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Tracking the next pandemic: Avian Flu Talk

Updates...17/07 and other AVIAN horrors

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    Posted: January 17 2007 at 5:45pm
...
interesting site... http://www.nwhc.usgs.gov/
 
 
 
 
and updates....
 
Read in full ...
 
 
 
 
 
 
and......
 
What else comes from BIRD droppings?
.........................................................
 
 
 
Reservoir
 
C. (cryptococcosis) neoformans var. neoformans
has been isolated from the soil worldwide, usually in association with bird droppings.
...............................................
 
 

What is Cryptococcus infection (cryptococcosis)?
Cryptococcosis (Krip-toe-coc-o-sis) is a fungal disease caused by Cryptococcus neoformans. Most people do not get sick with cryptococcosis, but some people are more likely than others to get this disease. For these people,

cryptococcosis can cause serious symptoms of brain and spinal cord disease, such as headaches, dizziness, sleepiness, and confusion.
 
 
Can animals transmit cryptococcosis to me?
 
Yes, but not directly. Cryptococcus neoformans is found in the droppings of wild birds (such as pigeons).
 
 
When dried bird droppings are stirred up, this can make dust containing Cryptococcus go into the air.
 
People can stir up this dust and then breathe it in when they work, play, or walk in areas where birds have been.
 
 
Pets, such as dogs and cats, can also get sick with cryptococcosis from this dust,
 
 
but people do not get cryptococcosis from dogs and cats.
 
........................................................................................................
 
(unless dogs and cats bring the dust inside on their fur/paws?)
.............................................................
 
 
 
 

Chronic meningitis in Thailand.
 
Clinical characteristics, laboratory data and outcome in patients with specific reference to tuberculosis and cryptococcosis.
Neuroepidemiology. 2006;26(1):37-44. Epub 2005 Oct 25.
PMID: 16254452 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
13:  Kay R. Related Articles, Links 
 
 
 
IngentaConnect Vertebral cryptococcosis
 
simulating tuberculosis
 
Radiological, magnetic resonance imaging and surgical finding of vertebral
 
cryptococcosis can mimic tuberculosis. The definite diagnosis of cryptococcosis ...
 
 ............................................................................................
 
 
Read during day... graphic photos this thread. 
 
Case Report
Ind. J. Tub., 1999, 46,137

HEPATIC CRYPTOCOCCOSIS IN ASSOCIATION WITH
PULMONARY TUBERCULOSIS
AND AMOEBIC LIVER ABSCESS
 
 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Guests Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 17 2007 at 6:08pm
Annharra hi read this one last night posted it in global warming world food day , no flour no bread no life .................its spreading thru all those nations who are without a lot of food , problems in all meat products with lots of diseases , see animal deaths in Spec thread ......life is going to get a lot worse over there . World shortage of food , wheat etc .  thanks for the thread.   trying to find all the old Nepal threads , should have saved them bugger it ...Hope-ing you did ??
 
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Also check this one China
 
(4) Both patients presented with "upper respiratory tract infection",
and one with chest pain, developing apparently each time well before
the oligo- or anuria, suggesting it had to do not with secondary
fluid overload, but perhaps with primary lung involvement on
admission. This is seen not only in American Sin nombre virus cases,
but in some European Puumala virus cases as well. Details of RX chest
on admission of both Chinese cases would be most interesting, since
to my knowledge there are no published reports of primary lung
involvement in HTNV or SEOV infections.
           Update on this fever info , imforamtion supplied not adding up .

 
Archive Number 20070116.0206
Published Date 16-JAN-2007
Subject PRO/AH> Epidemic hemorrhagic fever - China (Jiangsu) (02)
EPIDEMIC HEMORRHAGIC FEVER - CHINA (JIANGSU) (02)
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Thanks for the posts Candles...  most of your postings inspire me to search around   :)

....................................................................

AVIAN CHOLERA

.....................................
 
ProMED-mail is a program of the
International Society for Infectious Diseases

<http://www.isid.org>
 
 
 
 
 
 
Avian Cholera....  graphic....do not read before bedtime.
 
 
Check this site...bird die off photos
 
Excerpt.....
 
 
However, P. multocida infections
in humans are not uncommon.
 
 
Most of these infections
result from an animal bite or scratch, primarily from
dogs and cats.
 
Regardless, the wisdom of wearing gloves
and thoroughly washing skin surfaces is obvious when handling
birds that have died from avian cholera.
 
 
Infections unrelated to wounds are also common,
 
and in the majority of human cases, these involve respiratory tract
exposure.
 
This is most apt to happen in confined areas of air
movement where a large amount of infected material is
present. 
 
Processing of carcasses associated with avian cholera
die-offs should be done outdoors or in other areas with
adequate ventilation.
 
When disposing of carcasses by open burning,
 
personnel should avoid direct exposure to smoke
from the fire.
 
Milton Friend
 ....................................................................................................
 
 
Please see map of............
 
AVIAN CHOLERA DIE OFFS USA
 
click on words  under usa map that read, View dynamic Map.
 
 
 
 Avian cholera, also known as fowl cholera,
 
is one of the most common diseases among wild North American waterfowl.
 
 
It is the result of infection with the bacterium Pasteurella multocida.
 
This bacterium kills swiftly, sometimes in as few as 6 to 12 hours after infection.
 
Live bacteria released into the environment by dead and dying birds can subsequently infect healthy birds.
 
 As a result, avian cholera can spread quickly through a wetland and kill hundreds to thousands of birds in a single outbreak.
 
Avian cholera often affects the same wetlands and the same bird populations year after year.
 
This map layer portrays the incidence of avian cholera in the United States.
 
 
which was established to address the health and disease issues of free-ranging wildlife.
 
The center collects information on wildlife mortality events such as those caused by avian cholera, assesses the impact of disease on wildlife, identifies the role of various pathogens in contributing to wildlife losses, and works to develop effective disease prevention and control strategies.
 
The avian cholera information was extracted from NWHC's EPIZOO database, which is a long-term record of more than 25 years of information on epizootics (epidemics) in wildlife.
 
EPIZOO tracks die-offs throughout the United States and its territories, primarily in migratory birds and endangered species.

 
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 hold your breath #1

 

nobody breathe.....

..................................................................................................

Coccidioidomycosis

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

(Redirected from Valley fever)
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Coccidioidomycosis
Classifications and external resources
Histopathological changes in a case of coccidioidomycosis of the lung showing a large fibrocaseous nodule.
ICD-10 B38
ICD-9 114

Coccidioidomycosis (also known as Valley fever and California valley fever) is a fungal disease caused by Coccidioides immitis or C. posadasii.[1] It is endemic in certain parts of Arizona, California, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas, Utah and northwestern Mexico.[2]

C. immitis resides in the soil in certain parts of the southwestern United States, northern Mexico, and a few other areas in the Western Hemisphere.

Infection is caused by inhalation of airborne, fungal particles known as arthroconidia, which are a form of spore. The disease is not transmitted from person to person.

Symptomatic infection (40% of cases) usually presents as an influenza-like illness with fever, cough, headaches, rash, and myalgia (muscle pain).

Some patients fail to recover and develop chronic pulmonary infection or widespread disseminated infection (affecting meninges, soft tissues, joints, and bone).
 
Severe pulmonary disease may develop in HIV-infected persons.[3]
 
 
map......
 
 
 

Contents

[hide]

< =text/> //

[edit] Biological Warfare

C. immitis was investigated by the United States during the 1950s and 1960s as a potential biological. The Cash strain received the military symbol OC, and original hopes were for its use as an incapacitant. As medical epidemiology later made clear, OC would have lethal effects on several segments of the population, so it was later considered a lethal agent. It was never standardized, and beyond a few field trials, it was never weaponized. Most military work on OC was on vaccines by the mid-1960s.

[edit] Trivia

The illness is mentioned in episode 3x04 of the TV Show House, as the cause of a young girl's loss of inhibition. The illness does not actually cause loss of inhibition, nor does it cause milky tears. This was not a factual error in the episode: the Doctor was tricking the girl, however this was not obvious to many viewers.

It is also the center of an episode of Bones, 1x09, The Man In the Fallout Shelter. After being exposed to the fungus, the team was quarantined over Christmas to determine whether or not they had become infected.

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hi Candles... in Ref...to your post above on CHINA....
 
(4) Both patients presented with "upper respiratory tract infection",
and one with chest pain, developing apparently each time well before
the oligo- or anuria, suggesting it had to do not with secondary
fluid overload, but perhaps with primary lung involvement on
admission. This is seen not only in American Sin nombre virus cases,
but in some European Puumala virus cases as well.
......................................................................................
 
Some are wondering if it is...
a hantavirus called the Sin Nombre Virus. Hantaviruses are members of the family Bunyaviridae, a large family encompassing many different diseases. It is a deadly disease prevalent in the American Southwest, although cases have been recorded in much of the US, as well as Central and South America (Garrett 1994).
 
...............................................................................
 
If you look at the problems with Desert areas in China... you will see that t
Coccidioidomycosis ...is a possibility?...as it occurs in Arizona.
 
 The desert area of China is expanding....
 
........................................................................
 
 

China Intensifies Efforts to Curb Expansion of Deserts

 
 
excerpt...
In the northwestern Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, with the largest desert area in the country, a series of projects to prevent the expansion of deserts are underway or have been planned.

Xinjiang has a desert area of 404,000 square kilometers, accounting for 63 percent of the country's total desert area and 25 percent of the region's land space.

The Chinese government has invested 10.7 billion yuan (1.3 billion US dollars) in harnessing the Tarim Basin in an effort to form a greenbelt between two giant deserts in Xinjiang, the Taklimakan and Gurbantunggut Deserts, and to stop them merging.

In the north of Xinjiang, where serious sandstorms often occur, the local government has launched a program to improve the ecological environment to curb the invasion of deserts into oases.

Local officials said a shelter forest is expected to be built along the southern border of the Gurbantunggut Desert, the second desert in Xinjiang, in the near future.

The shelter belt will effectively prevent the southward movement of the desert and guarantee a sound ecological environment for economic development, the officials said.

Changji Hui Autonomous Prefecture has kicked off a project to improve vegetation over 15,000 hectares along the brim of the Gurbantunggut. The project is costing 28.57 million US dollars, with 20 million loaned by the Japan Bank for International Cooperation.

 
 
..................................................................................................................
 
Coccidioidomycosis acccounts for 29 percent of community-acquired
pneumonia among adults in the Tucson area (2003 to 2004).
 
 
- The state reported an average of 211 cases per year during 1980 to
1989; 460 during 1990 to 1995.
-
 
 134 fatal cases were reported during 1990 to 1994 - including 72 in 1993.- The highest rate in this state is for the age group over 65.
 
- 42 percent of Phoenix school children were skin test-positive
during the 1950's.
 
