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- <text id=93TT0583>
- <title>
- Dec. 06, 1993: Closing In On A Mysterious Killer
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Dec. 06, 1993 Castro's Cuba:The End Of The Dream
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MEDICINE, Page 66
- Closing In On A Mysterious Killer
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The deadly virus that emerged in the Southwest last spring has
- been isolated--but not tamed
- </p>
- <p>By Michael D. Lemonick--Reported by Nancy Harbert/Albuquerque and Lisa H. Towle/Raleigh
- </p>
- <p> People who think they're coming down with the flu, especially
- those living in the Southwest, should beware: the aches, fevers
- and coughs could mean something far worse. A mysterious ailment
- emerged last spring in which flulike symptoms become life threatening
- as tiny blood vessels throughout the lungs begin leaking plasma.
- Gasping for breath, victims literally start to drown in their
- own body fluids. The outcome in 27 of the first 45 known cases
- of the illness has been a quick death.
- </p>
- <p> Unofficially called Four Corners disease, because it was first
- identified in the region around the intersection of Arizona,
- New Mexico, Colorado and Utah, the malady has now turned up
- in 12 states, from Oregon to Texas. At first, no one knew why
- so many men and women--often young and otherwise healthy--were dropping dead. But months of swift and skilled medical
- detective work have confirmed the cause of the outbreak--and
- provided hope that it will not spread farther.
- </p>
- <p> Within a few weeks after the first cases appeared, scientists
- suspected that the culprit was a variety of hantavirus, closely
- related to pathogens already known to exist in Europe and Asia.
- Researchers then established that the virus was carried by wild
- deer mice, and residents of the Southwest and West began taking
- special precautions to minimize their contact with the rodents.
- Finally, just over a week ago, scientists at the Centers for
- Disease Control in Atlanta and the Army Medical Research Institute
- at Fort Detrick, Maryland, reported that both institutions had
- independently isolated the virus and grown it under laboratory
- conditions--a major step toward creating diagnostic tests
- and vaccines.
- </p>
- <p> The danger seems to have receded for the moment. The death rate
- has dropped from 60% of victims to 35%, and only three cases
- were reported in the Four Corners region in the past month,
- none of them fatal. Increased public awareness and a drop in
- the deer-mouse population may have helped stem the spread of
- the disease. But researchers fear that cold weather will cause
- mice to seek shelter inside houses, exposing people once again.
- So a major multilingual public-information campaign, set in
- motion in the spring, will continue. And in January Army scientists
- will begin testing a vaccine developed to fight the Asian version
- of the virus, which may prove at least partially effective in
- halting the local virus as well.
- </p>
- <p> The first inkling that a dangerous new disease was on the prowl
- came last May, when a 19-year-old Navajo man was rushed to an
- emergency room at the Indian Medical Center in Gallup, New Mexico.
- He seemed to have the flu, but suddenly he couldn't breathe.
- Within a short time, he was dead. Doctors recalled that they
- had seen a similar case about a month earlier. Then they found
- out that the young man had been on his way to his fiance's funeral
- when stricken--and that she too had died in exactly the same
- way.
- </p>
- <p> Further investigation uncovered two more cases, and after local
- health authorities ruled out severe flu and pneumonic plague--the latter is endemic to the Southwest, and a few cases show
- up every year--they turned to the CDC for help. Recalls Dr.
- C.J. Peters, chief of the CDC's Special Pathogens Branch: "It
- didn't fit the pattern of anything we'd seen, and all we could
- figure is that it was something brand new."
- </p>
- <p> The scientists hoped, though, that whatever pathogen was responsible
- would be related to some known virus. Sure enough, only days
- after they began testing one agent after another, researchers
- triggered an immune response in victims' blood and tissue samples
- with a strain of hantavirus. That came as a surprise. While
- hantaviruses had been known to exist in the Americas, they had
- never been found to cause disease. They do afflict some 200,000
- people a year worldwide. The majority of victims are in Asia,
- but Europe has hundreds as well. While these cases also start
- with flulike symptoms, the cause of death--which happens 5%
- to 15% of the time in Asia and just 1% in Europe--is often
- kidney hemorrhage, not fluid in the lungs.
- </p>
- <p> The fact that Four Corners disease--or Hantavirus Pulmonary
- Syndrome, as the CDC now calls it--seems to have appeared
- out of nowhere might suggest that the virus just arrived in
- the U.S. But after testing deer mice in the Four Corners area
- and in other regions, investigators say it's been around for
- a long time. "In all cases," says Peters, "we found what was
- clearly the same viral species. Things don't spread that widely
- all of a sudden. It takes awhile for it to happen."
- </p>
- <p> Then why hasn't the disease shown up in humans before? It probably
- has. People die from respiratory infections all the time; some
- cases that have been labeled "unexplained" were undoubtedly
- caused by hantavirus. The Navajo even have a traditional taboo
- against mice, which are believed to bear strange illnesses.
- The reason the outbreak was severe enough to be noticed this
- time, say investigators, is that heavy rains produced an unusually
- rich crop of wild pinon nuts, which in turn triggered a mouse-population
- explosion. When the animals urinate or defecate, the virus is
- spread into soil or dust that can then be inhaled by humans.
- In China cases multiply during harvest time, when farmers churn
- up the soil. As soon as health officials linked Four Corners
- disease to rodents, they launched an education campaign. They
- put together pamphlets, posters, videotapes and slide shows
- in English, Spanish and Navajo, explaining how to avoid contamination,
- and distributed them to churches, schools, public-health workers
- and exterminators.
- </p>
- <p> Because hantaviruses are species specific--that is, each strain
- is carried solely by one species of rodent--there's little
- danger that deer mice will pass the virus on to, say, rats who
- frequent large urban areas. But deer mice are found in every
- part of the country except the Southeast and East Coast. Researchers
- are now trying to determine just how widespread the virus is.
- Says Dr. Howard Levy, a professor at the University of New Mexico
- School of Medicine, who has treated a number of victims: "We
- are certainly hoping this has been an isolated disease related
- to an increase in the rodent population last spring. But it
- probably will be with us forever."
- </p>
- <p> Plenty of other questions remain. No one knows, for example,
- how long the incubation period inside the human body lasts (the
- current best guess is a couple of weeks). It's not clear why
- death comes so quickly--in as little as four hours after respiratory
- symptoms begin. And the fact that no one under age 12 has come
- down with the disease is unusual, given that children's immune
- systems are less well developed than those of adults. That may
- indicate that the damage comes not from the virus itself but
- from the body's violent immune response to it.
- </p>
- <p> The good news, says Peters, is that "we've not seen any evidence
- this can be passed from human to human." That means there is
- little chance of anything as extensive as the AIDS epidemic,
- in which hundreds of thousands of Americans have become infected.
- But few people who come down with chills and coughs in the Western
- U.S. this season will he able to avoid wondering, Is this really
- just the flu?
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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