Category Archives: Health

Vaccines offer little protection against long Covid, study finds

A nurse administers a booster shot at a Covid-19 vaccination clinic on April 0=6, 2022 in San Rafael, California.

Justin Sullivan | Getty Images

The Covid vaccines, while holding up strong against hospitalization and death, offer little protection against long Covid, according to research published Wednesday in the journal Nature Medicine.

The findings are disappointing, if not surprising, to researchers who were once hopeful that vaccination could significantly reduce the risk of long Covid.

Compared to an unvaccinated individual, the risk of long Covid in a fully vaccinated individual was cut by only about 15 percent, the study found.

“The vaccines are miraculous at doing what they were designed to do” — that is, prevent hospitalization and death, said Dr. Ziyad Al-Aly, a clinical epidemiologist at Washington University in St. Louis and the lead author of the study. But they “offer very modest protection against long Covid,” he said.

The Covid vaccines were developed early on in the pandemic, long before doctors, scientists and patients knew of the existence of long Covid. They were never designed to protect against it, said Al-Aly, who is also chief of research at the V.A. St. Louis Health Care System. “We need to revisit them now that we know that the virus can also produce long-term consequences.”

Dr. Greg Vanichkachorn, director of the Mayo Clinic’s Covid Activity Rehabilitation Program in Rochester, Minnesota, who was not involved with the new study, said the results were not “too surprising.”

“We know that the majority of folks with long Covid have not had severe infections,” he said.

The study looked at national health care data from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs and included medical records of nearly 34,000 vaccinated people who had breakthrough Covid infections and more than 113,000 who were unvaccinated when infected with Covid from January 2021 through October 2021. People were considered fully vaccinated if they had received two doses of either the Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna vaccine or a single dose of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine.

The researchers followed up six months post-infection to see whether patients had lingering symptoms. While the protection against long Covid in general was relatively small, vaccines were more effective at preventing some of the most life-threatening long Covid symptoms: Vaccination reduced the risk of lung disorders by nearly 50 percent and blood-clotting disorders by 56 percent, compared with those who were not vaccinated. 

Al-Aly noted that a breakthrough case does not mean a person will develop long Covid — only about 10 percent of breakthrough cases will result in the condition — but with so many people infected, this still translates to a large number of people. 

The data did not show whether a person was boosted, but Al-Aly said he doesn’t expect boosting to make a big difference in terms of vaccines protecting against long Covid, nor variants like omicron.

Vanichkachorn agreed. “Unfortunately, I do not think boosting will do much to prevent long Covid with the vaccine,” he said. “We have many patients with breakthrough infections who are as vaccinated as possible. We also have not seen much of a difference between variants with long Covid symptoms.” 

This is not to say that vaccines are not an important tool in the fight against the pandemic, experts say.

Boosters, in particular, offer the most protection against severe acute Covid and reduce the risk of complications, said Dr. Jason Maley, director of the Critical Illness and COVID-19 Survivorship Program at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston.

But for long Covid, they’re not necessarily the solution. “I don’t believe vaccination is the key to eliminating long Covid,” Al-Aly said. “We really need to think about additional layers to protect us from the long-term consequences of this virus.”

New approaches to preventing long Covid

Covid cases are once again rising again in the U.S., driven now by an omicron subvariant called BA.2.12.1, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Even so, public health measures such as masking and social distancing have largely fallen away.

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Al-Aly said he doesn’t fault people for that. 

“It isn’t pragmatic to tell people to mask for the next 10 years,” he said. But it does underscore the need to improve vaccines and treatments in a way that could offer protection against long Covid.   

“Now that we have lifted all these other public health measures, vaccines are really the only layer of protection we have,” Al-Aly said. “That places even more urgency on the question of what other prevention or treatments might be available. Can we tweak those original vaccines to also address long Covid, or do we also need intranasal vaccines or other therapies in addition?” 

Intranasal vaccines, for example, could potentially be better at preventing transmission than current vaccines, but this is an area that needs to be investigated, he said. 

Maley, who was also not involved with the study, said that mounting research suggests one of the main risk factors for long Covid is the level of virus in the body during the acute infection. This suggests early treatment with therapies including antivirals may be able to help prevent long Covid by keeping those virus levels low. 

“Right now, antivirals are approved for emergency use authorization for patients who are at high risk for severe Covid-19, usually older adults or people with compromised immune systems,” Maley said. There is also an interest, he said, in studying whether antiviral treatments could benefit long Covid patients. 

