Michael Omidi - Meningitis Outbreak News

Omidihealth was created by Michael Omidi - co-founder of NMP (No More Poverty) this blog is dedicated to providing its readers the latest news on the meningitis outbreak.

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Meningitis Symptoms and Treatments

500 Confirmed Cases and 40 Deaths Now Reported

Health officials are only just beginning to get an idea of the scope of meningitis outbreak. There have been more than 500 confirmed cases and close to 40 deaths, and that isn’t even counting the patients with meningitis symptoms who, while having been injected with medications from New England Compounding Pharmacy, haven’t been injected with the methylprednisolone acetate, which was the drug that was verified to have been contaminated.

Symptoms for fungal meningitis are the same as the symptoms for bacterial or viral meningitis, the more common forms of infection. Fungal meningitis occurs when one of several types of fungus gets into the bloodstream and attacks the spinal cord (the recipients of the tainted steroid were especially vulnerable, since the fungus was being injected next to their spinal cords). It cannot be transmitted from person to person, but ingesting fungus spores in the atmosphere, or working with infected soil can lead to fungal meningitis. People with compromised immune systems are susceptible to fungal meningitis.

What is Fungal Meningitis

Fungal meningitis is the inflammation of the spinal cord lining and the brain; the fungus travels up the spinal cord via the spinal fluid and settles in the brain, which has almost no defense mechanisms. Symptoms of fungal meningitis include headaches, stiff necks, fever, light sensitivity, weakness and nausea. Fungal meningitis can also cause blood clots and lead to stroke. Many of the patients who contracted fungal meningitis from the tainted drug supply died from stroke, making the diagnosis difficult, since doctors don’t often test for additional medical disorders when a patient succumbs to stroke.

Confirming Fungal Meningitis and Treatments

The only way of confirming that the infection is fungal meningitis with any degree of certainty is by spinal tap or lumbar puncture, where a sample of spinal fluid is extracted and tested for the presence of fungus. Because fungal meningitis is so rare, there aren’t as many efficient treatments for the disease as there are for bacterial and viral meningitis (viral meningitis often doesn’t even require medications). Treatments are administered intravenously, and can often take a month or longer to effectively kill the fungal infection. These treatments must also be given in a hospital setting so that a physician can monitor the patient. The drugs, voriconazole and amphotericin B, can cause damage to the liver and kidneys.

Unfortunately, the fungal meningitis symptoms start off so slowly that infected patients might not feel the need to seek medical attention until the infection has taken aggressive hold (some of the symptoms are similar to migraine headaches). It is important that anyone who has had injections of any kind from the New England Compounding Pharmacy (especially those who have even mild symptoms) get tested for the onset of fungal meningitis.

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