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- <text id=93TT2094>
- <title>
- Aug. 23, 1993: Beware of Rabies
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Aug. 23, 1993 America The Violent
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HEALTH, Page 58
- Beware of Rabies
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A death in New York renews fears about a scourge once thought
- to be under control
- </p>
- <p>By EUGENE LINDEN--With reporting by Hannah Bloch/New York
- </p>
- <p> Shortly after the Fourth of July weekend, 11-year-old Kelly
- Ahrendt complained to her parents that she did not feel well
- and was having trouble sleeping. But the Ahrendts, a family
- of nine living on a small farm in Mamakating, New York, had
- no real hint of the horror to come. On July 7, Kelly said her
- knuckles and arm hurt, and the next day was taken to the doctor.
- According to the family, he thought that some cartwheels she
- did earlier in the week might have caused the arm pain. As for
- her other symptoms, the doctor suspected strep throat and an
- ear infection; he took a throat culture and prescribed antibiotics.
- Reassured, the Ahrendts left for a camping trip in upstate New
- York, near Lake George.
- </p>
- <p> The vacation came to an abrupt end when Kelly became feverish
- and began hallucinating. Despite intensive care at three different
- hospitals and the best efforts of doctors to figure out what
- was wrong, she kept getting worse. She had muscle spasms, salivated
- uncontrollably and suffered bouts of terror. She recoiled from
- her mother and father and even her own hair. During one lucid
- moment the little girl told her parents, "I'm sorry, I know
- I shouldn't be afraid of you, but I can't help it." On July
- 11, three days before her 12th birthday, she died with doctors
- still mystified.
- </p>
- <p> It was not until a month later that tests revealed the stunning
- cause of Kelly's death: rabies. The finding was baffling because
- the girl had not reported being bitten or scratched by an animal,
- and all the Ahrendts' pets and livestock had been vaccinated.
- Though it may never be known how Kelly got the virus, she could
- have had some contact with an infected animal that she thought
- nothing of at the time. Rabies is so rare in Americans (Kelly
- was the first New Yorker to die of it since 1954) that the doctors
- had little reason to suspect the disease. And by the time they
- saw her, they probably couldn't have done anything to save her.
- If they had known much earlier that she had been exposed to
- a rabid animal, she could have been treated through vaccination.
- But once symptoms appear (typically 30 to 40 days after infection),
- the disease is almost invariably fatal.
- </p>
- <p> Since 1980 only 18 people have died of rabies in the U.S., and
- 10 of those victims became infected in other countries. But
- the threat is rising. Largely eradicated from pets by vaccination
- programs, the virus has re-emerged as a widespread problem among
- wild populations of mammals, particularly raccoons, skunks,
- foxes and bats. Nationwide, the number of reported rabies cases
- in animals has almost doubled, from about 4,700 in 1988 to 8,645
- last year. Raccoons (4,311 cases) eclipsed skunks (2,334) as
- the No. 1 carriers. Dr. Charles Rupprecht, chief of the rabies
- section at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC),
- calls the rapid spread "one of the most intensive wildlife rabies
- outbreaks in history."
- </p>
- <p> Humans may be partly to blame. In 1977, according to one theory,
- Virginia's hunters felt there was a shortage of raccoons in
- the region. As a result, perhaps several thousand raccoons were
- imported both legally and illegally from Southeastern states,
- and some of those animals apparently harbored rabies. Since
- then, raccoon rabies has been moving outward from Virginia and
- West Virginia at a rate of 25 to 40 miles a year and has invaded
- all Northeastern states except Vermont, Maine and Rhode Island.
- In New York, which now leads the nation in animal-rabies cases
- (1,761 last year), the number of people who got shots after
- they thought they were exposed to the disease has risen more
- than tenfold, from 81 in 1989 to 1,088 last year.
- </p>
- <p> While rabies in the U.S. has been confined almost totally to
- animals, it can still be a human scourge, especially in developing
- countries. In India 25,000 people died from the disease in 1989.
- Unofficial estimates of the annual worldwide death toll range
- from 50,000 to 100,000.
- </p>
- <p> First described 3,800 years ago in Mesopotamia, rabies has always
- inspired a special terror because of the gruesome and inexorable
- way it progresses once it takes hold of a victim. It attacks
- the nervous system, producing symptoms such as irrational furies,
- fearfulness and foaming at the mouth. The difficulty that patients
- have in swallowing water or food led to the disease's other
- common name: hydrophobia. Since the virus moves through the
- body inside nerve tissue rather than the blood, the disease
- triggers no antibodies and can't be detected during its incubation.
- Once it reaches the brain, death is virtually inevitable.
- </p>
- <p> The human response to rabies can be as savage as the disease's
- symptoms. In 1986 a rabid cat bit a woman in central Pennsylvania.
- Before long, a mob armed with shotguns and baseball bats approached
- an enclosure where an 80-year-old man kept dozens of cats. The
- group fired shots in the air before cooling down and deciding
- to back off.
- </p>
- <p> Destroying animals, of course, is no way to control the disease.
- About 60% of the raccoon population would have to be eliminated
- before the virus would be curbed. A better idea, says CDC's
- Rupprecht, is to vaccinate wild animals, just as pets are given
- protection. He helped develop an experimental oral vaccine for
- raccoons as a research veterinarian at Philadelphia's Thomas
- Jefferson University and the Wistar Institute, a biomedical
- research center. The vaccine is contained in bait and dropped
- into areas where raccoons roam. In tests done in New Jersey,
- the animals ate the bait, and many of them developed antibodies
- to the virus.
- </p>
- <p> Rabies is harder to spot than many people think; its carriers
- do not always appear to be crazed and menacing. In fact, they
- may seem tame or merely sick, inviting kindly passersby to make
- the potentially fatal error of coming to their aid. A bite or
- scratch is not absolutely necessary: two victims have picked
- up rabies in caves from breathing air contaminated by infected
- bats.
- </p>
- <p> With a few simple measures, families can minimize the risks.
- First, they should get pets inoculated, particularly those that
- might encounter other animals. Last year health officials destroyed
- 290 rabid cats and 182 infected dogs. In rural and suburban
- areas, people should keep pets behind fences so they will have
- little contact with wild animals; garbage and pet food should
- be kept indoors to discourage furry intruders from entering
- backyards.
- </p>
- <p> Parents and children should know the warning signals in both
- pets and wild animals. Loss of coordination, increased aggressiveness
- or even a strange meow or bark in an unvaccinated pet may be
- a sign that it should be confined and watched for 10 days. When
- confronted with a wild animal behaving unnaturally, people should
- resist the impulse to help and should notify the police. In
- fact, all wildlife should be observed from a distance. Says
- Dr. Mark Chassin, New York State health commissioner: "If a
- nocturnal animal like a raccoon is on a main street at noon
- in New York, one should assume it's rabid."
- </p>
- <p> If bitten or otherwise exposed, the victim should wash the wound
- immediately with soap and water and then get medical help. The
- rabies vaccination, first developed by Louis Pasteur in 1885,
- used to be an extremely painful series of 14 to 21 shots in
- the abdomen. In recent years, a much gentler but equally effective
- set of five shots in the arm has become available.
- </p>
- <p> The vaccination often costs more than $1,000, but that is a
- small price for stopping the virus. While a disease as old and
- resilient as rabies may never be eradicated, it can be controlled--if everyone stays alert to the danger.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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