- Rates increased from 33 per 100 000 in 1998, to 43 per 100 000 in 2001.
--
Steve Berger
Geographic Medicine
Tel Aviv Medical Center
<mberger@post.tau.ac.il>
[see also:
Coccidiodomycosis - USA (AZ): RFI     20070114.0188
2001
----
Coccidioidomycosis - Europe ex Costa Rica: alert
Coccidioidomycosis - Europe ex USA: Alert (02)     20011218.3060
Coccidioidomycosis - Europe ex USA (Calif.): Alert 20011214.3026
Coccidioidomycosis, archeologic site - USA (Utah)  20011115.2815
Coccidioidomycosis - USA (California)              20011009.2460
2000
----
Coccidioidomycosis - USA (Arizona)
20000503.0676
1996
Coccidioidomycosis (valley fever) - USA: Correction
19961216.2084]
................ ep/pg/mpp
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http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/eid/vol2no3/kirkfig2.gif&imgrefurl=http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/eid/vol2no3/kirkland.htm&h=454&w=600&sz=10&hl=en&start=10&tbnid=nMPnYrShpXlpeM:&tbnh=102&tbnw=135&prev=/images%3Fq%3DCoccidioidomycosis%26svnum%3D10%26hl%3Den%26lr%3D%26sa%3DG

Coccidioidomycosis: A Reemerging Infectious Disease

Theo N. Kirkland, M.D., and Joshua Fierer, M.D.
Departments of Pathology and Medicine, University of California, San Diego School of Medicine
Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, San Diego, California, USA
Download Article
Coccidioides immitis, the primary pathogenic fungus that causes coccidioidomycosis, is most commonly found in the deserts of the southwestern United States and Central and South America. During the early 1990s, the incidence of coccidioidomycosis in California increased dramatically. Even though most infections are subclinical or self-limited, the outbreak is estimated to have cost more than $66 million in direct medical expenses and time lost from work in Kern County, California, alone. In addition to the financial loss, this pathogen causes serious and life-threatening disseminated infections, especially among the immunosuppressed, including AIDS patients. This article discusses factors that may be responsible for the increased incidence of coccidioidomycosis (e.g., climatic and demographic changes and the clinical problems of coccidioidomycosis in the immunocompromised) and new approaches to therapy and prevention.

Emerging infectious diseases have been defined as “infections that have newly existed in a population or have existed but are rapidly increasing in incidence or geographic range” (1). In what sense is coccidioidomycosis an emerging infectious disease? Coccidioidomycosis is not a new disease; it was first recognized and reported slightly more than 100 years ago by a medical student in Argentina (2). In fact, coccidioidomycosis has affected inhabitants of the desert Southwest for thousands of years (3). However, in the past several years, the number of cases of coccidioidomycosis has increased dramatically, and the clinical symptoms of this illness have changed in patients with acquired immunodefficiency syndrome (AIDS). In this article, we explore some of the reasons for the increased incidence of coccidioidomycosis, review the new clinical data, and discuss current approaches to therapy and prevention.

Etiology

Coccidioidomycosis is caused by Coccidioides immitis, a dimorphic fungus that grows as a mold in the soil. The mold forms arthroconidia within the hypha, a type of conidia formation known as enteroarthric development (Figure 1) (4). C. immitis is the only species within the primary pathogenic fungi that has this type of conidia development. Alternate conidia undergo autolysis, leaving empty spaces between viable arthroconidia. The arthroconidia are released into the atmosphere when the wind ruptures the hypha. C. immitis infects humans and animals almost exclusively by the respiratory route (5). Once inhaled, the arthroconidia cluster in the lungs and undergo a dramatic morphologic change. The round cells, which develop into spherules, undergo repeated internal divisions until they are filled with hundreds to thousands of offspring, termed endospores. This process occurs over 48 to 72 hours (6). When the spherule ruptures, each released endospore has the capacity to develop into a mature spherule.

Figure 1
Figure 1. The dimorphic life cycle of Coccidioides immitis.

Epidemiology

C. immitis is primarily found in desert soil. It is present in highest numbers in the San Joaquin Valley in California, southern Arizona, southern New Mexico, west Texas, and the desert areas of northern Mexico (Figure 2). The organism is also found in scattered foci in coastal southern California, southern Nevada, and Utah (7) and is endemic in a few areas in Central and South America, especially in Venezuela (7). C. immitis is distributed unevenly in the soil and seems to be concentrated around animal burrows and ancient Indian burial sites (8,9); it is usually found 4 to 12 inches below the surface of the soil (7).

Figure 2
Figure 2. The geographic distribution of coccidioidomycosis. Cross-hatching indicates the heavily disease-endemic area, single hatching, the moderately disease-endemic area.

Since C. immitis infects humans by the respiratory route, exposure to dust is one critical factor determining the risk for infection (10). Coccidioidomycosis is not spread from person to person, except in extraordinary circumstances. Coccidioidomycosis probably had its most profound effect on the population of the United States during World War II when several training airfields were built in the San Joaquin Valley. The rate of new infections in military personnel was 8% to 25% per year (10). Coccidioidomycosis was the most common cause of hospitalization at many airbases in the Southwest. Though the death rate was very low, many soldiers were sick for weeks to months, and their training was completely disrupted. At least in part because of efforts to minimize dust, the infection rate declined as the war went on (10).

The incidence of coccidioidomycosis varies with the season; it is highest in late summer and early fall when the soil is dry and the crops are harvested (10). If it rains at this time of the year (which is unusual in southern California), disease incidence declines as the amount of dust decreases. Dust storms are frequently followed by outbreaks of coccidioidomycosis. One particularly severe dust storm in 1977 carried dust from the San Joaquin Valley up to the San Francisco Bay area and resulted in hundreds of cases of nonendemic coccidioidomycosis in areas north of the San Joaquin Valley (11). More recently, an earthquake centered in Northridge, California, was associated with 170 cases of acute coccidioidomycosis in Ventura County, which normally has a low incidence of this disease. The airborne dust associated with landslides triggered by the earthquake was implicated in the increase in the number of cases (12).

Occupational or recreational exposure to dust is also an important consideration. Agricultural workers, construction workers, or others (such as archeologists) who dig in the soil in the disease-endemic area are at increased risk for the disease (13,14). During World War II, C. E. Smith, one of the most perceptive and influential epidemiologists to study coccidioidomycosis, recommended dust control as a primary measure to reduce risk for exposure (10). However, because the desert is inherently dusty, many cases of coccidioidomycosis are acquired just by driving through the disease-endemic area.

Clinical Illness

C. immitis is transmitted by the respiratory route. Smith et al., in a prospective study of cases of coccidioidomycosis acquired during World War II by soldiers at three San Joaquin Valley airbases, skin-tested the airmen periodically and questioned them about illnesses in the interval. They found that most infections (60%) were asymptomatic and resolved spontaneously; 15% were not severe enough to require medical care, and 25% were clinically important and required a substantial amount of time off work (15). In symptomatic patients, the pulmonary illness ranges from a self-limited flulike illness to pneumonia (16). Approximately 5% of primary infections result in erythema nodosum or erythema marginatum with associated noninfectious arthritis; most of those patients have a self-limited infection (17). Particularly in persons with diabetes, multiple thin-walled chronic cavities tend to develop as a residual effect of pulmonary coccidioidomycosis (18). Unlike in tuberculosis, in coccidioidomycosis, dissemination almost always becomes evident within a few weeks of the primary pneumonia, although in cases of limited dissemination it may not become clinically evident until months later (15,19). Cocidioidomycosis can disseminate and cause miliary disease, bone and joint infection, skin disease, soft tissue abscesses, and meningitis (15,16). These extrapulmonary complications are uncommon (<5% of infections).

The risk for disseminated coccidioidomycosis is much higher among some ethnic groups, particularly African-Americans and Filipinos. In these ethnic groups, the risk for disseminated coccidioidomycosis is tenfold that of the general population (5,20). Presumably, a gene (or genes) that increases susceptibility to infection is more prevalent in these ethnic groups than in the general population. Such a resistance gene has been identified in mice (21-23), but not yet in humans. The mechanism by which the resistance genes affect the course of the disease in mice is not clear. Pregnant women and the immunosuppressed are also at high risk for developing disseminated disease (Figure 3) (24). One study demonstrated that the growth rate of spherules was influenced by human sex hormones, which may partially account for the increased risk of disseminated disease in pregnancy (25). Pregnancy also redirects the immune response toward humeral (TH2) immunity and away from delayed hypersensitivity (TH1) (26), which may influence resolution of coccidioidomycosis. Generalized suppression of cell mediated immunity also increases the risk of disseminated disease (27). Coccidioidomycosis is particularly severe in patients with organ transplants or AIDS.

Figure 3
Figure 3. The most common clinical presentations of coccidioidomycosis in immunocompetent patients (16).

Though disseminated coccidioidomycosis is uncommon, and symptomatic coccidioidal pneumonia usually resolves without therapy, many of these patients are very ill for weeks to months. Galgiani reported that a group of college students in Tucson who had coccidioidomycosis required an average of six clinic visits before the disease resolved (16). Therefore, this can be an expensive illness in terms of medical costs and time lost from work or school, even when the infection resolves spontaneously.

Coccidioidomycosis Epidemic in California

Kern County, in the San Joaquin Valley, California, is one of the most highly coccidioidomycosis-endemic regions. The number of new cases of coccidioidomycosis in the area has varied widely from year to year; a low incidence of coccidioidomycosis from 1987 to 1990 (<500 reported cases a year in Kern County), was followed by a high incidence from 1991 to 1994 (28-30). The number of reported cases, which were identified by serologic testing at the Kern County Health Department (the reference serology laboratory for the county), probably represent approximately 10% of the total number of infected persons in that county (Figure 4) (28). The medical costs for infected persons in Kern County are estimated at $66 million (29). In 1992, 4,500 new cases were reported to the California State Department of Health Services (30), most from Kern County; the number of new cases also increased in almost all counties in central and southern California (30). The increase in reported cases in California in 199192 was dramatic but certainly an underestimate of the magnitude of the problem (31).

Figure 4
Figure 4. The number of new cases of coccidioidomycosis identified by serologic testing at the Kern County Public Health Laboratory (source of data: Dr. Ron Talbot). The asterisk indicates a projected number.

The epidemic seems to be waning, for reasons that are not clear, but the marked increase in incidence from the 1980s to 1991 through 1993 is indisputable. What factors may account for this increase? One major consideration is the weather. C. E. Smith observed years ago that the number of cases of coccidioidomycosis was higher in the summer after a rainy winter than after a dry winter (10). In March 1991, a 5-year drought in California ended with a heavy rainfall. Rainfall was also heavy in the winters of 1992 and 1993. Though the relationship between the weather and the density of C. immitis in the soil may never be understood in detail, the following scenario seems plausible. During drought years, the number of organisms competing with C. immitis decreases. C. immitis does not thrive, but it remains viable though dormant. After heavy rain, the arthrocondia germinate and multiply to a higher density than usual because of the lack of competing organisms. Once the soil dries in the late summer and fall, the arthroconidia become airborne and potentially infectious (29).

