Fair
53°
Morris, IL
Fair|Forecast »

CDC leads the fight against meningitis outbreak

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

ATLANTA (MCT) — The emergency operations center is bustling at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, where scientists recently learned that the fungus linked to a multistate outbreak of lethal meningitis is actually two fungi.

That means the CDC must revise the treatment protocol and advise doctors in the 23 states with potential victims to switch to a broader spectrum of drugs.

“We’re still discovering what we’re up against,” said Dr. Benjamin Park, who is leading the CDC investigation.

The scene recalls images of NASA’s mission control center. Workers sitting at long tables look up at an array of large screens with maps pinpointing confirmed cases and deaths.

Dr. John Jernigan, a CDC epidemiologist, has assembled a team of the world’s leading experts in fungal infections. They spent Tuesday clarifying which patients are in the gravest danger. Many of those afflicted with the disease are elderly, he said.

As of Wednesday afternoon, there were 137 cases and 12 deaths across 10 states. Tuesday’s tally was 119 cases and 11 deaths.

“This is a rapidly evolving situation,” Jernigan said.

This isn’t your garden variety meningitis. Fungal meningitis is rare; there isn’t much scientific research or treatment guidance to fall back on.

Health officials have traced the outbreak to a steroid used in pain injections. It was formulated by one company in Massachusetts and delivered to 75 clinics in 23 states.

The CDC complex is coordinating the national effort to make sure affected patients get timely treatment that can save their lives. The emergency operations center has marshaled more than 100 workers to that end.

They are gathering information from health agencies in the affected states, honing treatment options and helping local health workers contact the 13,000 people who may have been infected. In the CDC’s labs, workers are extracting DNA from samples of spinal fluid and running tests to determine who is infected.

Meningitis attacks the spinal cord and brain, potentially causing brain damage, stroke and even death.

But Park said there’s some good news thus far: The great majority of potential victims have been contacted, and most who have been tested were not infected. Also, this form of meningitis is not contagious.

Previous Page|1||

Comments


Reader Poll

Were you impacted by last week's flooding?

Yes, but only inconvenienced by closed streets
Yes, water got close, but everything worked out OK
Yes, I had to evacuate my home or workplace
Yes, my house sustained extensive damage
No, I managed to avoid it all