Both Al-Aly and Vanichkachorn agreed that more research is needed on long Covid. “We need continued research specifically on long Covid so specific therapies can be developed,” Vanichkachorn said.

But right now, he said, “the best way to not get long Covid is not to get Covid.”

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CDC confirms Utah cases are monkeypox

Dr. Angela Dunn, executive director of the Salt Lake County Health Department, speaks about monkeypox during a press conference at the Salt Lake County Government Center in Salt Lake City on Monday. (Mengshin Lin, Deseret News)

Estimated read time: 2-3 minutes

SALT LAKE CITY — The Salt Lake County Health Department announced Wednesday that two local cases of monkeypox have been confirmed.

The department announced Monday that there were two probable cases in Salt Lake County, and was awaiting confirmation from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

A health department spokesperson said that the two infected adults, who live in the same home, are in isolation and there is no risk to the public. The two individuals are also both expected to fully recover.

On Monday, Salt Lake County health officials said the two people developed symptoms after traveling internationally earlier in May. Preliminary tests led them to believe that the individuals had monkeypox.

The county health department is working to contact anyone who may have been in close contact with the known cases while they were infectious.

People who have monkeypox are not contagious until they show symptoms, which is typically between seven and 14 days after infection. It is spread through close personal contact, including during sex.

“This is not easily spread from human to human,” said Dr. Angela Dunn, executive director at the Salt Lake County Health Department. “We are not talking about COVID here. It is really that direct contact with individuals who have monkeypox and that’s how it’s spreading right now. So for the general public, there’s not a great risk.”

Monkeypox is typically found in Africa but cases have recently appeared throughout Europe, as well as in New York, Florida, Washington and Massachusetts.

The CDC said several U.S. counties reported clusters of monkeypox in May, and the exposure of each case is unclear. The agency said the cases “include people who self-identify as men who have sex with men.”

The CDC is asking health care providers to watch for rashes that are consistent with monkeypox in any patients.

The smallpox vaccine can be used to treat early patients. The Salt Lake County health department said they are making sure they have supplies to receive and distribute the vaccine if necessary, but there have not been any high-risk exposures in the state and they have not yet asked for any of the vaccine to be sent.

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Emily Ashcraft joined KSL.com as a reporter in 2021. She covers courts and legal affairs, as well as health, faith and religion news.

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CDC monkeypox warning urges ‘enhanced precautions’ for travel

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The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has issued a monkeypox alert to travelers after cases were reported in North America, Europe and Australia. The Level 2 alert urged people traveling to “Practice Enhanced Precautions,” though the agency said the risk is low for the general public.

Confirmed cases of the rare disease have been found in countries including the United States, Canada, Australia, England, France, Italy, Spain, the Netherlands and Israel.

“None of these people reported having recently been in central or west African countries where monkeypox usually occurs, including the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Nigeria, among others,” the CDC alert says.

As monkeypox panic spreads, doctors in Africa see a double standard

The CDC warned travelers to avoid close contact with sick people and wild animals such as small mammals and primates (living or dead). Travelers are also discouraged from preparing or eating wild game meat, and the agency said travelers should refrain from using products — such as creams, powders and lotions — made from African wild animals. The warning says to avoid contact with materials used by sick people or animals.

Monkeypox causes symptoms including headache, muscle aches and fever, along with lesions on the body, with illness lasting between two and four weeks, according to the agency. Infections typically arise through contact with the skin lesions or bodily fluids of people or animals that have been infected. Those include respiratory droplets. People can also get infected via contact with contaminated materials. The illness has been fatal in as many as 1 in 10 people in Africa.

The CDC advised seeking medical care if you have a new rash on your skin without explanation, keeping away from others, and, if you think you could be infected, staying off public transportation until you have been cleared.

An infection in Massachusetts was the first identified this year in the United States. Health authorities have shared concerns about the increase in cases. However, they have also said the virus is significantly less transmissible than the coronavirus.

President Biden said Monday he did not expect a quarantine would be needed to curb the spread of monkeypox in this country. “I just don’t think it rises to the level of the kind of concern that existed with covid-19, and the smallpox vaccine works for it,” he said at a news conference.

Studies indicate the smallpox vaccine is, at minimum, 85 percent effective against monkeypox, per the CDC.

