Modesto Bee Article
By Ken Carlson, Modesto Bee Staff Writer
last updated: September 25, 2009
After it seemed like a light year for West Nile virus, the disease has returned in full
force in the past three weeks in Stanislaus County.
As of Friday, Stanislaus and Kern
counties, each with 11 reported cases, had the most cases this year among the 41 counties in
California affected by West Nile.
Stanislaus health officials reported 10 of the cases
this month, the patients ranging in age from 27 to 84. All of the patients were stricken with
neuroinvasive West Nile disease, a debilitating form of the illness that can result in long-term
neurological symptoms.
Surveillance personnel with local mosquito abatement districts still are finding infected
mosquitoes in the field. Positive mosquito samples prompted the Turlock Mosquito Abatement
District to conduct aerial spraying over 5,000 acres along the edge of west Turlock last week.
"It hit in the latter part of August and has just been building with more and more activity in
the last three weeks," said Jerry Davis, manager of the Turlock district.
With the
unseasonably warm temperatures, officials expect the virus will make one last assault in the
early weeks of fall and then go into dormancy as the weather cools.
Six of the people
stricken this year live in the Turlock area, with most coming down with symptoms the last week
in August and first week in September. The latest cases in the county were reported to the state
Monday and Tuesday, a 53-year-old woman and 41-year-old man, both with neurological symptoms.
"We talked to a number of people who had to be hospitalized," Davis said. "A number of them
didn't recall being bitten by mosquitoes. People should avoid being outdoors near sunset or
sunrise, and if they can't avoid it they should use insect repellant."
The West Nile
disease, which is native to Africa and first detected in the United States in 1999, hasn't bitten
very hard in California this year. As of Friday, the state had 62 cases of infection and two
deaths, compared with 445 people infected and 15 fatalities last year.
The two deaths this
year were in Merced and Fresno counties. The fatality is Merced County's only confirmed case this
year; San Joaquin County has reported five people infected.
Close to 90 positive mosquito
samples have been reported in Stanislaus County, the second-highest since the virus first surfaced
in the county in 2004. Stanislaus County reported 18 people infected in 2008.
County
officials said there were few signs of the virus during the not-so-hot first half of the summer.
West Nile tends to thrive in hotter conditions, so it is still a threat with temperatures forecast
in the high 90s this weekend.
About one in five people infected with West Nile will have
symptoms such as fever, body aches, nausea, vomiting or swollen lymph glands. The symptoms may
last for a few days to several weeks.
One in 150 of those infected suffer a debilitating
attack to their nervous systems, accompanied by fever, neck stiffness, disorientation, coma,
tremors and paralysis. This form of the illness can be fatal or cause permanent neurological
effects.
People planning a barbecue or picnic this weekend should be aware of mosquitoes.
A species that carries the virus moves into residential areas as cornfields and other crops are
harvested this time of year, said Lloyd Douglass, general manager of the East Side Mosquito
Abatement District, which is responsible for mosquito control in and around Modesto and other
communities north of the Tuolumne River.
The mosquitoes gather around homes and can get
into a house through an open window or hole in a screen door.
PDF: West Nile facts and information
Official West Nile information
State West Nile Information
Stanislaus County West Nile site
Bee staff writer Ken Carlson can be reached at kcarlson@modbee.com or 578-2321.