An infection
with the chikungunya (chik-un-GUN-ya) virus causes severe pain, high
fever, headache, nausea, vomiting and rash. The name is derived from an
East African word for "that which bends," a reference to the posture
adopted by infected people who are stooped over from severe joint pain.
And though the disease can't be spread directly from person to person, a
mosquito that bites a person who's infected with the virus can easily
spread the disease by biting another person, according to the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). [7 Devastating Infectious Diseases]
The spread of chikungunya
was first reported by the World Health Organization (WHO) in December
2013, after 10 residents on the Caribbean island of St. Martin were
confirmed to have the disease.
In the months since then, chikungunya has spread to other Caribbean
countries, including popular tourist destinations such as Guadeloupe,
Martinique and the British Virgin Islands.
Will chikungunya spread to the US?
The disease isn't unknown in the United States, but all previous
documented cases have been in people who traveled outside the United
States to countries where chikungunya is established, and were not
caused by infected mosquitos within the United States.
That may change, however, since the mosquitos that carry the virus — Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus —
are already found in the United States. Some experts worry that it's
only a matter of time before chikungunya fever spreads to the United
States.
"We definitely should
be concerned," said Laura Harrington, a professor of entomology at
Cornell University who specializes in the spread of chikungunya and
other tropical diseases.
The
death rate from chikungunya is fairly low — about 1 to 2 percent — "but
it does cause a lot of discomfort," Harrington told Live Science. Most
of the deaths caused by the disease are among the elderly or people with
compromised immune systems.
And because the virus has an incubation period of from two to 12 days,
according to the CDC, people carrying the disease often won't know they
have it.
Climate change and chikungunya
Another factor contributing to the spread of chikungunya is the gradual warming of the Earth resulting from climate change. "I think it can play a really important role," Harrington said.
She notes that some of the hallmarks of climate change — specifically,
an increase in rainfall and an increase in average temperature — make
perfect conditions for the spread of the two mosquitos that can carry
the chikungunya virus.
A. albopictus, commonly known as the Asian tiger mosquito,
is now well-established in the southern United States, having arrived
in the mid-1980s. And as the climate warms, "it's gradually moving
northward," Harrington said — the mosquito is already found as far north
as New York City.
Stopping the spread
To combat the spread of chikungunya and other mosquito-borne diseases,
experts recommend practical measures such as eliminating standing
bodies of water (where mosquitos often breed) under potted plants and in
spare tires, using mosquito nets, wearing long-sleeved shirts and long
pants, and applying mosquito repellents.
These tips are especially important for people who already have the
infection, since a mosquito can spread the disease to another person
through its bite.
If there's
any upside to the pain and misery of a chikungunya infection, which only
rarely lasts more than a week, it's this: Once a person is exposed to
the virus, the body is protected from reinfection for a lifetime,
scientists say.SOURCES http://news.yahoo.com/chikungunya-fever-virus-spread-us-140307803.html
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