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Researchers May Have Found the Missing Link Between Alzheimer’s and Vascular Disease

Summary: The FMNL2 gene links cerebrovascular disease and Alzheimer’s disease, a new study reports. Changes of activity in the FMNL2 caused by cerebrovascular disease prevent the efficient cleaning of toxic proteins in the brain, leading to the development of Alzheimer’s disease.

Source: Columbia University

For more than 20 years, scientists have known that people with hypertension, diabetes, high cholesterol, or obesity have a higher likelihood of developing Alzheimer’s disease.

The conditions can all affect the brain, damaging blood vessels and leading to strokes. But the connection between vascular disease in the brain and Alzheimer’s has remained unexplained despite the intense efforts of researchers.

Now, a study published in Acta Neuropathologica and led by researchers at Columbia University’s Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons has uncovered a possible mechanism.

The study found that a gene called FMNL2 links cerebrovascular disease and Alzheimer’s and suggests changes in FMNL2 activity caused by cerebrovascular disease prevent the efficient clearance of toxic proteins from the brain, eventually leading to Alzheimer’s disease.

The finding could lead to a way to prevent Alzheimer’s in people with hypertension, diabetes, obesity, or heart disease.

“Not only do we have a gene, but we have a potential mechanism,” says senior author Richard Mayeux, MD, chair of neurology at Columbia and NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia University Irving Medical Center.

“People have been trying to figure this out for a couple of decades, and I think we have our foot in the door now. We feel there must be other genes involved and that we’ve just scratched the surface.”

Mayeux and his colleagues found FMNL2 in a genome-wide hunt designed to uncover genes associated with both vascular risk factors and Alzheimer’s disease. The search involved five groups of patients representing different ethnic groups.

One gene, FMNL2, stood out during the analysis. But what role it could possibly play was unclear. That’s when Caghan Kizil, Ph.D., a visiting associate professor at Columbia, leveraged his expertise with zebrafish as a model organism for Alzheimer’s disease.

FMNL2 and the blood-brain barrier

“We had this gene, FMNL2, that was lying at the interface between Alzheimer’s disease in the brain and cerebrovascular risk factors,” says Kizil. “So we had an idea that FMNL2 might operate in the blood-brain barrier, where brain cells meet the vasculature.”

The blood-brain barrier is a semi-permeable, highly controlled border between capillaries and brain tissue that serves as a defense against disease-causing pathogens and toxins in the blood.

Astrocytes, a specialized type of brain cell, compose and maintain the structure of the blood-brain barrier by forming a protective sheath around the blood vessel. This astrocyte sheath needs to loosen for the clearance of toxic amyloid—the aggregates of proteins that accumulate in the brain and lead to Alzheimer’s disease.

The zebrafish model confirmed the presence of FMNL2 in the astrocyte sheath, which retracted its grip on the blood vessel once toxic proteins were injected into the brain, presumably to allow for clearance. When Kizil and his colleagues blocked the function of FMNL2, this retraction did not occur, preventing clearance of amyloid from the brain. The same process was then confirmed using transgenic mice with Alzheimer’s disease.

The finding could lead to a way to prevent Alzheimer’s in people with hypertension, diabetes, obesity, or heart disease. Image is in the public domain

The same process may also occur in the human brain. The researchers studied postmortem human brains and found increased expression of FMNL2 in people with Alzheimer’s disease, along with breach of the blood-brain barrier and retraction of the astrocytes.

Based on these findings, the researchers propose that FMNL2 opens the blood-brain-barrier—by controlling its astrocytes—and promotes the clearance of extracellular aggregates from the brain. And that cerebrovascular disease, by interacting with FMNL2, reduces the clearance of amyloid in the brain.

The team is currently in the process of investigating other genes that could be involved in the interplay between Alzheimer’s and cerebrovascular disease, which, along with FMNL2, could provide future approaches for drug development.

About this dementia research news

Author: Press Office
Source: Columbia University
Contact: Press Office – Columbia University
Image: The image is in the public domain

Original Research: Open access.
“FMNL2 regulates gliovascular interactions and is associated with vascular risk factors and cerebrovascular pathology in Alzheimer’s disease” by Annie J. Lee et al. Acta Neuropathologica


Abstract

See also

FMNL2 regulates gliovascular interactions and is associated with vascular risk factors and cerebrovascular pathology in Alzheimer’s disease

Alzheimer’s disease (AD) has been associated with cardiovascular and cerebrovascular risk factors (CVRFs) during middle age and later and is frequently accompanied by cerebrovascular pathology at death.

