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Alarm spreads as E. coli cases rise sharply [In Germany]
The Local ^ | 1 Jun 11

Posted on 06/01/2011 11:31:33 AM PDT by GonzoII

The number of E. coli cases has risen dramatically in northern Germany, authorities announced Wednesday, with at least 180 new cases emerging in the past 24 hours in Hamburg and Lower Saxony alone.

The new figures came as doctors in Schleswig-Holstein reported that the bacterial illness was also causing unusual neurological effects including epilepsy.

Seventeen people – one in Sweden and the rest in Germany – have now died from the virulent form of enterohamorrhagic E. coli (EHEC), which can cause bloody diarrhoea and kidney failure known as haemolytic uraemic syndrome (HUS).

In the past day, the number of cases rose in Lower Saxony by 80 to 344, while in Hamburg another 99 cases were identified, bringing the total in the port city to 668.

“We are again seeing a clear rise in cases of people sick with EHEC and HUS,” Hamburg’s Health Minister Cornelia Prüfer-Storcks said. “The situation remains worrying and it is definitely too early to give any kind of all-clear.”

An 84-year-old woman who died on Sunday has now been identified as the 17th confirmed victim, the Lower Saxony Health Ministry announced Wednesday.

Authorities continued desperately to search for the source of the bacteria as Spain vented its anger over the earlier statements by Hamburg authorities that they had identified Spanish cucumbers as contaminated – a claim they have since retracted.

Spain said it was considering legal action over what it says are €200 million in losses for its farmers.

The official number of confirmed cases according to the Robert Koch Institute, the government’s public health adviser, stands at 1,064. Of these, 470 have become ill with HUS. All states are affected by three quarters of the HUS have been across northern states: Schleswig-Holstein, Hamburg, North Rhine-Westphalia and Lower Saxony.

A worrying new dimension has been reported in Schleswig-Holstein – the worst-affected state with 121 cases. Every second patient being treated for HUS at the state’s University Hospital is developing unusual neurological complications, ranging from headaches to speech problems and up to epilepsy.

“We are observing unexpected characteristics to the illness with which we’re not familiar,” said Hendrik Lehnert, director of the hospital’s Lübeck campus.

Some 91 patients are currently being treated for HUS at Lübeck and the hospital’s other campus in Kiel, 23 of them in intensive care. The neurological problems were starting about three or four days after the HUS symptoms began.

The hospital’s doctors have changed tactics and begun using antibiotics earlier than they were before, said director Stefan Schreiber.

“We have learnt something,” he said, referring to knowledge gained from an autopsy on a patient who died, which revealed that the bacteria inflamed nearly the whole stomach and intestinal tract. “The bacteria live much longer that we previously thought.”

DAPD/The Local/djw


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Germany; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: ecoli; epilepsy; germany; health; medical; science
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To: EBH

I guess that leaves the $64,000 question - natural or gengineered?


21 posted on 06/01/2011 2:36:29 PM PDT by null and void (We are now in day 860 of our national holiday from reality. - Obama really isn't one of us)
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To: steve8714
If it's organic it's OK. right? snort>>>///
22 posted on 06/01/2011 2:39:09 PM PDT by Ditter
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To: steve8714

The vegetables are not infected, dutch news says. The germans investigated vegetables from different EU countries.
I wonder if they didnt focus too much on the veggies, maybe it is in meat. And what about mayonaise (raw eggs), or ice cream, milkshakes, or meat not fully cooked.

In Germany even near supermarkets, they have mobile food sellers. Bratwurst,hamburgers, meatballs, ice cream, fish, applepie, cake and such. I sometimes visit Germany, the Netherlands now have 5 infected, one child, and 4 have HUS,all visited Germany. Most of us visit Germany just for a day, so they wouldn’t probably eat at a restaurant, but buy some food outside, which they can eat while continuing whatever they were doing, especially with children.
I think it is odd they still don’t know what caused this?
Interesting to read all thoughts about this, as apparently the researchers are totally in the dark now that the vegetables are not the source for EHEC, or E coli.

I’m new here, I just try to read all about this bacteria, I want to know what is happening, I also follow the german websites and papers, but didnt read anything about people who had E coli with or without HUS from themselves I mean. There was a German young man, he had nose bleeds for days, was recovering, and then no update? Where are all the others who recovered, the researchers should ask them again what they ate beside vegetables. The Netherlands has 5 sick people, are they too ill to ask what they ate in Germany? Only 5, and then there should be something matching, and they cant find it? That is odd I would think.


23 posted on 06/01/2011 3:01:11 PM PDT by Koffie
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To: rogue yam

Gaddaffi ????


24 posted on 06/02/2011 7:36:42 PM PDT by Domestic Church (AMDG ...)
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To: Myrddin

The strain is from central Africa has has several deadly changes.


25 posted on 06/02/2011 7:50:28 PM PDT by Domestic Church (AMDG ...)
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To: Domestic Church
The strain is from central Africa has has several deadly changes.

Wonder if that is where it was "tested" for lethality before turning it loose. It really smells of a lab engineered pathogen. The antibiotic resistance plus kidney and liver damage all in one convenient package. As a common enteric bacterium, it has a number of ways to get along in the environment.

26 posted on 06/02/2011 10:48:15 PM PDT by Myrddin
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