After Ebola what Next? Chikungunya: New disease hits the Americas!
Chikingunya, meaning
"writhing around in pain", has hit the American continent for the
first time, with 1,200 cases reported in El Salvador and 57 imported cases in
the United States of America. This viral disease, carried by the mosquito, was
found in the Americas for the first time last December. There is one new case
every two minutes in some areas.
The number of cases of
Chikingunya has risen to 1,200 in El Salvador, according to the country's
Health Ministry, which confirms this is the first time the disease has been
registered in this Central American nation after it spread quickly through the
Caribbean. The outbreak started last December in St. Martin (French side), the
first appearance in the American continent of this virus which has manifested
itself until now in Africa and Asia.
New cases have been reported in the US
Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico (23 cases) and Guadeloupe (5,190 cases between May
26 and June 1), a rate of one new case every two minutes. There have been a
total of 165,990 cases registered by the Pan American Health Organization.
The countries and territories
most affected are St. Martin (French side), Martinique, St. Barthelemy,
Guadeloupe, and Dominica but it is the cases in Puerto Rico which pose the
greatest threat to the USA (imported cases) via travelling aircraft passengers.
Health authorities consider the South-Eastern USA as the region with the
highest risk due to its proximity to the Caribbean, although potentially all
areas where there is a high influx of passengers from affected regions are also
at risk.
Chikungunya means
"writhing in pain" in the Makonde language (Tanzania and Mozambique).
The symptoms are muscular pain, headache, nausea, vomiting, photophobia,
fatigue and rash on the trunk and/or limbs. The disease causes a febrile state
which lasts between two and five days, followed by terrible pains in the joints
which can last for years or months in severe cases, although others last for
weeks or even days. Complications are uncommon, and most survive but it can
kill elderly or debilitated patients. There is no vaccination or cure. The
incubation period is one to twelve days, mostly two or three.
The virus is carried by two species
of mosquito, namely Aedes albopictus and Aedes aegypti, although the strain
currently affecting the Americas is more probably spread by Aedes aegypti. If
the virus mutates to the strain carried by Aedes albopictus, this would create
a public health issue in the USA because this type of mosquito is widespread in
that country and is also more aggressive.
Prevention measures are to
avoid areas of stagnant water and make sure that water cannot lie near
inhabited regions in vessels such as plant pots or tires.
Timothy Bancroft-Hinchey
Pravda.Ru
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