It's material worthy of a
horror movie: a cloud of vicious
bees stinging people or pets to death; swarms of voracious
termites reducing houses to dust; people dying from an outbreak of an unknown exotic
disease.
These dramatic scenarios are not out of
fiction, but actually happened in the United States. New York City's famed
Central Park closed in the summer of 2000 because of the discovery of a
mosquito carrying the dangerous West Nile Encephalitis virus.
From 1999 through 2001, 149 cases of West Nile virus in humans were reported to the Centers for Disease Control, including 18 deaths.
As of August 12, 2002, state health departments have released information on 135 cases of West Nile virus related human illness this year, including seven deaths. Infected birds have been found in states as far ranging as Louisiana, Vermont, and Georgia. In fact, after five adults died from the disease in Louisiana, the governor declared a state of emergency. The outbreak is blamed on the unusually hot summer.
Named for the West Nile District of
Uganda, where it was discovered in 1937, West Nile Encephalitis is one of a host of disturbing illnesses, such as
AIDS,
Ebola,
hantaviruses, and
Lyme disease, to emerge in the past 100 years.
Spread by
mosquitoes, the disease usually causes a mild inflammation of the brain, accompanied by fever, headache, body ache, skin rash, and swollen lymph glands. It appeared in
North America for the first time in 1999.
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