|
Reprinted From Discover
Magazine, Vol. 26 No. 03
March 2005 | Biology & Medicine
Page 14, By Jocelyn Selim
The
deadly Rift Valley fever virus is on the move. First
detected during the 1930s in southern Africa, the
mosquito-borne pathogen had crossed the Sahara into
Egypt by 1977 and by 1999 had traversed the Red Sea
into Yemen and Saudi Arabia. Now it seems poised to
enter the United States—and the results could be
devastating. “To
say that Rift Valley fever makes West Nile look like a
hiccup is an understatement,” says Mike Turell, a
specialist at the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute
in Fort Detrick, Maryland. Like West Nile, Rift Valley
fever spreads rapidly in the warm weather mosquitoes
favor. But Rift Valley fever is much more devastating.
Most people who get West Nile don’t even know it, but
90 percent of those infected with the Rift Valley
fever virus become demonstrably ill. Symptoms range
from weakness and feverish illness to blindness and
Ebola-like hemorrhaging. Victims are 10 times more
likely to die from it than West Nile. If
Rift Valley fever comes to the United States, it will
most likely get here the way most scientists think
West Nile did—via a mosquito on an airplane. “While
the chance of any particular mosquito-borne virus
hitching a ride on an airplane and surviving in the
U.S. is like winning the lottery, somebody always wins
the lottery,” Turell says. “So it’s more a question of
when.”
Link To CDC Rift Valley Fever Fact Sheet:


|