Saturday, December 15, 2012

The awful legacy of meningitis



Perhaps no illness strikes fear like meningitis (often referred to as spinal meningitis). I recall during my freshman year in high school that there was a case in a neighboring town. The kid died and when we learned he was a wrestler parents and teachers claimed it came from the mat.  We were so frightened of the spongy devil that I swapped my spot in the gym class wrestling line so that I was matched up with one of the less athletic kids. That way I could pin him in under a minute and get the hell off the grimy Petri dish.
There are many types of meningitis.  The previous post was about fungal type, a rare form and related to pain injections. New York City has thus far escaped having any cases. The most common type of meningitis is caused by any number of viruses, but the type of meningitis that provokes community wide anxiety, rumors and regularly makes its way onto the evening news is a particular type of bacterial meningitis. It too is rare but possesses two features that have earned its deserved reputation. The first is that it can spread in group settings, such as schools. The second is that it kills. About one out of six or seven victims die, rather high in the modern era of public health and medicine. The name of this modern day scourge is meningococcal disease. The bacterium responsible is called Neisseria meningitidis. My job is to track and stop it.
The city is now in the midst of an outbreak. Not an epidemic of the scale of AIDS or Swine flu. There have been two dozen cases this year, but five have died. At the center of the outbreak is the community of men who have sex with men and reside in several Brooklyn neighborhoods. The health department has been promoting vaccination but it has been hard to reach the people that most need it. More efforts are being made to get the word out to those at highest risk.
Family legend is that my grandfather died of meningitis. I was shy of my second birthday when he died so I don’t have any memories of him other than from photos and the items from his medical practice I found in my grandmother’s Grand Concourse apartment. He was a physician and the story told me by my mother as long as I can remember was that he could’ve been saved if they had just given him sulfur. I was already my way to becoming a junior chemist and didn’t quite understand how the yellow powder I had used to make gunpowder would’ve saved my grandfather. Last year I decided to investigate the family story, learn if my grandfather really died of the disease that it is now my job to watch over for the city. It took a few months but I managed to get his death certificate from vital records. He died at sixty-six, just a year or two after retiring from his Bronx medical practice due to hearing loss. The certificate didn’t list the cause of death, however, the certificate had the name of the physician who attended his death.  It was a long shot, but I tried to locate him. The New York State Department of Education, the agency that oversees physicians, maintains a website where people can verify licenses. I found the doctor listed. He had graduated medical school in 1957. That made him at least 80 years old, if he was still alive. The last known address was in California and the Internet had two doctors with that name in the town listed in his license record. I dialed the first number and a woman answered. She confirmed I had the right physician. But his hearing was too poor to converse by phone. If I would write a letter, he’d be happy to answer my questions.
Meanwhile I learned that the city’s office of vital records had a more detailed death record. I got my dad to sign the authorization form for his father’s record and requested the full cause of death report. I had almost forgotten about it when the letter showed up a few days before Christmas last year.


I poured over the report. Laboratory diagnosis wasn’t common when my grandfather Jack died. I would have to confirm my suspicion without the definitive evidence I was accustomed to having. Jack had pneumonia and blood poisoning confirming that a bacterium was responsible. But was it the notorious Neisseria meningitidis? And then there it was, listed under the Part II. Other Contributing Conditions. Printed in black ink by the hand of the physician who was at the bedside were the words Waterhouse-Friedrichson Syndrome.  It was the eureka moment. Waterhouse-Friedrichson Syndrome is hemorrhage into the adrenal glands and occurs in overwhelming bacterial sepsis, most notably that caused by Neisseria meningitidis. Sulfur, more correctly the family of sulfonamide antibiotics, would have cured him. If they could’ve treated him quickly enough. That is the thing with meningococcal disease. You don’t have much time. I did end up getting a nice letter back from the California doctor.  He had no recall of ever treating a case of meningococcal disease. I didn’t ask him if he remembered treating grandfather Jack.
There is a vaccine for meningococcal disease. Because of questions about its efficacy and cost effectiveness, the CDC Committee on Immunization Practice only recommends the vaccine for teenagers up through the college years because studies have shown they are at an increased risk, particularly if they reside in dorms. But data from NYC suggests that people living with HIV and AIDS (PLWHA) are at an even greater risk. Currently there is a particularly nasty strain circulating among the MSM community and we've worked to insure that vaccine is available to this population at most health centers and city run clinics.
A few years ago there was a meningococcal death in a high school student. The circumstances around the case were particularly heart wrenching.  If you, a friend or a loved one is in the risk category, please get them the message to get vaccinated.

Monday, October 8, 2012

Compounding Pharmacies


The official case count is up to 105 in the largest outbreak of fungal meningitis in US history, but it will undoubtedly go higher as more cases are recognized as being connected to the contaminated medicine (CDC currently is updating the case counts once a day).

Fungal meningitis is the rarest form of meningitis and it is not contagious from one person to another. It usually occurs only in people who have a damaged immune system, like those with AIDS or undergoing chemotherapy. I heard a TV interview by a doctor, not a public health official, but an infectious disease specialist. He said we’ve never seen anything like this before. Well, he’s not exactly correct. A few years back there was an outbreak of Pseudomonas fluorescens traced to a compounding pharmacy in Texas. It involved kids with serious diseases, like cancer, who had indwelling catheters that required periodic flushing wit a heparin preparation to keep them from clogging.  See http://cid.oxfordjournals.org/content/47/11/1372.full.pdf

What are compounding pharmacies? They are a lot like the big factories that produce food for retail stores.  They buy large quantities of medication, like steroids, then mix them with sterile water or another solution and prepare vials for doctors. They exist because they can produce the drug at a cheaper price than pharmacies with more rigorously oversight. The problem is that organisms, mostly bacteria and fungi, have a way of getting everywhere. Unless you use high tech systems to ensure absolute sterility mistakes like this can happen. Just like one contaminated cow can be spread E. coli to a lot of ground beef one unsterile step in a compounding pharmacy can contaminate a lot of medicine.

What is odd and concerning is that the injections of steroids into the spinal column is resulting in meningitis. The goal of the procedure is to inject the medicine around the nerve root as it emerges from the spinal cord.  Decreasing inflammation by the use of steroids will reduce pain. Most of the time the placement of the needle is checked with fluoroscopy and dye. The spinal sac is not penetrated, which means that the infections in the outbreak are a result of direct fungal invasion though the spinal cord membrane or via the bloodstream. Both scary situations.

Saturday, September 8, 2012

Dying to be beautiful



The quest for beauty and perfection will make people do strange things. Some might include cosmetic surgery on the list but I think most would agree that allowing a person who never attended medical school or any hospital training to operate on you is beyond strange if not foolhardy.

Back in 2010 we were called by an astute and thoughtful hospital doctor. He was treating a woman who had bilateral abscesses in her buttocks. When he asked her what had provoked the unusual infection she confided that she recently had liposuction. When the doctor asked who did the procedure he was surprised by what he heard. A local Spa operator. Thinking that a language barrier was preventing him from fully understanding what the woman was saying he probed deeper. No, she wasn’t a doctor, but had done these procedures many times before. The patient had allowed the Spa operator to remove fat cells from her abdomen and re-insert them into her derriere.

Along with detectives from the major case squad we raided the Queens Spa and confiscated records and drugs. We found a number of pharmaceuticals that require a license to prescribe, such as botox, and others that are illegal in the United States. We began calling the patrons to ask if they were well and to learn the scope of this illegal medical practice and the harm it might have caused. Five procedures were popular: liposuction, meso therapy, botox, injection of filler materials and intravenous vitamin infusions.  Bust, thigh and buttock augmentation with silicone or other industrial-use chemicals was the most common procedure performed. Meso therapy is the injection of chemicals under the skin to dissolve fat. It is unproven and can result in infection and scarring. Quite a few had complications such as scarring, discolored skin and wounds that didn’t heal. This past spring the Spa owner pleaded guilty and was slapped with a $400,000 dollar fine and two years jail time.  http://www.queensda.org/newpressreleases/2012/may/nieto_05_29_2012.con.pdf
The district attorney sent a message to others involved in the illegal practice of medicine that putting the public health in danger will not be tolerated in NYC. It is also a cautionary tale to people seeking affordable alternatives to plastic surgery.

Sadly plastic surgery by unlicensed practitioners of medicine is all too common as a simple Web search reveals. And these are just the people who got caught. Costing a fraction of what real doctors and hospitals charge it is most popular among Hispanic women.  This was our fourth investigation into illegal medical practice.  The woman who was dissatisfied with her figure learned of the Spa from a friend who informed her that she could get a procedure that usually costs over $10,000 dollars for $500. What she got for her money was pain, fever, a deep tissue infection and a several day stay in the hospital.

She was lucky, others have not been as fortunate suffering debilitating pain, chronic infections with mycobacteria, permanent disfigurement and even death. In 2009 a Bronx woman died of silicone pulmonary embolism from a filler injection.  The list of chemicals injected is appalling as is the lack of safe and sanitary practices. One women used Krazy Glue to seal a wound (see links below). Cheap cosmetic surgery by an unlicensed practitioner is dangerous and you get what you pay for. So if you are determined to improve your appearance save up for a real plastic surgeon or do it the old fashioned way. Tone those abs and butt at the gym.

Bronx woman dies

PR woman dies after lipo

Miss Argentina

UK woman dies
Another Blog on dangers






Saturday, September 1, 2012

Deadly Virus Visits National Park


As scenic vacations go, Yosemite is spectacularly breathtaking. Whether you are viewing the awesome rock formations from an overlook or standing in the valley staring up at a waterfall. In the world of hantaviruses, Sin Nombre virus (SNV) is equally breathtaking. Literally. In the spring of 1993, in the Four Corners area of the US, the Sin Nombre virus killed two young, accomplished long distance runners. They died of sudden respiratory failure and the only clue was that the two victims were engaged to be married. A week later another couple became seriously ill with the same air gasping symptoms. One was a relative of the very first case.  The damage to the victim's lungs looked like they had inhaled World War I nerve gas. When investigators visited the home of the first two cases they found no obvious source, but noted that they place was heavily infested with rodents. El Nino’s rains resulted in a bumper crop of pine nuts, a staple for the white-footed deer mouse and their numbers had doubled since the previous year.


After an incubation period from one to five weeks the first symptoms to appear that aren’t much different from the flu and include fever, chills, headache and severe muscle aches. Sometimes stomach pain and dizziness occur.   Several days later respiratory symptoms appear.  The life sustaining oxygen membrane in the lungs no longer works. Fluid collects and patients die of oxygen starvation. Most hantavirus cases in the US have occurred in the southwest but another strain was discovered in Maryland and we have had two cases in New York, the latest was just last year: (http://abclocal.go.com/wabc/story?section=news/local/long_island&id=8211238)

Back in June of 1993 the CDC began testing serum from the Four Corners victims of SNV against a battery of viruses from across the world looking for cross-reactivity as a clue to Sin Nombre’s identity. They got reactions with two viruses from halfway across the world, Haantan and Seoul. These viruses were discovered during the Korean War and were known to cause kidney disease. Sin Nombre was their cousin and was uniquely adapted to survive in the urinary systems of mice, Peromyscus maniculatus to be exact, the white-footed deer mouse. Disturbing mouse nests or sweeping urine-laden dust aerosolizes the virus and brings it into contact with sensitive lung cells. To read the full Sin Nombre virus investigation story see CJ Peter's book, Virus Hunters, chapter 1.

Curry Village is a camp comprised of canvas tent-cabins in the valley of Yosemite. It is affordable and popular with families. Thus far six cases and two deaths from SNV have been confirmed in visitors to the park. Four were known to have stayed in Curry Village. Others are under investigation and an alert was sent to state health departments because an estimated 10,000 people from across the nation stayed at Curry Village from June to August this year.

Prevention begins with sealing your house to prevent mouse invasion, a difficult task. Even here in the Big Apple the industrious little critters routinely make there way into apartment buildings. Trapping (I use live, “green” mouse traps) and good food hygiene are the next steps, like disposing of trash in a receptacle that rodents can’t penetrate. That includes food in your home, using thick plastic, metal or glass canisters to store food.  Caution is advised when cleaning areas of mouse habitation. Ensure proper ventilation, spray the area first with a disinfectant, like dilute bleach. This will inactivate viruses and keep dust levels down. Wearing personal protective equipment to include a mask, goggles and gloves is also a good idea. See full CDC recommendations here: http://www.cdc.gov/rodents/cleaning/index.html

Thursday, August 30, 2012

What is up with West Nile virus this year?


It has been a bad West Nile virus (WNV) season, the worst since the virus arrived on the continent in 1999, and it isn’t over yet. But why? Why Texas, and even more curious, why South Dakota? WNV is a mosquito-born virus, but so is malaria and we don’t have malaria in the US anymore.

Image: Culex mosquito laying eggs.To understand the epidemiology of WNV we have to look at nature. It turns out that humans are “dead end” hosts, meaning we aren’t the intended target. That’s because we don’t sustain a significant viremia (meaning there is lots of virus circulating in the blood as happens with malaria for instance). Mosquitoes don’t pick up virus from us to transmit it to others. WNV is a virus adapted for birds and the normal cycle is that an infected mosquito bites a bird. The bird becomes viremic, other mosquitoes bite the bird and perpetuate the cycle. This is how the virus “amplifies” over the summer months.   Most of these mosquitoes specifically feed on birds and don’t bite humans, but there are crossover mosquito species, omnivores if you will, with a taste for bird and human blood. They come into the picture late in the season when the cycle has amplified the virus to infect many birds. Crossover occurs, the omnivores bite birds, pick up the virus then bite humans.  This is why we see most of the cases of WNV in late August and September. Amplification takes time.

Believe it or not WNV mostly causes an inapparent human infection. Only two out of ten get sick, and most of those get a flu-like illness. About one in a hundred get the more serious version, called “neuroinvasive disease.” This is a brain infection that causes weakness, confusion, coma and even death.  Age is a risk factor with 55 years seemingly where the increased risk begins, but anyone with a health condition that impairs the immune system should consider themselves at risk and take precautions when outside during mosquito season.

Mosquito control includes the use of larvacides-chemicals that kill the non-flying stage of mosquito – early in the season and adulticides throughout the season. Adulticides are chemicals that kill the flying adults.  We all remember spraying from when we were kids and chased the fogger down the block on our bicycles (well, some of us remember.)

So what’s a person to do? If you own a home make sure there are no items in your yard that could collect water and serve as a breeding sites for mosquitoes. Ensure that all windows are secure and screens intact. Don’t leave your door open. Peak mosquito biting hours are dusk and dawn but also anytime in between. Permethrin-based repellents can be applied to clothing but not skin.  Long sleeved shirts and pants, if made of thick material can deter bites, but it has been really hot throughout most of the US this summer.  The best put-on-the-skin repellents are DEET and Picaridin and the duration of effectiveness depends on the concentration. DEET can be toxic to small kids, so apply with caution. Oil of lemon eucalyptus is another alternative. CDC’s advice on mosquito repellent use is here: 

http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvbid/westnile/qa/insect_repellent.htm

Back to why is Texas and South Dakota having so much West Nile? The answer is nature. The right combination of rain and sun increases food supply for birds. If there are more birds, there is more food for mosquitoes and then more mosquitoes. Amplification of the virus is increased. The weather and rain also impact on mosquito breeding and hot weather means a higher amount of WNV in mosquitoes. If there are a lot of juvenile birds of the right species, birds that haven’t had been infected with the virus before, then that is the perfect storm. I haven’t been to Texas or South Dakota but I bet there has been an increase in young, naïve birds capable of sustaining the WNV and a bumper crop of all mosquitoes, including the crossover biting ones.

