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1. Unknown
illness sweeps US troops: (Sand Fleas)
illness
sweeps US troops: (Sand Fleas) Thu Oct 2 18:09:31 ...
US troops
serving in Iraq could be the harbinger of a new ...
U.S.
Ignored Iraq Recommendation Secretary-General Kofi Annan
http://www.apfn.net/messageboard/10-01-03/discussion.cgi.131.html
Kirt Love
SAND FLIES ATTACK U.S. SOLDIERS IN IRAQ
Mon Oct 27 01:39:24 2003
http://disc.server.com/discussion.cgi?disc=149495;article=45872;title=APFN
Sand flies keep troops from
donating blood
Pacific Stars and Stripes, Japan - 16 hours ago
KAISERSLAUTERN, Germany — The military blood supply has taken another
hit, this time by a parasitic disease spread by sand flies in Iraq.
...
http://www.estripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=18302
Skin disease infects U.S. soldiers in Iraq
By DAVID WAHLBERG - dwahlberg@...
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Click here to find out more!
At least 30 soldiers serving in Iraq have contracted a skin disease
spread by sand flies, prompting a ban on blood donations by all members of
the military in Iraq for a year after they return home, health officials
said Thursday.
The parasitic disease, leishmaniasis, occurs in two forms. The
soldiers have the milder form, which causes skin sores and is curable if
promptly treated. The other form of the disease -- believed to account for
some reports of Gulf War syndrome after that conflict in 1990-91 -- often
causes fever, weight loss and organ damage. It can be fatal.
A few cases have been transmitted through blood transfusions in
other countries, but not in the United States. The new policy may divert
more than 12,000 blood donors, Pentagon officials said. But some soldiers
would have been forbidden from donating anyway because they have been in
places where malaria is common.
A similar ban was implemented after the Gulf War, when 32 soldiers
got leishmaniasis, including 12 cases of the more serious form of the disease,
military officials said.
In a report Thursday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
in Atlanta and Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, health officials
said the soldiers in the recent outbreak have been treated successfully.
At least 30 soldiers have contracted the skin form of the disease
in Iraq this year, plus two apiece in Kuwait and Afghanistan since the beginning
of last year, said Dr. Dallas Hack of Walter Reed. They came from the Army,
the Air Force and the Marine Corps and included active, reserve and National
Guard members.
Most have had a few lesions, often resembling mini-volcanoes, on
their arms or legs.
More cases may be forthcoming. The sand fly season runs from
May to October, and symptoms often don't appear for a month after infection.
"I would expect we would see it for another couple of months," Hack
said. "A lot of people are reserves coming back, and they may not see this
until they get out of active duty."
Cases of the systemic, more serious, form of the disease also may
turn up, said Dr. Kathleen Murray-Leisure, an infectious disease specialist
from Pennsylvania who has treated Gulf War veterans.
"What they're seeing so far is the tip
of the iceberg," she said. "Whenever you have this many [skin]
cases, there are probably [systemic] cases too."
She said systemic leishmaniasis accounts for one-third to one-half
of Gulf War syndrome. But Hack said he considers leishmaniasis separate from
Gulf War syndrome, a label he reserves for conditions with no specific diagnosis.
Military health officials have instructed soldiers to use insect
repellent and insecticide-treated bed nets to protect themselves against
parasite-carrying sand flies, Hack said.
Murray-Leisure, who praised those steps, called for one more: clothing
that covers the whole body.
"Ideally they would issue scarves to each and every soldier or
tell them to wear turbans," she said. "They need to dress like the Arabs."
----- Original Message -----
From: Kirt Love HTTP://www.gulflink.org
Sent: Friday, October 24, 2003 8:42 PM
Subject: [gulflink] Skin disease infects U.S. soldiers in Iraq
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