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- <text id=93TT2368>
- <title>
- Feb. 01, 1993: Valley Fever
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Feb. 01, 1993 Clinton's First Blunder
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MEDICINE, Page 59
- Valley Fever
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A dust-borne fungus is causing an epidemic of misery and rising
- mortality in central California
- </p>
- <p>By MARGUERITE JOHNSON - With reporting by Dan Cray/Los Angeles
- and Andrea Dorfman/New York
- </p>
- <p> Lori Crown thought she was doing the right thing last year
- when she moved to a dryer climate in Bakersfield, California,
- after being plagued by asthma attacks during her six years in
- Hawaii. A few months later, Crown, 35, was suffering from severe
- headaches, a prolonged fever of 102 degreesF, swollen feet and
- painful bumps on her hands and legs. The diagnosis: "valley
- fever," or coccidioidomycosis, a dust-borne disease caused by
- the microscopic spores of a fungus, Coccidioides immitis.
- </p>
- <p> As a newcomer to the San Joaquin Valley, Crown was stunned
- to learn that the same rich topsoil that makes the region an
- agricultural Mecca also harbors this deadly microbe. She has
- become a statistic in the worst epidemic of valley fever ever
- recorded. From 1986 to 1990, doctors reported an average of 450
- cases a year to state authorities. In 1991 the number nearly
- tripled, to 1,208. Last year it soared to 4,54l, with an
- estimated death toll exceeding 50.
- </p>
- <p> The worst-afflicted area is the San Joaquin's Kern County,
- which has reported nearly 2,000 cases since October. Valley
- fever is also on the rise in the Tucson and Phoenix areas, where
- reported cases jumped from 287 in 1991 to 438 last year. But
- statistics tell just part of the story: only about 10% of those
- infected ever come to a doctor's attention. The rest have either
- no noticeable symptoms or mild cases that they mistake for a
- cold or flu. Though valley fever, which has been known for a
- hundred years, has received scant attention outside the
- Southwest, the current epidemic is changing that. Last week the
- U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta
- issued a warning to physicians nationwide to be on the alert for
- the disease in patients who may have become infected while
- traveling.
- </p>
- <p> Valley fever does not spread from person to person but is
- contracted by inhaling airborne spores from the fungus, which
- is endemic to dry areas of the American West and Southwest as
- well as parts of northern Mexico and Central and South America.
- Face masks offer only limited protection against the
- infinitesimal spores, and efforts to design a vaccine have yet
- to succeed. The fungus multiplies dramatically whenever the soil
- becomes damp after a protracted dry spell. Swept into the air
- by winds, construction equipment, even the passing feet of farm
- workers, the spores can travel up to hundreds of miles on the
- surface of dust particles. Central California's six-year
- drought, which has been interspersed with warm, heavy rains, as
- well as the region's construction boom, provided the ideal
- conditions for fungal proliferation.
- </p>
- <p> Those lucky enough to ingest the spores without becoming
- seriously ill seem to acquire immunity. More serious cases are
- often mistaken for pneumonia, since the fungus flourishes in the
- moist, warm environment of the lungs. In about 1% of victims,
- the disease spreads beyond the lungs through the bloodstream--typically to the skin, bones and the membranes surrounding the
- brain, causing meningitis. "There was a time when I saw three
- new cases of cocci meningitis a year," says Dr. Royce Johnson,
- chief of infectious diseases at Bakersfield's Kern Medical
- Center. "Not long ago, I saw three new cases in one day."
- Johnson is now treating 51 cases of cocci meningitis and an
- additional 300 patients with severe valley fever.
- </p>
- <p> Latinos, African Americans and Asians are at much greater
- risk than Caucasians of developing a severe case. "We don't
- know why," says Dr. Demosthenes Pappagianis, a professor of
- microbiology at the University of California at Davis, "and it
- is a very important question because it goes to the ability of
- humans to respond to this organism." Others who are especially
- susceptible are the elderly, asthma sufferers and people with
- suppressed immune systems. The California health department
- advises such individuals not to take car trips through the
- Central Valley on windy days.
- </p>
- <p> The disease is easily detected with a blood test, but
- since most cases are mild and self-limiting, there's no
- consensus on how aggressively it should be treated. However,
- once serious symptoms appear--including skin rashes, labored
- breathing and achy joints--treatment must be prompt.
- Unfortunately, all four antifungal drugs in use are disagreeable
- and often toxic. The worst, victims agree, is amphotericin B,
- known as "Ampho the Terrible" to those who have to have it
- injected into the base of their skull for meningitis. The side
- effects include nausea, fever and kidney damage. In severe
- cases, where the fungus has permanently damaged lung or bone
- tissue, surgical repair may be needed. Since the drugs serve
- only to suppress the fungus, not to kill it, those who develop
- a severe case of valley fever may require treatment for years
- and can never be sure that it will not flare up again.
- </p>
- <p> Ronald Sanders, 50, of Bakersfield, came down with valley
- fever in 1988. It spread into his brain membranes, causing a
- stroke. Today, although his paralysis is gone, he is still
- fighting the disease. Every Friday, Sanders has to go to his
- doctor's office for a cisternal tap, in which spinal fluid is
- removed, tested and mixed with amphotericin B for reinjection.
- There is no end in sight to the painful procedure.
- </p>
- <p> Thanks to fluconazole, an expensive antifungal drug ($685
- for a one-month supply of pills), Lori Crown's condition has
- improved. Her feet are no longer swollen and the sores on her
- skin have vanished, but she still gets painful headaches,
- frequent fevers, arthritic pain and debilitating fatigue. "It's
- so frustrating," she says. "One day I'll feel fine, then I'll
- be in bed for the next three." Most days she wishes she could
- have stayed in Hawaii.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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