Another reason for the sudden increase in disease incidence might have been the number of susceptible persons in the disease-endemic area. The number may have been the result of both increased migration of susceptible persons and decreased immunity in the indigenous population. Immunity comes from prior infection and is manifest as a positive coccidioidin skin test. In almost all cases, coccidioidomycosis confers lifelong immunity. As a result of years of low incidence, the number of nonimmune persons may have increased, as evidenced by the decrease in prevalence of positive coccidioidin skin tests among local high school students. In 1939, 50% to 60% of high school students in the San Joaquin Valley had positive skin tests (17), but in the 1980s only 3% to 5% of high school students had positive skin tests (T. Larwood, pers. comm.). Given the historical data, this estimate seems low, but another study also found a low prevalence. In 1985, workers in Tucson estimated that 30% of a random sample of persons in a Hispanic neighborhood had positive skin tests (32). In addition to the drought, irrigation of fields, the increasing amount of land under cultivation, and a decrease in indoor dust due to the widespread use of air conditioning may also have played a role in the relatively low incidence of infections in the 1980s.

Coccidioidomycosis in the Immunosuppressed

C. immitis is a primary pathogen that can cause disease in immunologically healthy persons. In the population as a whole, fewer than 5% of infected persons have persistent pulmonary infection or extrapulmonary dissemination of the disease (16). The incidence of clinically significant disease in immunosuppressed patients is much higher. In one study symptomatic coccidioidomycosis developed in 18 (7%) of 260 renal transplant patients in Arizona over a 10-year period, primarily in the first year after transplantation (33). This rate was substantially higher than the rate of infection in patients who were undergoing hemodialysis. Approximately 12 (67%) of infections in the patients with renal transplants were disseminated; the remainder were confined to the lung. Of patients with disseminated disease, 10 (83%) died, despite intensive therapy with amphotericin B. In another study from Tucson, all confirmed cases of coccidioidomycosis during a 4-year period were reviewed. The dissemination rate was 8 (73%) of 11 of patients who were receiving immunosuppressive therapies, compared with only 15 (14%) of 110 healthy controls (34). As more patients in the disease-endemic area receive liver, lung, and heart transplants, this problem will increase.

Pregnant women, especially those in the third trimester, are at high risk for developing disseminated coccidioidomycosis if they become infected (24). In the first and second trimesters, the risk is much lower. The reason is not entirely clear, but two factors may play a role: 1) the high sex hormone levels found in late pregnancy enhance the growth of C. immitis in vitro (25), and 2) the shift in the T-cell immune response late in pregnancy toward TH2 cytokines (26) interferes with resolving the infection. In experimental animals, pregnancy increases the severity of leishmaniasis, another infection hat is controlled by a TH1 T-cell response (35).

Coccidioidomycosis in AIDS patients is also very likely to be life-threatening. The first cases of coccidioidomycosis described in AIDS patients were atypical, with a reticulonodular chest x-ray pattern, positive blood cultures, and infection of multiple organs (36). As we have gained more experience with coccidioidomycosis in HIV-infected persons, we have learned that the clinical spectrum is broader than originally reported. Fish and his colleagues collected data from 77 AIDS patients with coccidioidomycosis who were treated by physicians in Arizona and California (37). They grouped the patients according to their clinical symptoms (Figure 5).

Figure 5
Figure 5. The most common clinical presentations of coccidioidomycosis in AIDS patients. The group "Other" includes dissemination to the lymph nodes, liver, spleen, and bone marrow. The antibody only group includes patients with serologic evidence of infection but no evident focus of infection. Since these were passively collected cases, a protocol to search for inapparent sites of infection had not been agreed upon (37).

Although the largest group of patients had diffuse pulmonary infiltrates, a significant fraction had focal pulmonary disease, meningitis, or other extrapulmonary disease. Six patients had only a positive serologic test with no other evidence of infection. Excluding the patients who had only a positive serologic test, 81% of the patients in this series had a positive serologic test for coccidioidomycosis, either for IgM or IgG antibodies. However, only 69% of patients with diffuse pulmonary disease had a positive serologic test, and the death rate in this group was also the highest (70%). In all clinical groups, death was correlated with the number of circulating CD4 T-cells at the time of diagnosis. For clinicians, however, the most important message from this study is that coccidioidomycosis is not a uniformly fatal complication in patients with AIDS, and that many forms of this disease, including meningitis, respond to therapy. Patients with <200 CD4 T-cells/µl are more likely to have severe, disseminated infections.

A more recent prospective study of 170 HIV-infected persons in an area of Arizona where coccidioidomycosis is endemic showed a cumulative incidence of coccidioidomycosis of 25% over 41 months (38). The most important risk factors were the level of CD4 T-cells and the diagnosis of AIDS (as opposed to HIV infection). HIV-infected patients with AIDS or <250 CD4 T-cells/µl were 8 to 35 times more likely to get coccidioidomycosis. History of coccidioidomycosis, a history of a positive skin test for coccidioidomycosis, or a prolonged stay in the disease-endemic area were not associated with an increased risk for infection. These data suggest that most cases were primary infections in severely immunosuppressed patients. Since patients with AIDS were not more likely to be exposed to the spores of C. immitis and all patients were seen prospectively at 4-month intervals and tested for antibody to C. immitis, severe immunosuppression appeared to increase their risk for infection, as well as disease. As in the retrospective study reviewed above, the clinical symptoms varied widely, ranging from mild to extremely severe. Only one patient had antibody titers to C. immitis by complement fixation test without any other evidence of disease.

Treatment

Various drugs are now available for treating coccidioidomycosis. In addition to amphotericin B, which must be given intravenously and is considerably toxic, triazole compounds have been found to be active agents for treating most manifestations of coccidioidomycosis. Fluconazole, in an uncontrolled study, was reported to be effective primary therapy for coccidioidal meningitis; since untreated coccidioidal meningitis is uniformly fatal, robust conclusions could be drawn from this trial (39). Forty-seven consecutive patients were treated with 400 mg/day of fluconazole; during the first 6 months of therapy, 33 (70%) of the patients responded to therapy. (A response was defined as a 40% reduction in a score, on the basis of clinical measurements and cerebrospinal fluid findings.) Two patients who did not respond to therapy died of coccidioidomycosis; both were HIV-positive. Because of previous experience with high relapse rates when azole therapy is stopped, the authors recommended lifelong treatment with fluconazole. In a small study, four of five patients treated for meningitis with itraconazole as sole therapy responded favorably (40). A recent article emphasized the high relapse rate after azole therapy is stopped (41). The alternative treatment to the azoles is amphotericin B. If amphotericin B is used to treat meningitis, however, it must be given intrathecally as well as intravenously, and this greatly increases the risk for a toxic reaction to that drug.

Clearly, fluconazole and itraconazole can be used to treat patients with nonmeningeal coccidioidomycosis (42-44). Whether one of these drugs is superior to the other, or how either one compares to amphotericin B is not known. It seems prudent to treat extremely ill patients with amphotericin B, at least until their clinical situation stabilizes, although no published studies support that point of view. However, few (if any) patients with the acute miliary form of coccidioidomycosis have been included in any of the reported studies of any of the azole drugs. New agents that are more active against coccidioidomycosis are still sorely needed.

Prevention

Simple environmental measures, such as planting grass or paving roads in highly populated areas, decrease the amount of airborne dust and lower the risk for coccidioidomycosis (10). These measures do not necessarily eradicate C. immitis from the soil but lower the risk for airborne dispersion of the organism. At present, no practical method exists for eliminating C. immitis from the soil.

Vaccine Development

An alternative approach is to vaccinate persons at risk. A vaccine is feasible because natural infection almost always confers lifelong immunity from reinfection. Furthermore, good animal models exist to test vaccine candidates (21). Finally, genetically susceptible mice can be successfully immunized, which suggests that the genetically susceptible human population would also benefit from vaccination (21).

One vaccine that has been tested is a killed spherule vaccine developed by Pappagianis and Levine. It protected mice and other animals from experimental infection with C. immitis (45). Between 1980 and 1985, a double-blinded human study compared results of a formalin-killed spherule vaccine with results obtained from a placebo. In this study, which involved almost 3,000 people, only a minority of the vaccinated persons had positive skin test results to C. immitis. Although the incidence of coccidioidomycosis was low while this study was conducted, no difference was found in the number of cases of coccidioidomycosis or the severity of the disease in the vaccinated group compared with that for the placebo-receiving control group (46). One explanation for the ineffectiveness of this vaccine may be that relatively small numbers of killed organisms could be injected into human without unacceptable local side effects of pain and swelling. Nevertheless, the vaccine trial made it clear that immunization with tolerable numbers of whole killed-spherules does not provide immunoprotection against coccidioidomycosis in humans.

Since the cell wall of C. immitis is made up primarily of nonprotein macromolecules, it contains a large amount of material presumably nonantigenic for T lymphocytes. Therefore, the whole organism is not the ideal vaccine candidate. Ideally, one would like to vaccinate patients selectively only with antigens that stimulate a protective T-cell-mediated immune response. These antigens have been difficult to identify, and a consensus on what they are does not exist. Various approaches have been used to obtain antigenic proteins. In one, a lysate of arthroconidia (coccidioidin) or spherules (spherulin) was made (47). Alkali treatment has also been used to extract antigens from arthroconidia and spherules (48). Another approach has been to use C. immitis antigens obtained without extraction or autolysis. The advantage of this method is that one should obtain reproducible preparations of intact proteins. Cole and co-workers (49) found that when the outer conidial wall was removed from arthroconidia, the organism released various proteins (called the soluble conidial wall fraction). This mixture of proteins was extraordinarily effective in stimulating the proliferation of C. immitis-immune T cells in mice. Another antigenic mixture is a membranous material consisting primarily of proteins and lipids that the spherule phase of the organism spontaneously releases (the spherule outer wall). This spherule wall fraction has been shown to be an active antigen in T-cell-mediated immune responses in mice (50).

All of these mixtures are heterogeneous and difficult to fractionate biochemically. This is probably due, at least in part, to differences in glycosylation, which makes physically separating the proteins difficult. To resolve this problem, Galgiani and his colleagues deglycosylated the proteins from a toluene spherule lysate by using hydrogen fluoride (51,52). Although this treatment does remove all sugars, it is extraordinarily harsh and yields less than 10% of the initial protein, with most of the protein forming an insoluble precipitate. Nevertheless, the resulting product reacts with reference antiserum to C. immitis in immunoelectrophoresis. This antigen also stimulated a proliferative T-cell response in patient lymphocytes but not in those of the control group (noninfected donors).

