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Little Star

(17,055 posts)
Sat Jul 12, 2014, 04:52 PM Jul 2014

Deadliest, Rarest Form of Plague Contracted Near Denver

Source: Bloomberg

A Colorado man is infected with the rarest and most fatal form of plague, an airborne version that can be spread through coughing and sneezing.

It is the first case of pneumonic plague seen in the state since 2004, said Jennifer House, a spokeswoman for the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment. The man, who hasn’t been identified, may have been exposed in Adams County near Denver, health officials said in a statement. While House said the man has been hospitalized and treated, she wouldn’t release other details about his situation.

“He’s on treatment long enough to not be transmissible,” House said in a telephone interview. He may have contracted the illness from his dog, she said, which died suddenly and has also been found to carry the disease.

“We don’t think it’s out in our air,” House said. “We think it’s in our dead animal populations and dead rodent populations.”

Read more: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-07-11/deadliest-rarest-form-of-plague-contracted-near-denver.html



Yikes!
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Deadliest, Rarest Form of Plague Contracted Near Denver (Original Post) Little Star Jul 2014 OP
Rodents... that's where it starts. 1monster Jul 2014 #1
Cats and dogs are the main vectors here Warpy Jul 2014 #2
Wish I'd known that last week..hopefully my neighbor does Voice for Peace Jul 2014 #3
See below Warpy Jul 2014 #10
it was very dead and very dehydrated, almost crispy. Voice for Peace Jul 2014 #16
Please don't throw the cat in the trash can! defacto7 Jul 2014 #19
Scary ReRe Jul 2014 #6
If the cat kills them, you can rule out COD as being plague or hantavirus. Warpy Jul 2014 #8
I've always called her our "Mouser" ReRe Jul 2014 #17
other considerations.... Duppers Jul 2014 #22
Thanks, Duppers! ;-) n/t ReRe Jul 2014 #25
Good thing it's not spread by roaches.... Spitfire of ATJ Jul 2014 #4
Plague? It can be... Warpy Jul 2014 #9
True,...already killed by fire. Spitfire of ATJ Jul 2014 #12
It could become chronic... tabasco Jul 2014 #18
Insteresting how differently everyone thinks when they hear "roach." kentauros Jul 2014 #21
Uh huh... Spitfire of ATJ Jul 2014 #23
Indeed In_The_Wind Jul 2014 #24
I bet it was irradiated Fred Friendlier Jul 2014 #5
News release: Pneumonic plague found in a Colorado resident and pet dog pinto Jul 2014 #7
they warned us that legal weed would be deadly Garion_55 Jul 2014 #20
The commenters on Bloomberg have gone total Hitler agentS Jul 2014 #11
People KNOW conservatives are ASSHOLES. Spitfire of ATJ Jul 2014 #13
Putting money on rampant dog and cat shootings coming to your neighborhood soon. glinda Jul 2014 #15
omg, I just finished reading The Plague by Albert Camus..... now I won't be able to sleep tonight secondwind Jul 2014 #14

1monster

(11,012 posts)
1. Rodents... that's where it starts.
Sat Jul 12, 2014, 04:59 PM
Jul 2014

Time to flea treat all of our pets and call the pest control people.

Warpy

(111,141 posts)
2. Cats and dogs are the main vectors here
Sat Jul 12, 2014, 05:00 PM
Jul 2014

They pick it up from rodents when they're out and about and come in and transmit it to their owners. Usually, it's the milder form, but in NM there have been a few cases since I've lived here of pulmonic plague.

People who find dead rodents on their property are asked to put them into baggies without touching them and seal those baggies up for delivery to or pickup by animal control. They'd be tested for both plague and hantavirus, another deadly endemic disease out here.

 

Voice for Peace

(13,141 posts)
3. Wish I'd known that last week..hopefully my neighbor does
Sat Jul 12, 2014, 06:23 PM
Jul 2014

because that's where I tossed the dead mouse..

I didn't mean to toss it into his yard, but had to
quickly get it away from the cat, it was very dead,
and somehow it went flying over the fence.

Warpy

(111,141 posts)
10. See below
Sat Jul 12, 2014, 07:34 PM
Jul 2014

If you think the cat killed it, just throw it in the trash and be done. If you find one dead on your doorstep when the cat hasn't been out for a week or so and that doesn't have any marks to suggest a violent death, be suspicious about what made it drop dead.

 

Voice for Peace

(13,141 posts)
16. it was very dead and very dehydrated, almost crispy.
Sat Jul 12, 2014, 10:11 PM
Jul 2014

If the cat killed it, he's kept it in dry storage for a while.

ReRe

(10,597 posts)
6. Scary
Sat Jul 12, 2014, 07:11 PM
Jul 2014

... I have a cat that has control of every moving wiggly critter in the neighborhood. And she has access to the indoors via her little kittie door. Quite often she brings birds, field mice, garter snakes in the house. She drives me nuts. Little huntress. Am going to have to seal up the little door, since reading this article. Thanks for the info on what to do with the dead rodents!