An interaction between CVRFs and genetic variants might explain the pathogenesis. Genome-wide, gene by CVRF interaction analyses for AD, in 6568 patients and 8101 controls identified FMNL2 (p = 6.6 × 10–7).

A significant increase in FMNL2 expression was observed in the brains of patients with brain infarcts and AD pathology and was associated with amyloid and phosphorylated tau deposition. FMNL2 was also prominent in astroglia in AD among those with cerebrovascular pathology.

Amyloid toxicity in zebrafish increased fmnl2a expression in astroglia with detachment of astroglial end feet from blood vessels. Knockdown of fmnl2a prevented gliovascular remodeling, reduced microglial activity and enhanced amyloidosis.

APP/PS1dE9 AD mice also displayed increased Fmnl2 expression and reduced the gliovascular contacts independent of the gliotic response. Based on this work, we propose that FMNL2 regulates pathology-dependent plasticity of the blood–brain-barrier by controlling gliovascular interactions and stimulating the clearance of extracellular aggregates.

Therefore, in AD cerebrovascular risk factors promote cerebrovascular pathology which in turn, interacts with FMNL2 altering the normal astroglial-vascular mechanisms underlying the clearance of amyloid and tau increasing their deposition in brain.

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More than 1 in 5 COVID survivors may develop long COVID, CDC study suggests

Enlarge / A long-COVID patient in Germany takes a pulmonary function test at Hufeland Clinic’s Center for Pneumology.

More than one in five adults in the US who have recovered from COVID-19 may end up developing a long-term condition linked to the viral infection, according to a study published this week by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The post-COVID conditions span heart, lung, kidney, cardiovascular, gastrointestinal, neurological, and mental health conditions. Overall, COVID survivors had nearly twice the risk of developing respiratory and lung conditions, including pulmonary embolisms, compared with uninfected controls. The most common post-COVID conditions were respiratory conditions and musculoskeletal pain.

Among COVID survivors, people ages 18 to 64 were more likely than older survivors to develop cardiac dysrhythmia and musculoskeletal pain. The risks for survivors 65 and up were greater for kidney failure, blood clots, cerebrovascular disease, muscle disorders, neurological conditions, and mental health conditions.

In the older age group, “post-COVID conditions affecting the nervous system are of particular concern because these conditions can lead to early entry into supportive services or investment of additional resources into care,” the authors wrote. And for the 18-to-64 age group, post-COVID conditions could particularly “affect a patient’s ability to contribute to the workforce and might have economic consequences for survivors and their dependents.”

With more than 83 million cases of COVID-19 reported in the US—and the actual number of infections likely significantly higher—the findings mean that millions could develop long-term symptoms, requiring additional care and resources. ” Therefore, implementation of COVID-19 prevention strategies, as well as routine assessment for post-COVID conditions among persons who survive COVID-19, is critical to reducing the incidence and impact of post-COVID conditions, particularly among adults aged ≥65 years,” the authors conclude.

Study design

For the study, the authors mined electronic health records from a national, de-identified database containing information on 63.4 million adult patients from all 50 states. CDC researchers identified 353,164 patients diagnosed with COVID-19 between March 2020 and November 2021. They then matched each COVID-19 patient in a ratio of one to five with 1,640,776 control patients who had visited a health care facility during the same month as the COVID-19 patients’ diagnosis but weren’t diagnosed in the study’s time frame. All of the survivors and controls were monitored for at least a month and up to a year.

Patients who had a history of any of the 26 conditions previously linked to COVID-19 were excluded from the study.

Overall, 38.2 percent of COVID-19 survivors developed a post-COVID condition, compared with 16 percent of uninfected controls. In the 18 to 64 age group, 35.4 percent of survivors developed a post-COVID condition, compared with 14.6 percent of controls. In the 65 and up group, 45.4 percent of survivors developed a post-COVID condition, compared with 18.5 percent of controls.

The absolute risk difference between the percentage of COVID survivors and controls who developed a post-COVID condition was 20.8 percentage points for those between 18 and 64, and 26.9 percentage points for those 65 and up. Based on those calculations, the CDC estimates that one in five adults from 18 to 64 and one in four adults aged 65 and up developed at least one post-COVID condition.

The study has several limitations, including only tapping into electronic health records from one software source, creating the possibility that the results are not generalizable to the entire US. It also did not account for different SARS-CoV-2 variants and some demographic details, such as geographic location. And because it is based on electronic health records, it may be biased toward those who more readily seek care.