Another way to attack the problem of generating pure C. immitis antigens is to use molecular biologic techniques. The advantage to this approach is that once antigens are molecularly cloned, and the protein is expressed, an essentially unlimited source of completely defined antigen is available. Therefore, one would not have to repeatedly grow C. immitis, extract the antigen, and purify it from a complex mixture. In addition, with the molecular approach, antigens could be delivered as part of a living vaccine system, should that be required to effectively immunize people against coccidioidomycosis. We believe that systematically identifying and evaluating C. immitis T-cell reactive antigens in experimental animals is a rational approach to the ultimate development of a vaccine. Our laboratories, in collaboration with Garry Cole, have used a murine T-cell line that is specific for soluble conidial wall fraction antigens to identify one cloned fragment of a C. immitis protein (53). Recently, genomic DNA clones coding for this protein have been identified and sequenced. Significant homology exists between this C. immitis antigen and the human enzyme 4 hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (54). This protein has been expressed in bacteria and was found to elicit T-lymphocyte proliferative responses in mice immune to C. immitis. We are testing its efficacy as an experimental vaccine.

With the exception of alkali extracted spherules (55) and whole killed spherules (45), none of the T-cell reactive antigens have been shown to be immunoprotective in experimental models. However, it is reasonable to expect that some antigen, or mixture of antigens, will be found that can confer protective immunity in experimental animals. Molecular strategies are available to accomplish this task and are an important area of future research. Once a vaccine has been successfully tested in animals, another human vaccine trial would be feasible.

Dr. Kirkland is associate professor of pathology and medicine; Dr. Fierer is professor of medicine and pathology and head of the Division of Infectious Diseases, University of California, San Diego School of Medicine. Drs. Kirkland and Fierer have worked together for the past 15 years. Currently, they are focusing on the genetic determinants for resistance to infection and on identifying candidates for a coccidioidomycosis vaccine.

Acknowledgments

We are grateful to Dr. Ron Talbot, Director of the Kern County Public Health Laboratory, and Dr. Tom Larwood for sharing unpublished data with us. The experimental work done in our laboratories has been supported by National Institutes for Health grants AI19149 and AI37232 and by the Research Service of the Department of Veterans Affairs.

Address for correspondence: Theo N. Kirkland, M.D., Department of Pathology and Medicine, University of California, San Diego School of Medicine, Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center (111-F) 3350 La Jolla Village Dr., San Diego, CA 92161, USA; fax: 619-552-4398; e-mail: tkirkland@ucsd.edu.

References

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  7. Kamel SM, Wheat LJ, Garten ML, Bartlett MS, Tansey MR, Tewari RP. Production and characterization of murine monoclonal antibodies to Histoplasma capsulatum yeast cell antigens. Infect Immun 1989;57:896-901.
  8. Lacy GH, Swatek FE. Soil ecology of Coccidioides immitis at Amerindian middens in California. Appl Microbiol 1974;27:379-88.
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  12. CDC. Coccidioidomycosis following the Northridge earthquake—California, 1994. MMWR 1994;43:194-5.
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  17. Smith CE. Epidemiology of acute coccidioidomycosis with erythema nodosum (“San Joaquin” or “Valley Fever”). Am J Public Health 1940;30:600-11.
  18. Baker EJ, Hawkins JA, Waskow EA. Surgery for coccidioidomycosis in 52 diabetic patients with special reference to related immunologic factors. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 1978;75:680-7.
  19. Smith CE, Beard RR, Saito MT. Pathogenesis of coccidioidomycosis with special reference to pulmonary cavitation. Ann Intern Med 1948;29:623-55.
  20. Williams PL, Sable DL, Mendez P, Smyth LT. Symptomatic coccidioidomycosis following a severe natural dust storm—an outbreak at the Naval Air Station, Lemoore, Calif. Chest 1979;76:566-70.
  21. Kirkland TN, Fierer J. Inbred mouse strains differ in resistance to lethal Coccidiodes immitis infection. Infect Immun 1983;40:912.
  22. Kirkland TN, Fierer J. Genetic control of resistance to Coccidioides immitis: a single gene that is expressed in spleen cells determines resistance. J Immunol 1985;135:548-52.
  23. Cox RA, Kennell W. Suppression of T-lymphocyte response by Coccidioides immitis antigen. Infect Immun 1988;56:1424-9.
  24. Wack EE, Ampel NM, Galgiani JN, Bronnimann DA. Coccidioidomycosis during pregnancy—an analysis of ten cases among 47,120 pregnancies. Chest 1988;94:376-9.
  25. Powell BL, Drutz DJ, Huppert M, Sun SH. Relationship of progesterone- and estradiol-binding proteins in Coccidioides immitis to coccidioidal dissemination in pregnancy. Infect Immun 1983;40:478-85.
  26. Wegmann TG, Lin H, Guilbert L, Mosmann TR. Bidirectional cytokine interactions in the maternal-fetal relationship: is successful pregnancy a TH2 phenomenon? Immunol Today 1993;14:353-6.
  27. Beaman L, Pappagianis D, Benjamini E. Significance of T-cells in resistance to experimental murine coccidioidomycosis. Infect Immun 1977;17:580-5.
  28. Einstein HE, Johnson RH. Coccidioidomycosis: new aspects of epidemiology and therapy. Clin Infect Dis 1993;16:349-54.
  29. Jinadu BA. Valley Fever Task Force report on the control of Coccidioides immitis.Bakersfield, CA: Kern Country Health Department, 1995.
  30. Pappagianis D. Marked increase in cases of coccidioidomycosis in California: 1991, 1992, and 1993. Clin Infect Dis 1994;19:S14-8.
  31. CDC. Update: Coccidioidomycosis--California, 1991-1993. MMWR 1994;43:421-3.
  32. Dodge RR, Lebowitz MD, Barbee R, Burrows B. Estimates of C. immitis infection by skin test reactivity in an endemic community. Am J Public Health 1985;75:863-5.
  33. Cohen IM, Galgiani JN, Potter D, Ogden DA. Coccidioimomycosis in renal replacement therapy. Arch Intern Med 1982;142:489-94.
  34. Rutala PJ, Smith JW. Coccidioidomycosis in potentially compromised hosts: the effect of immunosuppressive therapy in dissemination. Am J Med Sci 1978;275:283-95.
  35. Krishnan L, Guilbert LJ, Russell AS, Wegmann TG, Mosmann TR, Belosevic M. Pregnancy impairs resistance of C57BL/6 mice to Leishmania major infection and causes decreased antigenspecific IFN-gamma response and increased production of T helper 2 cytokines. J Immunol 1996;156:644-52.
  36. Bronnimann DA, Adam RD, Galgiani JN, Habib MP, Peterson EA, Porter B, et al. Coccidioidomycosis in the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. Ann Intern Med 1987;106:372-9.
  37. Fish DG, Ampel NM, Galgiani JN, Dols CL, Kelly PC, Johnson CH, et al. Coccidioidomycosis during human immunodeficiency virus infection—a review of 77 patients. Medicine (Baltimore) 1990;69:384-91.
  38. Ampel NM, Dols CL, Galgiani JN. Coccidioidomycosis during human immunodeficiency virus infection: results of a prospective study in a coccidioidal endemic area. Am J Med 1993;94:235-40.
  39. Galgiani JN, Catanzaro A, Cloud GA, Higgs J, Friedman BA, Larsen RA, et al. Fluconazole therapy for coccidioidal meningitis: the NIAID-Mycoses Study Group. Ann Intern Med 1993;119:28-35.
  40. Tucker RM, Denning DW, Dupont B, Stevens DA. Itraconazole therapy for chronic coccidioidal meningitis. Ann Intern Med 1990;112:108-12.
  41. Dewsnup DH, Galgiani JN, Leviner BE, Sharkey-Mathin PK, Fierer J, Stevens DA. Is it ever safe to stop azole therapy for Coccidioides immitis meningitis? Ann Intern Med 1996;124:305-10.
  42. Catanzaro A, Fierer J, Friedman PJ. Fluconazole in the treatment of persistent coccidioidomycosis. Chest 1990;97:666-9.
  43. Graybill JR, Stevens DA, Galgiani JN, Dismukes WE, Cloud GA, et al. Itraconazole treatment of coccidioidomycosis. Am J Med 1990;89:282-90.
  44. Catanzaro A, Galgiani JN, Levine BE, Sharkey-Mathis PK, Fierer J, Stevens DA, et al. Fluconazole in the treatment of chronic pulmonary and nonmeningeal disseminated coccidioidomycosis. NIAID Mycoses Study Group. Am J Med 1995;98:249-56.
  45. Levine HB, Cobb JM, Smith CE. Immunogenicity of spherule-endospore vaccines of Coccidioides immitis for mice. J Immunol 1961;87:218-27.
  46. Pappagianis D, et al. Evaluation of the protective efficacy of the killed Coccidioides immitis spherule vaccine in humans. Am Rev Respir Dis 1993;148:656-60.
  47. Huppert M, Spratt NS, Vukovich KR, Sun SH, Rice EH. Antigenic analysis of coccidioidin and spherulin determined by two-dimensional immunoelectrophoresis. Infect Immun 1978;20:541-51.
  48. Cox RA, Britt LA. Isolation and identification of an exoantigen specific for Coccidioides immitis. Infect Immun 1986;52:138-43.
  49. Cole GT, Kirkland TN, Sun SH. An immunoreactive, water-soluble conidial wall fraction of Coccidioides immitis. Infect Immun 1987;55:657-67.
  50. Cole GT, Kirkland TN, Zhu M, Yuan L, Sun SH, Hearn VN. Immunoreactivity of a surface wall fraction produced by spherules of Coccidioides immitis. Infect Immun 1988;56:2695-701.
  51. Dugger KO, Galgiani JN, Ampel NM, Sun SH, Magee DM, Harrison J, et al. An immunoreactive apoglycoprotein purified from Coccidioides immitis. Infect Immun 1991;59:2245-51.
  52. Galgiani JN, Sun SH, Dugger KO, Ampel NM, Grace GC, Harrison J, et al. An arthroconidial spherule antigen of Coccidioides immitis: differential expression during in vitro fungal development and evidence for humoral response in humans after infection or vaccination. Infect Immun 1992;60:2627-35.
  53. Kirkland TN, Zhu SW, Cruse D, Hsu LL, Seshan KR, Cole GT. Coccidioides immitis fractions which are antigenic for immune T lymphocytes. Infect Immun 1991;59:3952-61.
  54. Wycoff E, Pishco J, Kirkland TN, Cole GT. Cloning and expression of a T-cell reactive protein from Coccidioides immitis: homology to 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dixygenase and the mammalian Fantigen. Gene 1995;161:107-11.
  55. Lecara G, Cox RA, Simpson RB. Coccidioides immitis vaccine: potential of an alkali-soluble, water-soluble cell wall antigen. Infect Immun 1983;39:473-5.


