WILD DISEASES
By
A few days after
Three stool samples, a sigmoidoscopy and a proctoscopy could
not establish the cause of her illness. Finally she mentioned
her symptoms to a colleague at work who recognized them as
something he'd heard of before. A little research turned up
information on an organism that parasitizes the human digestive
tract,
According to epidemiologist Dr.
This is definitely not a case of "what you don't know won't hurt you." What you don't know about some of these ailments will, in some cases, kill you.
Lyme Disease
Lyme Disease may be the most visible of the little shop of
horrors found in the woods. Unlike some other diseases, Lyme
Disease is not rare. Dr.
A bacterium carried by deer mice and deer causes Lyme Disease. Ixodid ticks can pass the organism from infected animals to people.
The first symptom of the disease is a little red area where
the tick attached itself to you. The spot grows. Then fever,
headache, and muscle aches start. The spot increases in size
until it become a red ring several inches across with a light-
colored center. "It's kind of like a bull's-eye," says
If you don't get treatment, the effects can be severe. "It
can eventually cause cardiac problems, usually rhythm
disturbances,"
Lyme Disease is easy to treat with antibiotics. According
to
Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
Another bacterium transmitted exclusively by tick bites is Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever. Infected ticks can pass the organism from generation to generation without feeding on a sick animal.
According to Dr.
Antibiotics will cure Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever. Of the patients who are not treated, though, a few die from either shock or hemorrhaging. Encephalitis
Several different types of encephalitis cause problems from
time to time. St. Louis Encephalitis follows a 10-year cycle in
the Mississippi Valley, according to
Birds carry the viruses that cause encephalitis, which
mosquitoes spread from the birds to humans and other mammals.
Early symptoms include confusion and fever. Some varieties of
the ailment cause nausea and vomiting. Then,
"Eastern Equine is a particularly virulent form of encephalitis in humans," he says. "It frequently kills, and the people who do survive are usually brain damaged to a greater or lesser degree for life."
Antibiotics are useless against encephalitis, he says. Researchers have developed a vaccine against both Eastern and Western Equine, but officials recommend using it only during epidemic conditions. Tularemia
According to Dr.
"Most human cases occur through the bite of a tick or through direct contact with rabbits that are infected," he says. "There are other modes of infection, such as deer fly bites and mosquito bites." Sheep-shearers have acquired it from working with infected sheep in Colorado. Some people have become ill from drinking contaminated water. Farm workers can inhale the organism from hay dust.
Early symptoms are fairly vague. You'll develop a bit of a
fever, and generally not feel too good. If you've inhaled the
organism, you'll have respiratory symptoms; if you've swallowed
it, you'll think you'll have intestinal flu. Swelling of the
armpits - called buboes - and other plague-like symptoms will
follow a tick bite or infection through a cut. For untreated
cases, the fatality rate is about 5 to 7 per cent. With
antibiotic treatment, patients can expect complete recovery.
"The people who get sick with it wish they'd die, but they
usually don't,"
CDC worker Dr.
A number of different animals, especially beavers, may carry
the protozoan that causes the illness. Symptoms include loose
stools or full-blown diarrhea, cramping, gas and burping, and
rarely nausea and vomiting. The disease may be more chronic than
acute.
Relapsing Fever
The last big epidemic of Relapsing Fever occurred in the Grand Canyon in the 1970s, and was related to squirrels nesting in cabins where Canyon staff people were living. Generally, though, the cases are fairly scattered.
The disease produces flu-like symptoms, including fever and muscle aches. If it's not treated, the symptoms subside, and patients think they're well. Then it comes back. This cycle continues until the disease is treated. Fortunately, it doesn't seem to produce any serious long-term effects like Lyme Disease does.
Brucellosis
Unless you hunt wild hogs in the southeastern United States,
brucellosis is one problem you probably don't need to worry
about. This is not to say the disease isn't found in other
species; biologists have reported it in desert rats and other
rodents, hares, foxes, goats, sheep, deer, elk and
The organisms which cause brucellosis are a group of bacteria that live in the blood, bone marrow and lymphatic system, including the liver and spleen. You can become infected in a couple of ways. If you clean a hog without wearing gloves, bacteria can enter through small cuts and scratches on your hands. As you cut into the carcass of the animal a number of the organisms are released into the air, where you can inhale them.