Still, the authors note their findings are “consistent with those from several large studies that indicated that post-COVID incident conditions occur in 20-30 percent of patients,” they write. And overall, they conclude, “these findings can increase awareness for post-COVID conditions and improve post-acute care and management of patients after illness.”

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CDC confirms Utah cases are monkeypox

Dr. Angela Dunn, executive director of the Salt Lake County Health Department, speaks about monkeypox during a press conference at the Salt Lake County Government Center in Salt Lake City on Monday. (Mengshin Lin, Deseret News)

Estimated read time: 2-3 minutes

SALT LAKE CITY — The Salt Lake County Health Department announced Wednesday the two local cases of monkeypox have been confirmed.

The department announced Monday that there were two probable cases in Salt Lake County, and were awaiting confirmation from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

A health department spokesperson said that the two infected adults, who live in the same home, are in isolation and there is no risk to the public. The two cases are also both expected to fully recover.

On Monday, Salt Lake County health officials said the two people developed symptoms after traveling internationally earlier in May. Preliminary tests led them to believe that the individuals had monkeypox.

The county health department is working to contact anyone who may have been in close contact with the known cases while they were infectious.

People who have monkeypox are not contagious until they show symptoms, which is typically between seven and 14 days after infection. It is spread through close personal contact, including sex.

“This is not easily spread from human to human,” Dr. Angela Dunn, executive director at the Salt Lake County Health Department said. “We are not talking about COVID here. It is really that direct contact with individuals who have monkeypox and that’s how it’s spreading right now. So for the general public, there’s not a great risk.”

Monkeypox is typically found in Africa but cases have recently appeared throughout Europe, as well as in New York, Florida, Washington and Massachusetts.

The CDC said several U.S. counties reported clusters of monkeypox in May, and the exposure of each case is unclear. The agency said the cases “include people who self-identify as men who have sex with men.”

The CDC is asking health care providers to watch for rashes that are consistent with monkeypox in any patients.

The smallpox vaccine can be used to treat early patients. The Salt Lake County health department said they are making sure they have supplies to receive and distribute the vaccine if necessary, but there have not been any high-risk exposures in the state and they have not yet asked for any of the vaccine to be sent.

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Emily Ashcraft joined KSL.com as a reporter in 2021. She covers courts and legal affairs, as well as health, faith and religion news.

More stories you may be interested in

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Another 36 cases of mysterious hepatitis have been recorded, but no new deaths

Another 36 children have fallen sick in the mysterious hepatitis outbreak, health chiefs revealed Wednesday — after six deaths were linked to the illness.

It brings the tally of children affected by the liver inflammation to 216 across 37 states, with Mississippi and Utah the latest to be added to the growing list. 

No new deaths or liver transplants were reported over the last seven days, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) revealed in their weekly update with the totals remaining at 14 and six respectively. 

The agency has not revealed where the fatalities occurred due to ‘confidentiality issues’, but at least one was registered in Wisconsin health chiefs in the state say.

Globally, the U.S. has recorded the most fatalities and suspected cases out of any nation — although this may be because of stronger surveillance here.

Indonesia has reported five deaths in the outbreak, while both Palestine and Israel have registered one each.

Scientists say it will still be weeks before the cause of the cases is revealed, although the CDC continues to consider an adenovirus infection — which can trigger the common cold — as the most likely cause.

The outbreak may also be the result of weakened immunity due to lockdowns which harmed people’s immunity, experts warn.

The CDC is now publishing weekly outbreaks on the numbers of suspected cases, liver transplants and deaths reported.

Many of the cases are ‘historic’, having occurred over the seven months since October 2021, but are only just coming to light now as physicians research samples collected from sick children in-post. 

The CDC said last week there was no sign that cases were surging in recent months.

A total of 37 states have now reported cases in the hepatitis outbreak. These are: Arkansas, Alabama, Arizona, California, Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, Nevada, New Jersey, North Carolina, North Dakota, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, and Virginia, Washington and Wisconsin.

The territory of Puerto Rico has also recorded at least one case of mysterious hepatitis.

Experts warn lockdowns mean the U.S. may now be heading into a period where it is difficult to know what to expect from infectious diseases.

Dr Marion Koopmans, head of the department of viroscience at the Erasmus Medical Center in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, gave the warning to STAT News and said it was because of less recent immunity.