Table of Contents

Updated: Thursday, July 25, 1996
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Cryptococcus
 
 
 
Extensive molecular research showed that this isolate belonged to the
highly virulent AFLP genotype 6A (VGIIa) of _Cryptococcus gattii_,
which is the major genotype involved in the Vancouver Island _

C. gattii_ outbreak (1-4). All 7 sequenced genes had a complete match
with the sequence types specific for isolates involved in the
Vancouver Island outbreak (5).

Thus, we conclude that the pathogen
was acquired during the patient's visit to Vancouver Island and
imported to Denmark.

The presence of 3 cryptococcal masses of more or
less equal size suggests that the patient was exposed to a high
concentration of infectious cells of _C. gattii_.

The observed incubation time of 6 weeks is shorter than that was previously
reported for infections related to the Vancouver Island outbreak
(2-11 mo) (4). These observations, in combination with the absence of
any known predisposing factor in this patient, such as smoking or
treatment with corticosteroids, suggest that this specific AFLP6
genotype of _C. gattii_ is highly virulent (4,5).

This case suggests a potential risk of tourists acquiring
cryptococcosis while visiting Vancouver Island. Therefore, we
recommend tourists and medical staff of healthcare centers worldwide
be alert for symptoms of cryptococcosis after travel to Vancouver Island.

 
 
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Cryptococcus Neoformans | Legionella Pneumophila | Giardia and Cryptosporidium

ISOLATION OF CRYPTOCOCCUS NEOFORMANS

Cryptococcus neoformans is the infectious agent of the fungal disease cryptococcoses. Formerly a rare disease, the incidence of cryptococcoses has increased in recent years. This microorganism is commonly associated with old pigeon manure, but it has also been recovered from dried excreta of chickens, sparrows, starlings, and other birds.

C. neoformans uses the creatinine in avian feces as a nitrogen source. It gains a competitive advantage over other microorganisms and multiplies exceedingly well in dry bird manure accumulated in places that are not in direct sunlight.

ISOLATION PROCEDURE

The laboratory uses a dilution technique outlined by the Center for Disease Control and Prevention. The samples go through several dilutions with each dilution plated on specialized media for the isolation of Cryptococcus neoformans. Our laboratory has 18 years of experience in the isolation of this organism. Results can be expected within 4-5 days. Reports of these results can be expected within two weeks from receipt of samples.

MORE INFORMATION

More information about this fungus can be received by contacting our laboratory or from the Center for Disease Control and Prevention website. TOP

 

LEGIONELLA PNEUMOPHILA IN CONTAMINATED WATER

Legionella pneumophila is a bacteria which causes the disease legionellosis. L. pneumophila was first identified in 1977 by the CDC as the cause of an outbreak of pneumonia that caused 34 deaths at a 1976 American Legion Convention. In the U.S., Legionnaire's disease is considered to be fairly common and serious, and the Legionella organism is one of the top three causes of sporadic, community-acquired pneumonia.

TRANSMISSION

The likelihood of contracting Legionnaires' disease is related to the level of contamination in the water source, the susceptibility of the person exposed, and the intensity of exposure to the contaminated water. Disease transmission usually occurs via inhalation of an aerosol of water contaminated with the organism.

COMMON SOURCES OF CONTAMINATED WATER

Water sources that frequently provide optimal conditions for growth of the organisms include:

  • cooling towers
  • domestichot-water systems that operate below 60 degrees C
  • humidifiers
  • spas and whirlpools
  • dental water lines at a temperature above 20 degrees C
  • other water sources including stagnant water in fire sprinkler systems

ISOLATION OF LEGIONELLA

Analysis of water samples from a source suspected of being contaminated with L. pneumophila is a valuable means of identifying potential sources of the disease. Our microbiological laboratory has 16 years of experience in the detection of Legionella and can determine the number of organisms present in colony forming units per milliliter of water and can determine the identity of serogroups of Legionella pneumophila in the sample.

CULTURED SAMPLES

Water samples are cultured on special buffered charcoal yeast extract culture media. Selective isolation processes to eliminate other microbial overgrowth can determine the number of CFU of L. pneumophila per milliliter of water. This process of growth and isolation is time-consuming, and results typically require 7-14 days from the time of submission.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

For additional information about Legionella isolation and identification please call our laboratory or access the Center for Disease Control website. TOP

GIARDIA AND CRYPTOSPORIDIUM IN WATER

Giardia lamblia are flagellated protozoans first documented in 1966 as causative agents of waterborne intestinal disease in the United States. Since that time, numerous outbreaks of giardiasis have occurred throughout the United States, principally in mountainous areas. Giardia are currently the predominant cause of waterborne illness, accounting for more than 50 percent of the identified cases. Giardia form environmentally resistant cysts that allow for the extended survival of the parasite in surface and treated drinking water. This organism has previously been reported to be present in lakes, rivers, and creeks with a survival rate of at least 16 days. Cryptosporidium are protozoans first described in 1907 but only recognized as an agent of human waterborne diseases in 1987. Like Giardia, Cryptosporidium form environmentally resistant oocysts. Cryptosporidium appear to be widely distributed in the aquatic environment and resist the normal water treatment processes due to their size and increased disinfection resistance.

ISOLATION METHOD

Samples (10 liters) are sent to the laboratory where a filtration process is completed. The filter is processed using the USEPA Method 1622 for the Isolation of Cryptosporidium and Giardia in water samples. The entire procedure usually takes 1 -1½ days to complete. Our laboratory has 6 years of experience isolating these two protozoans from water samples. You may expect results within one week from the date of receipt.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

For additional information about the isolation of these two protozoans, please contact our laboratory or access the USEPA website. TOP

 
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Should we be boiling our water?
.........................................................
.
.

Cryptosporidium is a parasite commonly found in lakes and rivers, especially when the water is contaminated with sewage and animal wastes.

Cryptosporidium is very resistant to disinfection,
 
and even a well-operated water treatment system cannot ensure that drinking water will be completely free of this parasite.
 
 
Current EPA drinking water standards were not explicitly designed to assure the removal or killing of Cryptosporidium.
 
 
Many large water systems already voluntarily take actions for greater control of Cryptosporidium and other microbial contaminants.
 
By 2001, the water systems serving the majority of the United States population (those relying on a surface water source, such as a river, and serving more than 10,000 people) must meet a new EPA standard that strengthens control over microbial contaminants, including Cryptosporidium.
 
EPA continues to conduct research on microbial contaminants which will be used for determining priorities for the drinking water program, including setting future standards and reevaluating existing standards.

Cryptosporidium has caused several large waterborne disease outbreaks of gastrointestinal illness, with symptoms that include diarrhea, nausea, and/or stomach cramps. People with severely weakened immune systems (that is, severely immunocompromised) are likely to have more severe and more persistent symptoms than healthy individuals. Moreover, Cryptosporidium has been a contributing cause of death in some immunocompromised people.

Individuals who are severely immunocompromised may include those who are infected with HIV/AIDS, cancer and transplant patients taking immunosuppressive drugs, and people born with a weakened immune system.

BACKGROUND:

Data are not adequate to determine how most people become infected. For example,

we do not know the importance of drinking water compared to other possible sources of Cryptosporidium,
 
 
such as exposure to the feces of infected persons or animals, sex involving contact with feces, eating contaminated food, or accidentally swallowing contaminated recreational water.

Thus, in the absence of an outbreak, there are insufficient data to determine whether a severely immunocompromised individual is at a noticeably greater risk than the general public from waterborne Cryptosporidiosis.

Even a low level of Cryptosporidium in water, however, may be of concern for the severely immunocompromised, because the illness can be life-threatening.
 
The risk of a severely immunocompromised individual acquiring Cryptosporidiosis from drinking water in the absence of an outbreak is likely to vary from city to city, depending on the quality of the city's water source and the quality of water treatment.
 
 
Current risk data are not adequate to support a recommendation that severely immunocompromised persons in all U.S. cities boil or avoid drinking tap water.
 
(PERHAPS WE SHOULD)

In the absence of a recognized outbreak, this guidance has been developed for severely immunocompromised people who may wish to take extra precautions to minimize their risk of infection from waterborne Cryptosporidiosis.

To be effective, the guidance must be followed consistently for all water used for drinking or for mixing beverages. During outbreaks of waterborne Cryptosporidiosis, studies have found that people who used precautions only part of the time were just as likely to become ill as people who did not use them at all.

GUIDANCE:

EPA and CDC have developed the following guidance for severely immunocompromised people who may wish to take extra precautions. Such individuals should consult with their health care provider about what measures would be most appropriate and effective for reducing their overall risk of Cryptosporidium and other types of infection.

Although data are not sufficient for EPA/CDC to recommend that all severely immunocompromised persons take extra caution with regards to their drinking water, individuals who wish to take extra measures to avoid waterborne Cryptosporidiosis can bring their drinking water to a full boil for one minute. Boiling water is the most effective way of killing Cryptosporidium.

As an alternative to boiling water, people may use the following measures:

* A point-oBLEEPse (personal use, end-of-tap, under-sink) filter. Only point-oBLEEPse filters that remove particles one micrometer or less in diameter should be considered. Filters in this category that provide the greatest assurance of Cryptosporidium removal include those that use reverse osmosis, those labeled as "Absolute" one micrometer filters, or those labeled as certified by NSF International (National Sanitation Foundation) under standard 53 for "Cyst Removal." The "Nominal" one micrometer rating is not standardized and many filters in this category may not reliably remove Cryptosporidium. As with all filters, people should follow the manufacturer's instructions for filter use and replacement. Water treated with a point-oBLEEPse filter that meets the above criteria may not necessarily be free of organisms smaller than Cryptosporidium that could pose a health hazard for severely immunocompromised individuals.

* Bottled water. Many, but not all, brands of bottled water may provide a reasonable alternative to boiling tap water. The origin of the source water, the types of microorganisms in that water, and the treatment of that water before it is bottled vary considerably among bottled water companies and even among brands of water produced by the same company. Therefore, individuals should not presume that all bottled waters are absolutely free of Cryptosporidium. Bottled waters derived from protected well and protected spring water sources are less likely to be contaminated by Cryptosporidium than bottled waters containing municipal drinking water derived from less protected sources such as rivers and lakes.

Any bottled water treated by distillation or reverse osmosis before bottling assures Cryptosporidium removal. Water passed through a commercial filter that meets the above criteria for a point-oBLEEPse device before bottling will provide nearly the same level of Cryptosporidium removal as distillation or reverse osmosis. Bottled waters meeting the above criteria may not necessarily be free of organisms other than Cryptosporidium that could pose a health hazard for severely immunocompromised individuals.

Neither EPA nor CDC maintains a list of point-oBLEEPse filters or bottled water brands that meet the above criteria. NSF International can provide a list of filters that meet the NSF criteria. The NSF address is:

NSF International
P.O. Box 130140
789 N. Dixboro Road
Ann Arbor, MI 48113-0140, USA
Telephone: (+1) 734-769-8010
Toll Free (USA): 800-NSF-MARK
Fax: 734-769-0109
E-mail: info@nsf.org
(http://www.nsf.org/ Exit EPA Disclaimer ).
Individuals who contact bottlers or filter manufacturers for information should request data supporting claims that a brand of bottled water or filter can meet the above criteria.