Heat kills the bacteria, so you're not at risk if you eat well-cooked meat from a sick animal. In fact, when domestic animals such as cattle are found to have brucellosis, one cure is to send the animals to the slaughterhouse.
In humans, brucellosis is a vague sort of illness, according
to
"It goes on and on and doesn't go away," says
Q Fever
Q or Query Fever may be under reported, according to CDC
microbiologist
"I think it's an important disease, but one for which very little data can be found," says Regnery. In his opinion, hunters and fishermen in sheep country need to be aware of the disease as a potential long-shot ailment. "If, for example, you were to shoot a sheep that had Q Fever and you butchered it out, especially if that animal is a pregnant female, you would really be asking for the possibility of exposure," Regnery says. The organism reaches its highest concentration in amniotic fluid and fetal tissues.
The agent is a specialized bacterium. It can infect humans through cuts on the hand, but it's very infectious if inhaled. As a result, clothes and other items can become contaminated by the organism.
Symptoms include headache and fever, plus muscle pain. Pregnant women may suffer complications. Untreated, the disease usually resolves itself after a few days or a few weeks. A few people, though, develop Q Fever endocarditis, or inflammation of the heart. This can be a chronic problem, hard to treat, and sometimes leading to death. Q-fever has been associated with rabbit hunting in Canada. Rabies
Despite modern vaccinations, rabies is still a potential threat. Unlike most of the other diseases you can acquire in the woods, rabies has no treatment - if you get it, you die. It's that simple.
"Any warm-blooded animal can get rabies," says
You're only at a slight risk to pick up rabies if you dress an infected deer or other ungulate without gloves on. Theoretically, though, it's possible for you to get it, especially if you skin out the head and get saliva on your hands.
Direct contact is not the only way you can acquire rabies. In rare cases, spelunkers have become infected from inhaling the virus in bat caves.
If you're bitten by a rabid animal, the first symptom of the
disease is what
A post-exposure vaccine for people has been available for
many years. Recently, scientists have developed a pre-exposure
vaccine.
Plague Remember the bubonic plague, the disease that decimated Europe in the Middle Ages? It's still with us in the western US.
Any rodent in the west can harbor the plague organism.
"Most people in the United States who acquire plague are getting
it from ground squirrels,"
Plague is transmitted to humans through flea bites. Early symptoms are similar to those of tularemia: high fever, muscle aches, fatigue. You'll have pain, sometimes quite severe, in the area where the buboes, or swollen lymph glands, are going to develop.
Untreated, plague kills. The organism produces toxins that cause problems with blood clotting, and eventually gangrene. Fifty-five to sixty per cent of patients die. Even treated, plaque kills 15 to 20 per cent of patients.
As dreadful as plague is, it's easily treated. A variety of antibiotics, including Tetracycline and sulfa drugs, will knock it out.
"People who see a physician early on after symptoms, and who
have the savvy to know they were possibly exposed tend to
survive,"
Fortunately, plague is rare.
Prevention
Most members of this hall of villains are easy to prevent with little effort. First, don't drink untreated water. Carry water or soft drinks with you.
Second, any time you dress game, don't do it bare-handed;
wear gloves. "If you don't wear gloves, you're really taking
your chances,"
Third, avoid contact with mosquitoes, ticks and fleas.
"Most of these things can be prevented with repellents,"
If, after being in the woods, you begin to show symptoms
like any of the ones described here, go straight to the doctor.
"Be sure you tell the physician you had the contact,"
These are only some of the weird and exotic diseases you may encounter on a hunting or fishing trip. Others include Leptospirosis, Anthrax, and a variety of fungal organisms. But by following some common-sense preventive techniques, you can avoid bringing home these unwanted freeloaders from the woods.
-End-
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