From: Lubbock Online
Posted: May
5, 2013 - 5:01pm
ASSOCIATED PRESS
FRESNO, Calif. (AP) — California and federal public
health officials say valley fever, a potentially lethal
but often misdiagnosed disease infecting more and more
people around the nation, has been on the rise as
warming climates and drought have kicked up the dust
that spreads it.
The fever has hit California’s agricultural
heartland particularly hard in recent years, with
incidence dramatically increasing in 2010 and 2011. The
disease — which is prevalent in arid regions of the
United States, Mexico, Central and South America — can
be contracted by simply breathing in fungus-laced spores
from dust disturbed by wind as well as human or animal
activity.
The fungus is sensitive to environmental changes,
experts say, and a hotter, drier climate has increased
dust carrying the spores.
“Research has shown that when soil is dry and it is
windy, more spores are likely to become airborne in
endemic areas,” said Dr. Gil Chavez, Deputy Director of
the Center for Infectious Diseases at the California
Department of Public Health.
Longstanding concerns about valley fever were
heightened last week when a federal health official
ordered the transfer of more than 3,000 exceptionally
vulnerable inmates from two San Joaquin Valley prisons
where several dozen have died of the disease in recent
years. A day later, state officials began investigating
an outbreak in February that sickened 28 workers at two
solar power plants under construction in San Luis Obispo
County.
Although millions of residents in Central California
face the threat of valley fever, experts say people who
work in dusty fields or construction sites are most at
risk, as are certain ethnic groups and those with weak
immune systems. Newcomers and visitors passing through
the region may also be more susceptible.
Nationwide, the number of valley fever cases rose by
more than 850 percent from 1998 through 2011, according
to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In
2011, there were more than 20,400, with most cases
reported in California and Arizona.
In California, according to the CDC, valley fever
cases rose from about 700 in 1998 to more than 5,500
cases reported in 2011. The disease has seen the
sharpest rise in Kern County, followed by Kings and
Fresno counties.
Out of the 18,776 California cases between 2001 and
2008, 265 people died, according to the state health
department.
Arizona saw an even steeper rise: The number of
reported cases there went from 1,400 in 1998 to 16,400
in 2011, with the highest rates of infection occurring
in Maricopa, Pima and Pinal counties.
Drought periods can have an especially potent impact
on valley fever if they follow periods of rain, said
Prof. John Galgiani, director of the Valley Fever Center
for Excellence at the University of Arizona. Rainfall
leads to fungus bloom, but limits dust.
“When it dries up, that’s when the fungus goes into
the air,” Galgiani said. “So when there is rain a year
or two earlier, that creates more cases if drought
follows.”
Another reason for the increase in cases, Galgiani
said, is new residents, who are more susceptible to the
disease, relocating to areas with the spores.
In addition, the CDC and the California Department
of Public Health say improved reporting methods and
better diagnosis also partially explain the increase in
valley fever.
Despite that, an estimated 150,000 valley fever
infections go undiagnosed every year, the CDC says.
That’s because valley fever is difficult to detect and
there’s little awareness of the disease, experts say.
The fever often causes mild to severe flu-like symptoms,
and in about half the infections, the fungus — called
Coccidioides — results in no symptoms.
But in a small percent of cases, the infection can
spread from the lungs to the brain, bones, skin, even
eyes, leading to blindness, skin abscesses, lung
failure, even death.
“Valley fever is a very common problem here, and it
devastates people’s lives,” said Dr. Royce Johnson,
professor of medicine at UCLA and chief of infectious
diseases at Kern Medical Center. “But many patients
don’t know about it, and some physicians are only
vaguely aware of it because half of our physicians come
from out of state.”
Dale Pulde, a motorcycle mechanic in Los Angeles
County, said he contracted the disease three years ago
after traveling to Bakersfield in Kern County and was
coughing so hard he was blacking out; he spit blood and
couldn’t catch his breath. For two months, doctors
tested him for everything from tuberculosis to cancer
until blood tests confirmed he had the fever.
After two lung operations, Pulde gave up his job and
is on disability. He says he has to take anti-fungal
medication that costs him more than $2,000 per month out
of pocket. He had to sell his house in Sylmar, Calif.,
to raise money for his treatment.
“When I found out that health officials knew about
(this disease) and how common it is, I was beside
myself,” said Pulde, now 63. “Why don’t they tell
people?”
California public health officials say they are
working to educate and train the public and doctors to
recognize the illness.
The state has trained county health departments
about the fungus, Chavez said. It has also included
information on valley fever in a newsletter the
California Medical Board sends to the state’s licensed
physicians. The CDPH website and social media feature
information and data about the disease, including advice
to limit outdoor activities on dry, windy days.
As prison officials gear up to move inmates from the
endemic areas, doctors and patients say more needs to be
done, including funding research to work on a cure.
“If the state is so concerned about prisoners, they
should be worrying about all of us who live and work in
the valley,” said Kathy Uhley, a former realtor from Los
Banos who contracted the fever last year.
No comments:
Post a Comment