Warpy

(111,141 posts)
8. If the cat kills them, you can rule out COD as being plague or hantavirus.
Sat Jul 12, 2014, 07:32 PM
Jul 2014

Animal control won't want them, just say "good kitty" and put them into the garbage.

Cats do very well as indoor only animals. Just set a cat tree in front of a window where there is an outdoor bird feeder and listen to her talk trash to them.

ReRe

(10,597 posts)
17. I've always called her our "Mouser"
Sat Jul 12, 2014, 10:14 PM
Jul 2014

.. She grosses us out all the time. We have a small garden and also a nomadic family of bunnies. She chewed up a little bunny the other day. Thank God she didn't bring it in the house. Hubby told me about it. I guess she earns her keep, but I would rather not know about her outdoor escapades. Thanks for the tips.

kentauros

(29,414 posts)
21. Insteresting how differently everyone thinks when they hear "roach."
Sun Jul 13, 2014, 12:19 PM
Jul 2014

I don't smoke, so that particular image never came to my mind.

This is what I immediately imagined. Because this kind of roach flies


pinto

(106,886 posts)
7. News release: Pneumonic plague found in a Colorado resident and pet dog
Sat Jul 12, 2014, 07:14 PM
Jul 2014

Has nothing to do with radiation. Pockets of pneumonic plague among prairie dogs and other rodents have always been around.

News release: Pneumonic plague found in a Colorado resident and pet dog

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: July 9, 2014
CONTACT:
Mark Salley, Communications Director
303-692-2013
mark.salley@state.co.us

The Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment laboratory yesterday identified pneumonic plague in a Colorado resident. Investigation revealed the family dog had recently died unexpectedly. The carcass was recovered and tested at the Colorado State University Veterinarian Diagnostic Laboratory, where tests were positive for plague.

Tri-County Health Department officials and the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment are working together to investigate the source of exposure and to identify those who may have been exposed through close contact with the individual. Any individuals exposed will be recommended for antibiotic treatment.

The patient and the dog may have been exposed in eastern Adams County. Plague is spread from fleas on rodents, most commonly prairie dogs. People walking in open spaces and trails should avoid contact with rodents.

Dr. Jennifer House, public health veterinarian at the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, encourages people take the following precautions to prevent plague exposure:

Do not directly handle any dead rodents.

Keep pets away from wildlife, especially dead rodents.

Don’t let dogs or cats hunt prairie dogs or other rodents.

Don’t allow pets to roam freely.

Treat all pets for fleas according to a veterinarian's advice.

Do not feed prairie dogs or other rodents – this attracts them to your property, brings them in close contact with other rodents and increases the risk of disease transmission.

Be aware of rodent populations in your area and report sudden die-offs or multiple dead animals to your local health department.

Contact your physician if you develop a high fever and other plague symptoms following a fleabite or direct contact with dead rodents. Symptoms of plague include a sudden onset of high fever, muscle pain, malaise, nausea and vomiting, or a general feeling of being ill. Individuals with bubonic plague will develop a large, swollen, painful lymph node in the area of a flea bite, usually in the groin or armpit. If untreated, the disease can enter the bloodstream or lungs, which are severe, life-threatening complications. Individuals with pneumonic plagues (the lung form) develop fever, headache, weakness, shortness of breath, chest pain, cough which can lead to respiratory failure. Pneumonic plague is the most serious form of the disease and is the only form of plague that can be spread from person to person (by infectious droplets from coughing). Although human cases occur infrequently, plague is severe and potentially life-threatening if not detected and quickly treated with common antibiotics.

Plague often is identified when there is an unusual die-off of prairie dogs in an area. When an infected animal dies, the fleas leave the carcass to find another host, thus spreading the disease. Most human plague cases occur when humans are bitten by infected fleas. Less commonly, people are infected by direct contact with blood or tissues from an infected animal or from pets that become infected and transmit the disease. Since 1957, Colorado has identified 60 cases of human plague, nine (15 percent) of which were fatal.

Additional information on plague can be found at: http://www.cdc.gov/plague

Contact CO-HELP (Colorado Health Education Line for the Public) at 1-877-462-2911 for more information or to report a dead prairie dog.

Garion_55

(1,915 posts)
20. they warned us that legal weed would be deadly
Sun Jul 13, 2014, 07:10 AM
Jul 2014

and likely kill us or make us want to kill our parents. they never mentioned the plaque though

agentS

(1,325 posts)
11. The commenters on Bloomberg have gone total Hitler
Sat Jul 12, 2014, 07:39 PM
Jul 2014

Even though this disease has nothing to do with migrants or refugee children, they're blaming the kids, calling them "infested" and other untrue nasty terms. And they wonder why people think conservatives are racist.

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