FURTHER INFORMATION:

When an outbreak of waterborne Cryptosporidiosis is recognized and is determined to be on-going, officials of the public-health department and/or the water utility will normally issue a "boil water" notice to protect both the general public and the immunocompromised.

Current testing methods cannot determine with certainty whether Cryptosporidium detected in drinking water is alive or whether it can infect humans. In addition, the current method often requires several days to get results, by which time the tested water has already been used by the public and is no longer in the community's water pipes.

Severely immunocompromised people may face a variety of health risks. Depending on their illness and circumstances, a response by such individuals that focuses too specifically on one health risk may decrease the amount of attention that should be given to other risks. Health care providers can assist severely immunocompromised persons in weighing these risks and in applying this guidance.


FOR MORE INFORMATION ON CRYPTOSPORIDIUM:

The National Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has prepared a fact sheet on Cryptosporidium - www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dpd/parasites/cryptosporidiosis/default.htm

The National Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has prepared guidance for persons with HIV/AIDS who are concerned about Cryptosporidiosis- www.cdc.gov/ncidod/diseases/crypto/hivaids.htm--> www.cdc.gov/nchstp/hiv_aids/pubs/brochure/oi_cryp.htm -->www.cdc.gov/hiv/pubs/brochure/oi_cryp.htm

The US Department of Agriculture, in conjunction with Cornell University, has prepared a general information document on Cryptosporidium-www.nalusda.gov/wqic/cornell.html

You will need Adobe Acrobat Reader to view the Adobe PDF files on this page. See EPA's PDF page for more information about getting and using the free Acrobat Reader.


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.
read in full here...
 
 
 

Volume 13, Number 1–January 2007

Research

Spread of Cryptococcus gattii in British Columbia, Canada, and Detection in the Pacific Northwest, USA

Laura MacDougall,*Comments to Author Sarah E. Kidd,† Eleni Galanis,* Sunny Mak,* Mira J. Leslie,‡ Paul R. Cieslak,§ James W. Kronstad,† Muhammad G. Morshed,* and Karen H. Bartlett†
*British Columbia Centre for Disease Control, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada; †University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada; ‡Washington State Department of Health, Shoreline, Washington, USA; and §Oregon State Public Health, Portland, Oregon, USA

Suggested citation for this article

Abstract
Cryptococcus gattii, emergent on Vancouver Island, British Columbia (BC), Canada, in 1999, was detected during 2003–2005 in 3 persons and 8 animals that did not travel to Vancouver Island during the incubation period; positive environmental samples were detected in areas outside Vancouver Island. All clinical and environmental isolates found in BC were genotypically consistent with Vancouver Island strains.

In addition, local acquisition was detected in 3 cats in Washington and 2 persons in Oregon.
 
The molecular profiles of Oregon isolates differed from those found in BC and Washington.
 
Although some microclimates of the Pacific Northwest are similar to those on Vancouver Island, C. gattii concentrations in off-island environments were typically lower, and human cases without Vancouver Island contact have not continued to occur.
 
This suggests that C. gattii may not be permanently colonized in off-island locations.
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 Hi Annharra thanks for the link top site  ... http://www.nwhc.usgs.gov/
  page 6 on the guidelines .............
 
 
 
 
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Annhara  hi ,I know you have posted this disease on a thread , forum moves so guickly can't find it for now, this article is a hmmm interesting ......
 bacteria Acinetobacter baumannii
 

Wired to report US unwittingly evolved superpathogen in Iraqi combat hospitals


A drug-resistant bacteria that is infecting wounded US soldiers in Iraq -- and has spread to civilian hospitals in parts of Europe -- accidentally evolved in US military hospitals in Iraq, Wired Magazine will report in a massive expose on Monday, RAW STORY has learned.

The full story is
now available here.

The several thousand word expose is set to bring uncomfortable new light to the bacteria Acinetobacter baumannii that Pentagon officials previously said was likely a product of Iraqi soil.

"By creating the most heroic and efficient means of saving lives in the history of warfare, the Pentagon had accidentally invented a machine for accelerating bacterial evolution and was airlifting the pathogens halfway around the world," the magazine reveals.

The story will go live online early Monday, newsroom sources say, and appear in February's print edition.

http://www.informationliberation.com/?id=19682

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Figure 2
 
 
 
Human Mycoses

Fungi cause a wide variety of diseases in humans,
 
and the areas we discuss are listed below. You may also want to refer to the Infectious Disease Society of America-Mycoses Study Group (IDSA-MSG) Practice Guidelines for treating invasive mycoses.
 
These cover aspergillosis, blastomycosis, candidiasis, coccidiodomycosis, cryptococcosis, histoplasmosis, and sporotrichosis and are available at the IDSA website.
 
 
Aspergillosis
Blastomycosis
Candidiasis
Coccidioidomycosis
Cryptococcosis

Histoplasmosis
Paracoccidiomycosis
Sporotrichosis
Zygomycosis
.......................................................................................................
 

C. immitis infects humans and animals almost exclusively by the respiratory route (5).
 
Once inhaled, the arthroconidia cluster in the lungs and undergo a dramatic morphologic change.
 
The round cells, which develop into spherules, undergo repeated internal divisions until they are filled with hundreds to thousands of offspring, termed endospores.
 
This process occurs over 48 to 72 hours (6). When the spherule ruptures, each released endospore has the capacity to develop into a mature spherule.
................................
 
 
 
Coccidioidomycosis (also known as
 
Valley fever and California valley fever)
 
 
is a fungal disease caused by Coccidioides immitis or C. posadasii.[1] It is endemic in certain parts of Arizona, California, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas, Utah and northwestern Mexico.[2]
 
C. immitis resides in the soil in certain parts of the southwestern United States, northern Mexico, and a few other areas in the Western Hemisphere.
 
Infection is caused by inhalation of airborne, fungal particles known as arthroconidia, which are a form of spore. The disease is not transmitted from person to person.
...................................................................................
 
It, along with its relative Coccidioides posadasii,
 
can cause a disease called coccidioidomycosis,
 
and it is a rare cause of meningitis, mostly in immunocompromised persons.
 
It has been declared a select agent by both the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the U.S. Department of Agriculture, and is considered a biosafety level 3 pathogen.
 
........................................................................................................
 
 
 
 
 
 

D. CLASS 3 AGENTS

Agents that cause disease which may have serious or lethal consequences.

  Agents involving special hazards, or agents derived from outside the United States, that require a federal permit for importation, unless they are specified for higher classification.

This class includes pathogens that require special conditions for containment. Mycobacterium tuberculosis, St. Louis encephalitis virus, and Coxiella burnetii are representative of microorganisms assigned to this level. These agents may cause a serious or potentially lethal disease as a
 
result of exposure from inhalation and require Biosafety Level 3 work practices.

 Biosafety Level 3 includes all the same guidelines as Biosafety Level 1 and 2, but also:

  • The lab area must be physically separated from access corridors and have self-closing, double door access.
  • Lab doors must be closed when experiments are in progress.
  • Access is highly restrictive, including a double set of doors separating the lab from other areas.
  • Infectious work is done in a biological safety cabinet.
  • Disposable plastic-backed matting is used on non-perforated work surfaces within biological safety cabinets.
  • Respirators or surgical masks are worn in infected animal rooms.
  • Vacuum lines are adapted with high efficiency particulate air (HEPA) filters and liquid disinfectant traps.
  • Exhaust from biological safety cabinet is HEPA-filtered and discharged directly to the outside or through the building exhaust system if it is connected in a manner (e.g. thimble unit connection) that avoids any interference with the air balance of the cabinets or building exhaust system.
  • Ducted exhaust air ventilation systems are used.
  • Baseline serum samples are collected for all at-risk personnel.
  • Lab personnel receive the appropriate immunizations or tests for the agents handled or potentially present in the laboratory (e.g. hepatitis B vaccine or TB skin testing). Document this requirement.
  • A biosafety manual must be prepared or adopted. Personnel must be advised of special hazards and are required to read and to follow instructions on practices and procedures. Document this requirement.
  • The laboratory supervisor is responsible for insuring that, before working with organisms at Biosafety Level 3, all personnel demonstrate proficiency in standard microbiological practices. This might include prior experience in handling human pathogens or cell cultures or a specific training program. Document this requirement.
  • All potentially contaminated waste materials (e.g. gloves, lab coats, etc.) from laboratories or animal rooms are decontaminated before disposal or reuse.
..................................................................................................
 
Cryptococcus neoformans
 
is a yeast-like fungus which is found worldwide, often in soil which has been contaminated by bird excrement.
 
It is much more common in Africa than in Europe. It usually gets into the body through the lungs, and is not spread from person to person.
 
with symptoms such as coughing, fatigue, fever and shortness of breath. Lung inflammation is called pneumonitis, and fluid may also build up in the space between the lungs and the ribs (pleural effusion).

After the Cryptococcus organisms enter the bloodstream and spread elsewhere in the body, other symptoms can occur. The commonest manifestation, which is seen in two-thirds of cases of cryptococcosis, is cryptococcal meningitis: inflammation of the membranes surrounding the brain and spinal cord (the meninges).

The symptoms of cryptococcal meningitis, which tend to get gradually worse over a period of several weeks, include headache and stiff neck, discomfort in bright light, fever, neurological problems such as stroke, disorientation, coma, and non-specific signs and symptoms such as nausea, weight loss and general ill health.

..........................................................................................................
 
 
 
Spread of Rare Fungus from Vancouver Island
.............................................................................
 
click on link to listen to the Podcast...
 
 
...........................................................................................
 

 

 

Cryptococcosis

Description:

Cryptococcosis

is a chronic, subacute to acute pulmonary, systemic or meningitic disease,
 
 
initiated by the inhalation of basidiospores and/or desiccated yeast cells of Cryptococcus neoformans.
 
Primary pulmonary infections have no diagnostic symptoms and are usually subclinical. On dissemination, the fungus usually shows a predilection for the central nervous system,
 
however skin, bones and other visceral organs may also become involved.
 
Although C. neoformans is regarded as the principle pathogenic species, C. albidus and C. laurentii have on occasion also been implicated in human infection.
 
 
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Listen to more CDC Podcasts....
 
