, and "most were under
5 years old."
Makkhavane could not confirm the source of the E. coli outbreak in
the children, but local experts are investigating food sources,
international travel and exposure to animals.
Most E. coli strains are harmless, but those that do cause sickness
usually trigger bouts of bloody diarrhea, fever and abdominal
cramps. In the bacteria's most serious and severe form, the
infection causes hemolytic uremic syndrome, or HUS, a condition
that attacks the kidneys and can cause stroke, seizure, coma and
death. In a typical outbreak, only about 1 to 2 percent of those
affected experience HUS.
"Initial information suggests [the strain] is more virulent or
"meaner" than those previously seen," said Dr. Christopher Ohl,
associate professor of medicine in the infectious disease division
at Wake Forest University School of Medicine. "Although we don't
know how many total infections there are, it seems that it is more
likely to result in HUS."
Despite a massive medical dragnet, the culprit for the outbreak has
not yet been determined. Tomatoes, cucumbers and lettuce
consumed in the region are being tested for the E. coli bacteria.
Because the source of the outbreak is still unknown, it is possible
that tainted products could be unknowingly transported into the
U.S., warned Dr. William Schaffner, chairman of the department of
preventive medicine at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine.
"Bacteria do not need a passport," said Schaffner. "There already
have been a couple of cases in the U.S. The patients had traveled
to Hamburg, returned to the U.S. where they became ill. This could
happen again and the E. coli could be transmitted to family, friends
and others in the U.S."
And doctors said recent proposed budget cuts to the Food and
Drug Administration's food surveillance program may make
outbreaks in the U.S. even more likely in the future.
"I worry that the FDA is not properly resourced to be able to
police imported food," said ABC News' senior health and medical
editor Dr. Richard Besser. "This is so important for preventing the
introduction of products that could be harmful."
E. coli Outbreak Resistant to Antibiotics
But Schaffner said that it is not likely that this outbreak will spread
to the U.S., because there is not a lot of fresh produce that is
imported into the U.S. food supply from Europe.
Dr. Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious
Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota, said
that it will be important to decipher whether there is something
unusual about this particular agent that is causing a higher
percentage of people to experience HUS, or whether the outbreak
is just extremely widespread.
Germany first targeted cucumbers imported from Spain as the
source of the outbreak. After experts tested the vegetables, and
they came up negative for carrying the bacteria, Spain threatened
to sue Germany over the cucumber charge.
But Osterholm said Spain may not be in the clear.
"Spain has no basis to say the cucumbers weren't involved because
this is such a difficult organism to find," said Osterholm. "Right
now, there is a lot of misinformation out there because, even if a
food item is tested, there can be such a low level of contamination
that nothing ever comes up in testing."
Osterholm continued to say that experts need to look
epidemiologically to compare what the E. coli victims ate versus
the healthy population.
"Once you identify products, you do the trace and it almost
universally comes back to one source," said Osterholm.
Kimball noted that strain "seems to be affecting a different age
group."
Usually, young children and elderly people are most at risk of
severe E. coli symptoms, but women of various ages seem to be
hit hardest by the outbreak.
"If you look at the primary group that eats salads in the U.S. and
around the world, it's young to older women," he said. "The profile
of the outbreak hit perfectly. It wasn't a surprise to see that
vegetables were implicated."
WHO: Deadly E. coli is New Strain of
Bacteria, Source Still Unknown
Langganan:
Posting Komentar (Atom)
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar