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wildcard
14th September 2010, 12:07 AM
Diseases from the third world? You don't say... Oh yeah, booga booga, you're all gonna die.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5iATGESRjGy7n2GSqbVCRMRV49mYgD9I78SPG1

By MARILYNN MARCHIONE (AP) – 10 hours ago

BOSTON — An infectious-disease nightmare is unfolding: Bacteria that have been made resistant to nearly all antibiotics by an alarming new gene have sickened people in three states and are popping up all over the world, health officials reported Monday.

The U.S. cases and two others in Canada all involve people who had recently received medical care in India, where the problem is widespread. A British medical journal revealed the risk last month in an article describing dozens of cases in Britain in people who had gone to India for medical procedures.

How many deaths the gene may have caused is unknown; there is no central tracking of such cases. So far, the gene has mostly been found in bacteria that cause gut or urinary infections.

Scientists have long feared this — a very adaptable gene that hitches onto many types of common germs and confers broad drug resistance, creating dangerous "superbugs."

"It's a great concern," because drug resistance has been rising and few new antibiotics are in development, said Dr. M. Lindsay Grayson, director of infectious diseases at the University of Melbourne in Australia. "It's just a matter of time" until the gene spreads more widely person-to-person, he said.

Grayson heads an American Society for Microbiology conference in Boston, which was buzzing with reports of the gene, called NDM-1 and named for New Delhi.

The U.S. cases occurred this year in people from California, Massachusetts and Illinois, said Brandi Limbago, a lab chief at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Three types of bacteria were involved, and three different mechanisms let the gene become part of them.

"We want physicians to look for it," especially in patients who have traveled recently to India or Pakistan, she said.

What can people do?

Don't add to the drug resistance problem, experts say. Don't pressure your doctors for antibiotics if they say they aren't needed, use the ones you are given properly, and try to avoid infections by washing your hands.

The gene is carried by bacteria that can spread hand-to-mouth, which makes good hygiene very important.

It's also why health officials are so concerned about where the threat is coming from, said Dr. Patrice Nordmann, a microbiology professor at South-Paris Medical School. India is an overpopulated country that overuses antibiotics and has widespread diarrheal disease and many people without clean water.

"The ingredients are there" for widespread transmission, he said. "It's going to spread by plane all over the world."

The U.S. patients were not related. The California woman needed hospital care after being in a car accident in India. The Illinois man had pre-existing medical problems and a urinary catheter, and is thought to have contracted an infection with the gene while traveling in India. The case from Massachusetts involved a woman from India who had surgery and chemotherapy for cancer there and then traveled to the U.S.

Lab tests showed their germs were not killed by the types of drugs normally used to treat drug-resistant infections, including "the last-resort class of antibiotics that physicians go to," Limbago said.

She did not know how the three patients were treated, but all survived.

Doctors have tried treating some of these cases with combinations of antibiotics, hoping that will be more effective than individual ones are. Some have resorted to using polymyxins — antibiotics used in the 1950s and '60s that were unpopular because they can harm the kidneys.

The two Canadian cases were treated with a combination of antibiotics, said Dr. Johann Pitout of the University of Calgary in Alberta, Canada. One case was in Alberta, the other in British Columbia.

Both patients had medical emergencies while traveling in India. They developed urinary infections that were discovered to have the resistance gene once they returned home to Canada, Pitout said.

The CDC advises any hospitals that find such cases to put the patient in medical isolation, check the patient's close contacts for possible infection, and look for more infections in the hospital.

Any case "should raise an alarm," Limbago said.

Phoenix
14th September 2010, 12:09 AM
We must have MORE divershitty!

wildcard
14th September 2010, 12:09 AM
http://www.hindustantimes.com/Three-people-from-India-infected-with-superbug-US-group/Article1-599919.aspx

Three people from India infected with 'superbug': US group

Press Trust Of India
Boston, September 14, 2010

Three people, who returned to the US from India earlier this year, have been infected with the "superbug" that are highly resistant to antibiotics, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has said.

All three confirmed US cases - in Massachusetts, California and Illinois - involved people who had received medical care in India.

A person infected with the 'superbug' was treated earlier this year at Massachusetts General Hospital and isolated, a move that helped prevent the germ from spreading.

The patient had recently travelled from India.

The Illinois patient too recovered, and there is no evidence the infection was transmitted to other people.

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said the Massachusetts patient survived, as did the only other two US patients with infections.

All three patients developed urinary tract infections that carried a genetic feature that made their cases harder to treat.

The superbug, also known as NDM-1 -– short for New Delhi metallo-beta-lactamase -– allows bacteria to escape some of the strongest antibiotics available.

"It leaves treating physicians with few treatment options," the Boston Globe quoted Alex Kallen, a CDC medical officer, as saying.

All three of the US patients had been in India, and two underwent medical procedures in hospitals while they were there, Kallen said.

The patient treated in Boston was an Indian citizen with cancer who had undergone surgery and chemotherapy in that country before coming to Massachusetts, Kallen added.

Cases of NDM-1 infections have been reported in Asia, Europe and Canada.

Experts have said the threat posed by the germs in the US is most acute in hospitals.

"They don't cause infection in people walking down the street," said Dr Alfred DeMaria, top disease tracker for the Massachusetts Department of Public Health.

"If somebody is in an intensive care unit on a ventilator with a tube in their trachea, they are at risk for these organisms. If someone has had extensive abdominal surgery with lots of open wounds, they are at risk."

Only two antibiotics possess a measure of effectiveness against bacteria riddled with NDM-1, doctors said: an old drug called colistin, and tigecycline.

ShortJohnSilver
14th September 2010, 05:44 AM
Colloidal silver - have the superbugs built up a resistance to that? I don't think so.

Joe King
14th September 2010, 07:55 AM
We must have MORE diversh*tty!
Stop with the BS already.

These people got this due to having traveled to certain countries.

Celtic Rogue
14th September 2010, 08:10 AM
Does anyone else feel that this smacks of an engineered event? A gene that can find its way into any number of bacteria of different species and rendering them drug resistant? I don't know enough about this topic to pass an opinion (wishes Mamboni would chime in) ... but it seem odd to me.

Dogman
14th September 2010, 08:17 AM
http://www.emaxhealth.com/1357/drug-resistant-superbugs-found-3-states


Submitted by Tyler Woods Ph.D. on 2010-09-14
All about:

* General Health Articles

5Share

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A superbug has caused people to become sick in three states in the U.S as well as Canada. The bug is also starting to pop up all over the world.

The drug-resistant superbugs found in 3 states has mostly been found in a bacteria that causes urinary infections. The gene responsible is called NDM-1 and can be spread via a person to person route. It can enter the body due to hand to mouth contamination. It then builds a drug resistance in the body. All of the known cases seem to have been contracted by people traveling to India for medical procedures.

A superbug gene capable of resisting almost all antibiotics, including the usually effective and powerful carbapenems, has been identified, according to the Lancet Infectious Diseases Journal.

Disease specialists never wanted to see the day that conventional antibiotics fail to do their job. More concerning is how quickly a drug resistant strain can spread. Dr. M. Lindsay Grayson, director of infectious diseases at the University of Melbourne in Australia said, "It's just a matter of time" until the gene spreads more widely from one human to another. Time is something that is in short supply when battling infectious diseases. Unlike flu scares in the past, many doctors who specialize in infectious diseases are preparing for the worst case scenario.

The human body can eventually become immune to certain antibiotics if they are overused. Thus it is crucial to only use antibiotics when critical to health. Don't pester the doctor for an antibiotic if he or she has said you do not need one. A cold is not caused by bacteria and thus an antibiotic is not needed to cure it. Also, if an antibiotic is prescribed take the drug exactly as prescribed. Also take all of the medication prescribed. Stopping the drug part way through the prescription can cause the body to build up tolerance to that drug.

The bacteria now poses a worldwide threat, warned experts attending the 50th annual meeting of the Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC), the world's largest gathering of infectious disease specialists. "There is an urgent need, first, to put in place an international surveillance system over the coming months and, second, to test all the patients admitted to any given health system" wherever possible, said Patrice Nordmann of Bicetre Hospital in France.

Unlike other multi-drug resistant bugs reported during the last 20 years, NDM "brings several additional factors of deep concern for public health," said Patrice Nordmann of France's Bicetre Hospital. For example, scientists have determined that the NDM gene "is very mobile, hopping from one bacteria to another," he said.

Specialists can help "stem the onslaught of DNM producers" through "early identification of the very first cases of NDM-related infections and preventing their spread by implementing screening, hygiene measures and isolation of carriers," Nordmann said.

Measures have already been approved in France, and are being negotiated in Japan, Singapore and China, said Nordmann, a microbiology professor at South-Paris Medical School and head of Bicetre's department of bacteriology and virology.



Colloidal silver - have the superbugs built up a resistance to that? I don't think so.


I think you can take collidal silver until you are blue and this bug will laugh at you and ask
for more..

Ash_Williams
14th September 2010, 08:32 AM
I'm surprised it took this long.

It is never good to rely on drugs instead of your own immune system, when there is a choice.

The more we rely on drugs and vaccines, the weaker the human race will become.

Dogman
14th September 2010, 08:43 AM
I'm surprised it took this long.

It is never good to rely on drugs instead of your own immune system, when there is a choice.

The more we rely on drugs and vaccines, the weaker the human race will become.


That and also the drugs and antibiotics they feed livestock ,Plus people put on antibiotics and
they do not finish the full course of treatment so not all of the bacteria are killed off so resistance
starts to build.
Then also the doctors are to blame for handing out antibiotics willy nilly and the people given
them do not finish the course and a year later still have some left in their medicine cabinets instead
of taking them all like they should have.
Nothing dark and secret going on , just plane stupidity and yes this is a man made problem but
one not made in a lab. Unless one conceder's the whole world a lab and 60 or so years in the making.

IMHO

Phoenix
14th September 2010, 01:22 PM
We must have MORE diversh*tty!
Stop with the BS already.

These people got this due to having traveled to certain countries.


TURD World countries!

It is FACT that more Turd Worlders = more Turd World diseases.

We had eliminated measles, cholera, and a whole menu of nasties from White countries, but since the divershitty has picked up, they have all returned.

Joe King
14th September 2010, 01:32 PM
We must have MORE diversh*tty!
Stop with the BS already.

These people got this due to having traveled to certain countries.


TURD World countries!

It is FACT that more Turd Worlders = more Turd World diseases.

We had eliminated measles, cholera, and a whole menu of nasties from White countries, but since the diversh*tty has picked up, they have all returned.

The diseases you're talking about aren't the ones referred to in the OP, so you're a bit off topic.
This thread is about people from this country acquiring some type of "superbug bacteria" while traveling abroad. So good ol' white people traveling abroad are bringing it home to you.
Perhaps we should ban foreign travel?