Monday, August 13, 2012

The fallacy of IT security

Forgive me readers for it has been many weeks since I have last written. It is not because infectious diseases have gone away. To the contrary, there is a new new flu virus, H3N2v that has emerged again in pigs and has caused some recent furor though thus far the illness is mild. There have been more iatrogenic outbreaks related to poor infection control and there's even an Ebola outbreak in Uganda with 23 cases and 16 deaths. No info on how the outbreak began though. The reason I have taken a hiatus from the blog is to focus on the new novel and it occupies all of my writing hours.

But when something sticks in my craw I just have to get it down on cyber paper. At work, the latest bureaucratic brainstorm is to require password changes for the application we use to log our time every three months. I want to know if anyone had ever suffered a breach. Really, who would want to crack into this system? Perhaps to steal some sick days? I bet they go for a few hundred apiece on the black and blue market.

Let's see, now I have at least three or four other work related passwords, all of which expire far too frequently, then there's email, twitter, bank accounts... soo many that I've had to write them all down.  In the same location in fact, so that I have them handy in case I forget. Check that multiple locations. But wait, doesn't that defeat the purpose of having expiring passwords?

Yes, it most certainly does. WTF?

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Not AGAIN! Hepatitis C caused by a medical procedure


The New Hampshire Department of Health is reporting ten cases of nosocomial hepatitis C associated with a cardiac cath lab. What is unusual about this outbreak is that it is in a hospital where infection control is generally more rigorously practiced. While the exact route of transmission in this outbreak has yet to be determined, public health enemy number one has to be suspected.


In May of 2001 we did our very first hepatitis C outbreak investigation. A doc in Brooklyn reported himself after he found four of his own patients hospitalized with acute hepatitis C while on hospital rounds. He had done endoscopy on all four within the recent past. Endoscopy, more specifically colonoscopy, is recommended for screening and prevention of a big killer, colon cancer.  It is an important medical procedure, but it has risks. One of which shouldn’t be a risk, hepatitis C. When performing colonoscopy the physician reuses the equipment. That was our first suspicion and while the steps to clean the instruments didn’t follow the exact manufacturer’s instructions, we quickly ruled out the scopes as the cause. We had uncovered twelve patients over a five day period, many of who had their procedures back-to-back. There simple wasn’t time to reuse the scopes. We next zeroed in on the other invasive part of the procedure, anesthesia. We quickly discovered that all the patients had received the same drugs in about the same quantities, but what really stood out was the vials. They weren’t single use and thrown away. Meet the multi-dose vial (MDV). Intended for a single patient, these are often used for multiple patients. Why? They cost less. But it shouldn’t be a problem. As long as they are always entered with a clean needle, that is. Unfortunately, that isn’t what happens. The medical literature is littered with outbreaks traced to MDVs. We determined that a patient known to be infected with hepatitis C underwent colonoscopy. He woke up during the procedure. The anesthesiologist removed the needle and syringe that had been bathing in the patient’s blood and reinserted this into a MDV. The bottle was then used for the next fifteen or so patients, infecting twelve of them with the virus.

So, what’s the answer? For the consumer ask your doctors if they use MDVs and request that you get a fresh vial and it is thrown away when done. For us doctors, don’t use MDVs. For the FDA prohibit MDV use without appropriate engineering controls which eliminate the possibility of  accidental needle reuse. Hepatitis C is preventable. 

Thursday, May 3, 2012

Mycobacterium chelonae outbreak


A cluster of infections due to Mycobacterium chelonae have been diagnosed in individuals who patronized the same upstate NY tattoo parlor. The outbreak was traced to a bottle of pre-mixed ink and the FDA is issuing a recall. 


For information on tattoos and mycobacteria infections see:

http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_hb4393/is_1_42/ai_n56785728/
and
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19733936

Monday, April 30, 2012

Interview with Mailaise author Don Weiss


Detectologist: What made you decide to write this book?

