New Fungus Strain Killing People and Animals in Northwest, page
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reply posted on 26-5-2010 @ 12:33 PM by emelie
reply to post by ddarkangle2bad



HI! There is also a fungus problem along with bacterial and parisitcic infection around the area of New England, in birds and most recently bats. They announced last year on tv and radio, anyone with bats in attics or homes are to call animal control so they can retrieve and study. Then of course you hear absolutely nothing on the subject! Hard to find healthy squirrels in this area also.Thanks, emelie


reply posted on 28-5-2010 @ 09:54 PM by ddarkangle2bad
New Fungus Strain Killing People and Animals in Northwest report is now out......................................................................................................May 27, 2010 Durham, North Carolina - Recently Web MD and other internet medical sites have featured articles with headlines such as, “About 10 People Have Reportedly Died in Northwestern U.S. After Infection with C. Gatti. [sic]” Cryptococcus gattii is a soil and plant fungus species usually found in South America, Australia, Africa and New Guinea. That particular fungus was not discovered in North America before 1999 when clinicians on the island of Vancouver, B. C., Canada, in the southeastern cities of Victoria and Nanaimo, confirmed emergency room patients with pneumonia and meningitis were infected with C. gattii fungus.

About the same time, veterinarians in the region were also treating dogs, cats and other animals with breathing problems that turned out also to be from C. gattii fungus infections. Then in January 2006, the first American case of human C. gattii fungus infection was confirmed in a patient who lived in the San Juan Islands of Puget Sound, Washington. Canada has now reported a total of 220 patients and 19 deaths attributed to the C. gattii fungus. That's a 10% death rate. In the United States, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) has identified 50 cases in Washington State, Oregon and Idaho with 10 deaths. That's a 20% death rate.

So the combined number of Canadian and U. S. cases of C. gattii fungus infection is now 270 cases with 29 deaths in a decade. Recently I talked with the head of a Duke University Medical Center research team that has gone to the Vancouver and northwestern United States to study the soil, plants and trees in which Cryptococcus gattii fungi now seem to be thriving and spreading. He is Joseph Heitman, M. D. and Ph.D., Chair and Professor in the Department of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology at the Duke University Medical Center in Durham, North Carolina. I asked Dr. Heitman if he and his medical team were surprised to learn that the Southern Hemisphere fungi was making people and animals sick in the Northern Hemisphere climate of Vancouver, Washington State and Oregon.
Read the rest of the report at
www.earthfiles.com...


reply posted on 28-5-2010 @ 10:15 PM by Aeons
reply to post by elfulanozutan0



H1N1 will be back this fall, if it follows the same trend as its prior incarnation. The second wave of that one was the worst one.


reply posted on 22-1-2011 @ 08:45 AM by Dogdish
reply to post by jcrash



Why does this link take me to the "Microsoft Live" site?

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