 
 
Cryptococcus gattii, a rare fungus normally found in the tropics, has infected people and animals on Vancouver Island, Canada. Dr. David Warnock, Director, Division of Foodborne, Bacterial, and Mycotic Diseases, CDC, discusses public health concerns about further spread of this organism

Spread of Rare Fungus from Vancouver Island


Cryptococcus gattii, a rare fungus normally found in the tropics, has infected people and animals on Vancouver Island, Canada. Dr. David Warnock, Director, Division of Foodborne, Bacterial, and Mycotic Diseases, CDC, discusses public health concerns about further spread of this organism  (Created: 12/20/2006 by Emerging Infectious Diseases)
Date Released: 12/29/2006
Listen to the podcast Listen To This Podcast... (9:23)
Bats are a natural reservoir for emerging viruses, among them henipaviruses and rabies virus variants. Dr. Nina Marano, Chief, Geographic Medicine and Health Promotion Branch, Division of Global Migration and Quarantine, CDC, explains connection between horseshoe bats and SARS coronavirus transmission.

Bats and SARS


Bats are a natural reservoir for emerging viruses, among them henipaviruses and rabies virus variants. Dr. Nina Marano, Chief, Geographic Medicine and Health Promotion Branch, Division of Global Migration and Quarantine, CDC, explains connection between horseshoe bats and SARS coronavirus transmission.  (Created: 11/8/2006 by Emerging Infectious Diseases)
Date Released: 11/17/2006
Listen to the podcast Listen To This Podcast... (5:37)
Survey participants in the United Kingdom admitted keeping leftover antimicrobial drugs for future use and taking them without medical advice. Dr. J. Todd Weber, director of CDC's Office of Antimicrobial Resistance, advises against the practice, which can be dangerous and can promote antimicrobial drug resistance.

Antimicrobial Drugs in the Home


Survey participants in the United Kingdom admitted keeping leftover antimicrobial drugs for future use and taking them without medical advice. Dr. J. Todd Weber, director of CDC's Office of Antimicrobial Resistance, advises against the practice, which can be dangerous and can promote antimicrobial drug resistance.  (Created: 10/19/2006 by Emerging Infectious Diseases)
Date Released: 10/26/2006
Listen to the podcast Listen To This Podcast... (4:07)
Chikungunya fever has reemerged in India, with thousands of people reporting moderate to high fever with arthralgia and arthritis. Learn what researchers at the National Institute of Virology in Pune, India, determined after analying blood samples collected from suspected case-patients in 3 Indian states.

Chikungunya Outbreaks Caused by African Genotype, India


Chikungunya fever has reemerged in India, with thousands of people reporting moderate to high fever with arthralgia and arthritis. Learn what researchers at the National Institute of Virology in Pune, India, determined after analying blood samples collected from suspected case-patients in 3 Indian states.  (Created: 8/29/2006 by Emerging Infectious Diseases)
Date Released: 9/13/2006
Listen to the podcast Listen To This Podcast... (12:00)
 
 
 
 
 
Bio
 
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From*****pedia...

 
 
Coccidioidomycosis (also known as
 
Valley fever and California valley fever)
 
 
is a fungal disease caused by Coccidioides immitis or C. posadasii.[1]
 
It is endemic in certain parts of
 
Arizona,
 
California,
 
Nevada,
 
New Mexico,
 
Texas,
 
Utah and
 
northwestern Mexico.[2]
..........................................................................................
 
 
 
................................

86. Anonymous. 2000. Coccidioidomycosis in travelers returning from Mexico--Pennsylvania, 2000 [In Process Citation]. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep. 49:1004-6.


 360. Cairns, L., D. Blythe, A. Kao, D. Pappagianis, L. Kaufman, J. Kobayashi, and R. Hajjeh. 2000. Outbreak of coccidioidomycosis in Washington State residents returning from Mexico. Clin Infect Dis. 30:61-64.

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Another Avian Gift....
 
........................................................................
 
 
 

Mycobacterium avium

Pronunciation: ( mi¢ko-bak-ter¢e-um e¢ve-um) A bacterial species causing tuberculosis in fowl and other birds. Recently linked to opportunistic infections in humans. syn: tubercle bacillus 3  

 
 
 
 
 
More than 95% of MAC infections in patients with AIDS are caused by
 
M avium  (Mycobacterium avium)
 
 
Pathophysiology:
 
The modes of transmission include inhalation through the respiratory tract and ingestion via the GI tract.
 
........................................................................
 
 
from.............. w i k i p e d i a
 

Mycobacterium avium subspecies paratuberculosis is a pathogenic bacteria in the genus Mycobacteria. It is often abbreviated Map, M. paratuberculosis, or M. avium sub. paratuberculosis.

Map causes Johne's disease in cattle and other ruminants, and it has long been suspected as a causative agent in Crohn's disease in humans.

Recent studies have shown that Map present in milk can survive pasteurization,

 
which has raised human health concerns due to the widespread nature of Map in modern dairy herds.
Map is heat resistant and it is capable of sequestering itself inside white blood cells, which may contribute to its persistence in milk.
 
It has also been reported to survive chlorination in municipal water supplies.

Even though Map is hardy, it is slow growing and fastidious , which means it is difficult to culture. Many negative studies for Map presence in living tissue, food, and water have used culture methods to determine whether the bacteria is present. Due to recent advances in our knowledge of the bacterium, some or all of these studies may need to be re-evaluated on the basis of culture methodology.

Map, like most mycobacteria, is difficult to treat. It is not susceptible to anti-tuberculosis drugs

 
 (which can generally kill Mycobacterium tuberculosis),
 
 
but can only be treated with a combination of antibiotics such as Rifabutin and a macrolide such as Clarithromycin.
 
Treatment regimes can last years.

Li et al., in 2005, sequenced and investigated the Map strain K-10 which consist of a single circular chromosome of 4,829,781 base pairs.

 

The Crohn's connection

On the assumption that Map is a causative agent in Crohn's, the Australian biotechnology company Giaconda is seeking to commercialise a combination of Rifabutin, clarithromycin and clofazimine as a potential drug therapy for Crohn's.

 
 
 
 
Genus: Mycobacterium
Species: M. avium
Subspecies: M. a. paratuberculosis
Trinomial name
Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis
(Bergey et al. 1923) Thorel et al. 1990
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..
 
 

Cyanotoxins

 ..........................................
 

Why are Cyanobacteria a Concern?

Some cyanobacteria produce toxins

that adversely affect livestock, domestic animals, and humans.
 
According to the
 
World Health Organization (WHO),
 
toxic cyanobacteria are found worldwide in both inland and coastal waters.
The first reports of toxic cyanobacteria in
 
New Hampshire occurred in the 1960 and 1970s.
 
During the summer of 1999, several dogs died after
 
ingesting toxic cyanobacteria from a blue-green algae
 
bloom in Lake Champlain.
 
WHO has documented acute impacts to humans from cyanobacteria from the U.S. and around the world as far back as 1931.
 
 
While most human health impacts have resulted from ingestion of contaminated drinking water,
 
cases of illnesses have also been attributed to swimming in waters infested with cyanobacteria.
 
 
FROM WHO....
 
 
 
Chapter 2. Cyanobacteria in the environment
.....................................................................
 
 
2.1 Nature and diversity

2.2 Factors affecting bloom formation

2.3 Cyanobacterial ecostrategists

2.4 Additional information

2.5 References

Chapter 3. Cyanobacterial toxins

3.1 Classification

3.2 Occurrence of cyanotoxins

3.3 Production and regulation

3.4 Fate in the environment

3.5 Impact on aquatic biota

3.6 References

Chapter 4. Human health aspects

4.1 Human and animal poisonings

4.2 Toxicological studies

4.3 References

Chapter 5. Safe levels and safe practices

5.1 Tolerable exposures

5.2 Safe practices

5.3 Other exposure routes

5.4 Tastes and odours

5.5 References

Chapter 6. Situation assessment, planning and management

6.1 The risk-management framework

6.2 Situation assessment

6.3 Management actions, the Alert Levels Framework

6.4 Planning and response

6.5 References

Chapter 7. Implementation of management plans

7.1 Organisations, agencies and groups

7.2 Policy tools

7.3 Legislation, regulations, and standards

7.4 Awareness raising, communication and public participation

7.5 References

Chapter 8. Preventative measures

8.1 Carrying capacity

8.2 Target values for total phosphorus within water bodies

8.3 Target values for total phosphorus inputs to water bodies

8.4 Sources and reduction of external nutrient inputs

8.5 Internal measures for nutrient and cyanobacterial control

8.6 References

Chapter 9. Remedial measures

9.1 Management of abstraction

9.2 Use of algicides

9.3 Efficiency of drinking water treatment in cyanotoxin removal

9.4 Chemical oxidation and disinfection

9.5 Membrane processes and reverse osmosis

9.6 Microcystins other than microcystin-LR

9.7 Effective drinking water treatment at treatment works

9.8 Drinking water treatment for households and small community supplies

9.9 References

Chapter 10. Design of monitoring programmes

10.1 Approaches to monitoring programme development

10.2 Laboratory capacities and staff training

10.3 Reactive versus programmed monitoring strategies

10.4 Sample site selection

10.5 Monitoring frequency

10.6 References

...............................................
 
From... W i k i p e d i a...
 
Cyanobacteria .....
 
...Biotechnology and applications
 
Certain cyanobacteria produce cyanotoxins
 
like
 
Anatoxin-a, Anatoxin-as, Aplysiatoxin,
 
Cylindrospermopsin, Domoic acid, Microcystin LR,
 
Nodularin R (from Nodularia), or Saxitoxin.
 
Sometimes a mass-reproduction of cyanobacteria results in algal blooms....
 
Cyanobacteria are found in almost every conceivable habitat, from oceans to fresh water to bare rock to soil. They may be single-celled or colonial. Colonies may form filaments, sheets or even hollow balls....

...Each individual cell typically has a thick, gelatinous cell wall, which stains gram-negative. They lack flagella, but may move about by gliding along surfaces. In water column, some of them float due to the ability to form gas vesicles, like in archaea. Most are found in fresh water, while others are marine, occur in damp soil, or even temporarily moistened rocks in deserts. A few are endosymbionts in lichens, plants, various protists, or sponges and provide energy for the host. Some live in the fur of sloths, providing a form of camouflage....

...Cyanobacteria are the only group of organisms that are able to reduce nitrogen and carbon in aerobic conditions, a fact that may be responsible for their evolutionary and ecological success.
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Cyanobacteria in New Hampshire Waters
Potential Dangers of Blue-Green Algae Blooms
 

Do Cyanobacteria Exist in New Hampshire Waters?

Yes, they occur in all lakes, everywhere.

In New Hampshire, four of the most common cyanobacteria include:
 
Anabaena, Aphanizomenon, Oscillatoria, and Microcystis. Anabaena and Aphanizomenon
 
 produce neurotoxins (nerve toxins) that interfere with the nerve function and have almost immediate effects when ingested.
 
Microcystis and Oscillatoria are best known for producing hepatotoxins (liver toxins) known as microcystins.
 
 Oscillatoria and Lyngbya (another blue-green algae) also produce dermatotoxins, which cause skin rashes.
 