DW: I had written a chapter on the anthrax outbreak for a non-fiction book on outbreak investigations by Mark Dworkin and came across a number of interesting conspiratorial coincidences that I thought would make a good novel.

Detectologist: Conspiracies? What do you mean?

DW: Well, for instance, two of the 9/11 hijackers lived for a while in South Florida near the first anthrax case. On the same day the case was announced on October 4, 2001, an Ukrainian missile shot down a Russian commercial airline over the Black Sea. On board were microbiologists from Novosibirsk. And after the attacks there was a series of deaths of other microbiologists, some of whom were involved in bioterrorism research.

Detectologist: Fascinating. What was it like during the actual outbreak?

DW: Did you ever do wind sprints in high school? Running back and forth over the length of the gym floor as fast as you can stopping at the foul line, mid-court, three-quarter court and then full court? We worked long hours after the 9/11 attack doing surveillance for a secondary biologic attack. After that the anthrax response was like doing a fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth wind sprint.

Detectologist: How did you cope? It must have been nerve racking.

DW: Humor, but I think writing the novel was a way for me to bring some closure to the experience.

Detectologist: The book matches up an epidemiologist with an FBI agent, how close to reality is this?

DW: During the anthrax outbreak we did work closely with an FBI agent, and one of our staff was assigned to be the liaison with law enforcement. Mailaise does expand on this a bit.

Detectologist: Where did the inspiration for the epidemiologist, Mackey Dunn and the FBI agent, Charo Chen come from?

DW: The characters are composites. A mix of the many people I’ve met, worked with and known over time. I think it is necessary skill for writers to be observant. As a friend of mine used to remind me, if you aren’t constantly amused it means you aren’t paying attention. A lot of my ideas come from everyday situations.

Detectologist: You decided to self publish through Amazon services. Can you share some of your experiences?

DW: Sure. I started Mailaise in 2007. Two and half years, and several re-writes later I began contacting agents. I got very little interest.  After Mailaise won the Herdsfolk First Novel Award I found an editor to help me polish it some more. I tried again with agents, got a bit more interest but no takers. The publishing business has become highly competitive, with the poor economy and the expansion of ebooks, agents and publishers are very selective.  I have so many ideas for stories I felt like it was time to be done with this one and move on.

Detectologist: So, what’s next? Are you working on a sequel?

DW: Yes. I am close to completing the first draft of a sequel in which Mackey and Charo investigate a smallpox outbreak in New York City. Then there is the unfinished first Dunn novel and a novella I wrote between books. I have no shortage of ideas.

Detectologist: Very interesting, I look forward to reading the sequel; what’s it called?

DW: It’s a historical mystery called The Curse of Cortes.

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Still no flu this winter but there's soup


Butternut squash split pea soup

1-1 ½ cups dried split peas
1 lb butternut squash
1 roasted red pepper (skinned and diced)
1 bulb of garlic, roasted, peeled and chopped (should be soft)
¾ cup frozen corn
1 tsp vegetable or chicken stock (I use Better than Bouillon brand)
1 tsp granulated garlic
1 tsp granulated onion
1 tsp black powder
1 tsp savory
Pinch sea salt
3 cups water

Boil peas in 3 cups of water and stock until mushy (add more water if necessary). In a separate pot steam sliced squash until soft. Remove squash rind and mash. Roast bulb of garlic until soft and red pepper. Add squash to the peas. Add garlic, chopped red pepper. Season to taste with spices. Add more water to desired consistency.  Add corn.

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Influenza that fickle fellow


While influenza epidemics occur annually the variation in the timing, peak and magnitude remain a mystery. So far influenza in NYC has been mild. Several surveillance systems are used to gauge the severity of flu season and by any of them either flu hasn’t arrived yet or the strain has not varied much from last season. Outpatient visits for influenza-like illness in NYC are still below the 2.5% threshold and of nearly 1800 lab tests done for flu in the first week of 2012 less than 20 were positive (during peak flu season this can range as high as 15%). Elsewhere in the country the story is much the same with only a few states showing activity, but no hot regions.  Most of the circulating strains are the H3-type with smaller proportions of H1 and B; all components of this year’s vaccine. Looking at the world picture there is activity in Northern Africa and Japan, however, in general activity remains low.

