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Health Alert for Deadly Tick-Borne Disease: CDC

CDC Issues Health Alert for Deadly Tick-Borne Disease

At least three people have died from Rocky Mountain spotted fever [RMSF] in the last five months, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced in a public alert on Friday.

Five cases of the deadly disease — caused by bites from infected ticks — have been reported since July in Southern California.

In each case, the patient had been in the Mexican border city of Tecate within two weeks of becoming ill, the agency said.

All five patients, three US residents and two Mexican residents, were hospitalized and three died. Four of the patients were minors.

“RMSF is a severe, rapidly progressive, and often deadly disease transmitted by the bite of infected ticks, although many patients do not recall being bitten by a tick,” the CDC notice said.

The disease is native to several states in northern Mexico along the southern border and parts of the Southwestern US.

The pathogen, Rickettsia rickettsii, is commonly spread by ticks associated with urban dogs, according to the CDC.

Symptoms can at first appear mild over the first 1-4 days of infection, including a “low-moderate fever, headache, gastrointestinal symptoms, abdominal pain, myalgia, rash, and edema around the eyes and on the back of hands,” the notice says.

After about five days, however, the CDC says disease can cause “altered mental status, coma, cerebral edema, respiratory compromise, necrosis, and multiorgan system damage.”

This is an excerpt from New York Post.

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