Beyond Statistics: 2 Faces of West Nile Virus
Thousands Now Live With West Nile Virus Infection. Here, 2 Share Their Stories
Aug. 31, 2012 — This year, more than 1,500 people in the U.S. have been diagnosed with West Nile virus infection and several have died.
Transmitted by the bite of a mosquito, the infection is not equal opportunity.
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Some infected people do not notice any symptoms. Others have a milder form of the disease, known as West Nile fever. About 1 in 150 people infected develop severe complications, including infections of the brain (encephalitis) or spinal cord and connecting nerves (meningitis) or paralysis.
, 52, is a construction worker in Riverside County, Calif., near Los Angeles. He learned he had West Nile virus earlier this month.
Don R. Read, MD, is a Dallas surgeon who became infected in 2005 at age 63. He states he is still coming back from the complications, including paralysis.
, is a huge guy who has worked construction most of his life. Most recently, he has been working as a glass glazer in Southern California.
In early August, he was hanging out at a friend’s house in the city of Riverside, spending a lot of time in the backyard.
A lifelong mosquito magnet, he remembers being bitten but not thinking much about it. “I was getting bitten every night,” he says.
One morning soon after, he woke up with a burning fever. “I was sweating like crazy,” he says. The day before, he remembers feeling like he was coming down with something.
He was lagging at work. “I have to deal with measurements, stuff like that,” Wagner says. “I was really slow, feeling incompetent in my measurements.”
He had an excruciating headache. He states he is had those before, and they were linked with his high blood pressure. “It was like flu symptoms,” he says.
“I had a friend take me to the emergency room.” They told him the fever was 105 degrees.
“They started doing tests, taking blood. They did CT scans and MRI.” He had two painful spinal taps, a typical test to check for meningitis, which physicians suspected.
Doctors admitted him to the hospital. They decided the diagnosis was bacterial meningitis and started him on antibiotics.
The pain was so bad the physicians put him on morphine.
The week he spent in the hospital was a nightmare, his sister, Pamela Vest, says. “A whole week, we could not even speak to him because he was so out of it.”
“One morning he woke up crying,” she says, “saying, ‘What is wrong with me?’ ‘What is it?’”
When he improved some, he was released.
Then came the call from the Riverside County Department of Health. “It was not bacterial meningitis, it was West Nile virus,” he says.
“I did not know that much about it,” he says. “I was still kind of out of it.”
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Submited at Saturday, September 1st, 2012 at 8:15 am on Uncategorized by Alina
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