By The Associated Press
Monday, July 9, 2012
Heng Sinith/AP
Mean Thida, 4, affected with the mystery disease, sleeps at her home near a dump site at Sambour village, on the outskirts of Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Monday.
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — A deadly form of a common childhood illness has
been linked to the mysterious child deaths in Cambodia that sparked
alarm after a cause could not immediately be determined, health
officials said Monday.
Lab tests have confirmed that a virulent strain of hand, foot and mouth
disease known as EV-71 is to blame for some of the 59 cases reviewed
since April, including 52 deaths, according to a joint statement from
the World Health Organization and Cambodian Health Ministry. The numbers
were lowered from the initial report of 62 cases.
EV-71 is a virus that can result in paralysis, brain swelling and
death. Most of the Cambodian cases involved children younger than 3 who
experienced fever, respiratory problems that led to rapid shutdown and
sometimes neurological symptoms.
Epidemiologists are still trying to piece together information about
the cases by interviewing parents because some details may have been
omitted or missing from medical charts and specimens were not taken from
most children before they died, said Dr. Nima Asgari, who is leading
the WHO investigation. Of 24 samples tested, 15 came back positive for
EV-71.
"As far as I'm aware, EV-71 was not identified as a virus in Cambodia
before," Asgari said, adding that based on the information now available
it's likely that the majority of untested patients were infected with
it.
"We are a bit more confident. We are hoping that we can come up with
something a bit more conclusive in the next day or so," he said.
Hand, foot and mouth disease has been raging across Asia and usually
causes a telltale rash. Blistering was only reported in some of the
Cambodian cases, and it's possible that steroids administered by doctors
could have masked the symptom or it may not have been recorded, he
said.
The lab results also identified other diseases in some cases, including
mosquito-borne dengue fever and Streptococcus suis, a germ commonly
seen in pigs that sometimes infects people, often causing meningitis and
hearing loss.
Hand, foot and mouth disease is spread by sneezing, coughing and
contact with fluid from blisters or infected feces. It is caused by
enteroviruses in the same family as polio. No vaccine or specific
treatment exists, but illness is typically mild and most children
recover quickly without problems.
The virus gets its name from the symptoms it causes, including rash,
mouth sores and blisters covering the hands and feet. Many infected
children don't get sick but can spread it to others.
Neighboring Vietnam has been battling a surging number of hand, foot
and mouth disease cases for the past few years, with EV-71 also wreaking
havoc there. Last year, the disease sickened more than 110,000 people
and killed 166, mostly children whose immune systems were not strong
enough to fend off the infection.
China is also experiencing an outbreak, and more than 240 people have
died of the disease there this year, according to China's Health
Ministry.
The Cambodia investigation is continuing, but the H5N1 bird flu virus,
SARS and Nipah — a deadly virus usually spread by fruit bats or pigs —
have all been ruled out.
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