 
 
"...However, the state strongly advises against using lake water for consumption,
 
 
since neither in-home water treatment systems nor boiling the water will eliminate cyanobacteria toxins if they are present.

If you observe a well-established blue-green algae bloom or scum in the water, please comply with the following:

  • Do not wade or swim in the water!
  • Do not drink the water or let children drink the water!
  • Do not let pets or livestock into the water!
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Darwin Australia ... Top End .... Very Hot climate . Pool in near every back yard .
 

Brain disease organism found in city's water supply

February 24, 2007 02:12pm

AN organism that can cause a rare disease characterised by inflammation around the brain has been found in Darwin's drinking water.

High levels of amoeba naegleria fowleri (amoeba naegleria fowleri) have been discovered in the city's water supply.

However, the water was safe to drink, the Northern Territory health department told ABC Radio.The organism cannot cause disease through ingestion, but can be potentially lethal if it enters the body through the nose.No cases exist of victims contracting the disease in backyard pools, it was reported.

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Naegleria fowleri, Acanthamoeba, and other Pathogenic Free-Living Amoebae
Signs at some hot springs around southern Nevada and notices on the Internet warn about the dangers of getting a deadly Naegleria fowleri infection while swimming in a hot spring. What is "Naegleria fowleri" and what is the risk?

According to the Center for Disease Control (CDC) website, Naegleria fowleri is an amoeba that is ubiquitous in the environment (it occurs everywhere in the soil, water, and air). Infections in humans are rare and generally acquired from getting contaminated water up your nose. The World Health Organization suggests that swimming pools and spas are the main sources of infection. In untreated cases, death occurs within one week of the onset of symptoms, but drugs can control the disease. This disease is known only from isolated cases. For more information, see the World Health Organization and CDC web sites.

The Darwin newspaper seemed calm it has this in its drinking water and didn't seemed concerned about the pools , which in Darwin are near standard back yard features .
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( It's in the drinking water and they are calm?)

 http://parasitology.informatik.uni-wuerzburg.de/login/n/h/2335.html

Naegleriasis

Naegleria fowleri, a free-living amoeba is found in lakes, especially warm ones, and in swimming pools (amoebae).

 It infects healthy young people. In a small percentage of those exposed
 
it invades the nasopharynx and reaches the brain
 
 
 
where it gives rise to acute meningoencephalitis with trophozoites but without cysts. Because of the fast multiplication of the amoebae, clinical infection usually leads to death in a few days.
 
Large numbers of amoebae are present in the subarachnoid space, penetrating into the underlying cortex, but there is little (neutrophilic or monocytic) or no inflammatory reaction (Pathology/Fig. 4). Mobile amoebae are often found in the cerebrospinal fluid. Uncal herniation is the usual cause of death. A thick “exudate,” mostly amoebae, covers the brain and spinal cord and is most apparent over the sulci, major fissures, and basal cisterns.

Main clinical symptoms: Meningoencephalitis (= primary amoebic meningoencephalitis = PAME), often leading to death within days.

Incubation period: 1–3 days

Prepatent period: 12–14 days

Patent period: 3 weeks (if infection is survived)

Diagnosis: Culture techniques, immunohistological methods

Prophylaxis: Avoid bathing in eutrophic lakes

Therapy: see Treatment of Opportunistic Agents

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Guests Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 24 2007 at 10:26pm
 
Why is it found out of control ...
 
Human Intervention in nature...what? again?
...................................................................................
 
 

The results of this study confirmed the positive association of thermophilic pathogenic FLA, especially N. fowleri,

 
with thermally enriched cooling waters (Tyndall et al. 1989).
 
An increase in those amoebic concentrations was indeed found for the samples taken at C, T and OUT compared with IN samples. Additionally, the fact that OUT samples with significant lower temperatures contain at the same time lower thermophilic amoebic concentrations than C and T samples strengthens this association.
 
When the water conditions are in favour of Naegleria species (conductivity < 2,000 μS/cm2 and temperature > 22°C), only low concentrations of non-Naegleria amoebae (Ac and Ha) are found.
 
The flagellate empty habitat hypothesis (Griffin 1983) could therefore explain why Naegleria species, especially N. fowleri, are the most dominant encountered thermotolerant species that suppress other TA.
 
The former hypothesis postulates that human actions that disturb the environment (e.g. thermal pollution, chlorine disinfection) will (partially) remove the resident protozoal community, which usually competes successfully with N. fowleri and open an 'empty-habitat' that can thereafter very easily be colonized by N. fowleri.
 
On the other hand, when conductivity values are too high for optimal growth of Naegleria species (>2000 μS/cm2), Acanthamoebae spp. are able to dominate.
 
Acanthamoeba spp. are among the most prevalent protozoa found in the environment and have been isolated from a variety of sources including fresh and marine waters (Marciano-Cabral and Cabral 2003).
 
As the temperature of the water was measured at the sampling site during sample collection, it was not possible to determine up to what extent previous temperature conditions had an impact on the relative representation of the thermophilic amoebae present.
 
Selection of thermophilic amoebae may indeed depend on previous maximum temperatures as well as on the period during which such higher temperatures are maintained. Fresh water at higher temperatures (>30°C) and a bacterial food supply has a positive impact on the incidence of thermophilic amoebae, including Naegleria spp. (Ettinger et al. 2003).

Variable amoebae concentrations in the same circuit are probably also linked with variable perturbations (due to changing water flows in the cooling circuits) of soil (bottom sediment), the use of disinfectants and other (non-detected) abiotic and biotic factors.

More detailed and precise ecological studies, where more biotic (bacterial community) and abiotic factors (free-chlorine concentration, water speed, rainfall and solar heat) are included, would be welcomed.
 
This is also the case for temperature, as more data sets over a longer period could assist further the interpretation of amoebic density fluctuations. Such further information could allow to better understand the seasonal and spatial distribution and temporal evolution of the FLA community. This could lead to a more intelligent design of modelling including preventative and investigative monitoring programs.
..............
 
Survey for the presence of specific free-living amoebae in cooling waters from Belgian power plants
 MediaObjects/436_2006_399_Fig1_HTML.gif
 
Fig. 1 Sampling sites in Belgium and Chooz (France)
View complete entry
 
 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Guests Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 07 2007 at 6:03am
http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/03/07/africa/ME-GEN-Israel-Health-Scare.php

Itamar Shalit, chairman of the Israeli Society for Infectious Diseases, told Israel Radio that a total of 200 people have been infected this year with the germ, known as Klebsiella pneumoniae. He said half of them have died, though officials stressed that it was not yet clear if the infection was the main cause of death in these cases.

 
Israeli hospitals organize to prevent spread of deadly infection

JERUSALEM: Israeli health officials rushed to calm the public Wednesday as they investigated whether a bacterial infection contributed to the deaths of dozens of patients in hospitals in recent months.

The suspected outbreak in hospitals in central Israel has caused a scare since it was first reported by Israeli TV on Tuesday night. The largest newspaper, Yediot Ahronot, ran the banner headline "A dangerous germ has killed dozens of hospital patients" and Israeli radio stations devoted most of their air time to the subject.

Itamar Shalit, chairman of the Israeli Society for Infectious Diseases, told Israel Radio that a total of 200 people have been infected this year with the germ, known as Klebsiella pneumoniae. He said half of them have died, though officials stressed that it was not yet clear if the infection was the main cause of death in these cases.

The Israeli Health Ministry summoned hospital directors to an urgent meeting to discuss the situation but said there was no immediate threat to the public.

"When such a problem arises, we have to check it, to examine it, and not make the public panic," Health Minister Yaakov Ben-Izri told Israel Radio. "Even now there is no reason for panic."

Health officials said it remained unclear whether the germ had caused the patient deaths, noting that the people with the infection suffered from existing medical conditions.

"The ministry has not hidden information and we're not talking here about something that is very new," said Boaz Lev, the ministry's deputy director. "We don't know how many died from the germ. It's hard to say that people who died from serious illnesses died from the infection."

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Guests Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 09 2007 at 7:51pm
 Okay this is right off OT but had to share from Russia to L. A.  ....

T******ium was originally suspected in the murder in London last year of former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko, which sparked worldwide condemnation. He was later found to have died of poisoning by polonium.

There has been no official explanation of how or why the two women, who according to family members do not work for either government and have no known political or business ties to Russia, were poisoned.

L.A. hospital confirms t******ium poisoning

Sat Mar 10, 2007 1:37 AM GMT19
 

By Dan Whitcomb

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A Los Angeles hospital confirmed on Friday that two U.S. women who became ill during a trip to their native Russia, prompting investigations by both countries, were suffering from t******ium poisoning.

Cedars-Sinai Medical Centre said Marina Kovalevsky and her daughter, Yana, were receiving "appropriate treatment" for t******ium poisoning. They have been listed in fair but stable condition.

"Their date of discharge has not been determined but they are expected to remain in the hospital this weekend," Cedars-Sinai spokeswoman Sandy Van said in a statement.

The U.S. State Department asked Moscow on Thursday to investigate the suspected poisoning of the Kovalevskys with t******ium, a highly toxic metal that can cause a slow, painful death. The two women were initially hospitalized in Moscow and returned to Los Angeles on Wednesday.

T******ium was originally suspected in the murder in London last year of former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko, which sparked worldwide condemnation. He was later found to have died of poisoning by polonium.

There has been no official explanation of how or why the two women, who according to family members do not work for either government and have no known political or business ties to Russia, were poisoned.

Russian media said Marina Kovalevsky and her daughter emigrated to the United States from the Soviet Union in the 1980s but frequently visited there. On the most recent trip, they arrived in Moscow in mid-February and became ill about a week later.

"There was no reason in the world to poison Marina and Yana. They were not involved in anything at all," Marina's brother, Leon Peck, told the Los Angeles Times in an interview.

Peck told the newspaper that, because the Russian hospital where his sister and niece were being treated had no antidote for t******ium poisoning, he flew there with one called Prussian Blue and, after they began taking it, saw an immediate improvement in their condition.

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Guests Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 09 2007 at 7:53pm
 Why did the word T******ium poisoning come up like that ......????
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Guests Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 09 2007 at 7:55pm
Originally posted by Candles Candles wrote:

 Why did the word T******ium poisoning come up like that ......????
ConfusedConfused Very confused here  t  h  a l l i u m  poisoning ......will try again , or please follow link for reuters in red below.
 
 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T******ium for added reading on  t  *******i u m ..
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Guests Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 10 2007 at 3:17pm
 
 
Are You Sure You Want Chickens In Your Back Yard?
 
 
 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Guests Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 11 2007 at 12:48pm
A friend from California had valley fever. She felt she was going to die. She was on oxygen and had all the treatments that modern medicine, could give. She was told by someone online to use sulfer. She did and has beat it. I do not know if there is a connection or not, she sure thinks so.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Guests Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 11 2007 at 9:04pm

hi vstr... do you know if she used a sulfa drug... or sulfer?

 

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