It is still a good idea to get a flu shot, especially if you have a chronic illness. 


http://gis.cdc.gov/grasp/fluview/main.html

Saturday, January 7, 2012

To smokers and their loved ones everywhere



Quit. Muster all your intestinal fortitude and just do it.  While not all smokers will end up ravaged by lung, throat or bladder cancer no one escapes unscathed. Heart disease, stroke, peripheral vascular disease, emphysema, hypertension, chronic bronchitis, prematurely aged skin, loss of fertility … the list is long and only grows  the more we learn. If everyone in the US quit smoking health care costs would plummet and we might just be able to pay off our national debt in a few years.

Last week I passed five male teens on the corner smoking. A few minutes later I passed five girls of the same age. So, I stopped and asked them, “Do any of you smoke?” They all made faces and a few started to edge away but three yelled back, “No way!” I then asked, “Would you date a boy that smokes?” In unison they all sang, “No.” There are good reasons why people can’t smoke in offices, bars or in city parks. The smoke is toxic and the rest of us don’t want to share your poison. When I see parents puffing around their young kids I want to whack them across the back of their heads, but social decorum requires I keep my opinions to pages like these.

Consider that a person can survive a few weeks without food, a few days with out water and barely a few minutes without oxygen.  When you smoke you are inhaling hot, toxic gases into the most miraculous and delicate of all the human organs. Deep in the lungs the exchange of oxygen for carbon dioxide happens at a thinner than tissue paper layer of cells. Those hot, toxic gases are destroying this life-sustaining interface with every puff. Sure, you’ve got millions of alveoli, but do you really want to burn them like kindling?

For the young, here’s a news flash: smoking isn’t cool. If you think it is you’ve been duped by advertising and peer pressure, the same stuff that said it was cool to wear crocs and designer jeans. You don’t see people doing that anymore, do you? If you’re old, there are still health benefits to gain from quitting a long-term addiction. Don’t be that person wheeling a tank of oxygen behind you. The one who can’t walk two blocks to the market or climb a half flight of stairs. Who at forty is mistaken for an AARP member. Who on their deathbed look back at their life and say, “Why didn’t I just quit?” Save yourself a bundle of woe. Quit smoking.

Monday, January 2, 2012

Unusual infection strikes four infants


Four infants have been sickened by an uncommon environmental bacterium called Cronobacter sakazakii in November and December. A single case has occurred in four states: Missouri, Illinois, Oklahoma and Florida. CDC is working with state and local health departments to investigate, but at this time there does not appear to be a connection. Two of the infants died of the infection and a DNA fingerprint analysis for the cases did not suggest a common link. Investigators in Missouri were able to identify Cronobacter in opened containers of powdered infant formula, premixed formula and a bottle of water. How the contamination occurred is as yet unknown but unopened samples of formula and water with the same lot numbers have reassuringly tested negative.

Cronobacter is not a reportable disease in New York unless several cases are recognized as being linked. The State and City Health Departments sent notices last week to hospital physicians, nurses and laboratories asking them to report any positive cultures in infants. No suspect cases have been reported in NYC.

Cronobacter mostly affects people with weakened, or in the case of neonates, undeveloped immune systems. Because it exists in the environment there are multiple opportunities for the bacteria to contaminate food, however, heat does destroy the bacteria.  Ordinarily CDC learns of 4-6 cases per year but in 2011 there were 12 in infants. Whether this represents a contamination of a commercial product or just better recognition is not known, but under investigation. There have been outbreaks in the past connected to powdered formula. Affected infants are generally less than a month old and have fever, irritability or listlessness and poor feeding. Medical consultation for infants with these symptoms should be sought without delay.

The World Health Organization recommends that whenever feasible infants be exclusively breastfed until the age of six months.