She said blood tests on children showed they had been on something of an ‘infection honeymoon’ with few antibodies present to normal diseases.

She added: ‘You really see that children in the second year of the pandemic have far less antibodies to a set of common respiratory viruses.

‘They just got less exposed.’

The CDC said last week that an adenovirus infection — which can cause the common cold — was their leading hypothesis for the cause of the illness, although they were also still investigating whether Covid infections played a role.

They have all but ruled out theories suggesting a mutation in the virus may be causing the illness, or that it could be down to exposure to pet dogs. There is no evidence that the Covid vaccine is triggering hepatitis.

The usual causes — hepatitis viruses A, B, C, D and E — have all been ruled out. 

Q&A: What is the mysterious global hepatitis outbreak and what is behind it? 

What is hepatitis?

Hepatitis is inflammation of the liver that is usually caused by a viral infection or liver damage from drinking alcohol. 

Some cases resolve themselves, with no ongoing issues, but a fraction can be deadly, forcing patients to need liver transplants to survive.

What are the symptoms?

People who have hepatitis generally have fatigue, loss of appetite, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, dark urine, light-colored stools and joint pain.

They may also suffer from jaundice — when the skin and whites of the eyes turn yellow. 

Why are experts concerned?

Hepatitis is usually rare in children, but experts have already spotted more cases in the current outbreak than they would normally expect in a year.

Cases are of an ‘unknown origin’ and are also severe, according to the World Health Organization. 

What are the top theories? 

Co-infection

Experts say the cases may be linked to adenovirus, commonly associated with colds, but further research is ongoing.

This, in combination with Covid infections, could be causing the spike in cases. 

Around three-quarters of British cases have tested positive for the virus. 

Weakened immunity

British experts tasked with investigating the spate of illnesses believe the endless cycle of lockdowns may have played a contributing role.

Restrictions may have weakened children’s immunity because of reduced social mixing, leaving them at heightened risk of adenovirus. 

This means even ‘normal’ adenovirus could be causing the severe outcomes, because children are not responding to it how they did in the past. 

Adenovirus mutation

Other scientists said it may have been the adenovirus that has acquired ‘unusual mutations’.

This would mean it could be more transmissible or better able to get around children’s natural immunity.

New Covid variant

UKHSA officials included ‘a new variant of SARS-CoV-2’ in their working hypotheses.

Covid has caused liver inflammation in very rare cases during the pandemic, although these have been across all ages rather than isolated in children. 

Environmental triggers  

The CDC has noted environmental triggers are still being probed as possible causes of the illnesses. 

These could include pollution or exposure to particular drugs or toxins.

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What to know about symptoms, threat

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Being examined by Congolese doctors, a Manfuette village teenage boy is suspected of having monkeypox in Manfuette, Republic of Congo Tuesday, August 29, 2017. The Washington Post/Getty Images
  • Since early May 2022, many countries in Europe, as well as Australia, and the U.S. have reported an increasing number of monkeypox cases.
  • As a viral disease native to Africa, monkeypox is usually transmitted by animal-to-human contact, producing skin lesions, fever, and body aches in people the virus infects.
  • Some recent cases of monkeypox have involved men who have had sex with men, however, experts say the disease is not a sexually transmitted infection but can spread via direct contact during sex.

This is a developing story. We will provide updates as more information becomes available.

On the heels of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, a zoonotic virus seems to be spreading throughout Europe and into North America.

Monkeypox has been making headway across the U.K., Spain, and Portugal since early May 2022. France, Germany, Italy, Belgium, and Australia have since confirmed at least one case in each country as well.

In the U.K., 20 monkeypox cases have been confirmed since early May. During a press conference on May 17, World Health Organization (WHO) officials said that these are mostly separate occurrences except for “a family cluster with two confirmed cases and one probable case[…]”

Recently, Canada and the U.S. joined these nations in tracking and tracing the virus.

As of May 19, Canada confirmed two monkeypox cases and said it was investigating 17 suspected cases. The Massachusetts Department of Health also announced a single case in an individual who had recently been in Canada. Several of the Canadian cases have been linked to this person.

On May 18, Scott Pauley, press officer at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), told Medical News Today:

“The U.K. notified the U.S. of 8 people in the U.S. who might have been seated near the U.K. traveler when they flew from Nigeria to London [on May 3-4, 2022]. Of these, one is no longer in the U.S., and one was not a contact. The remaining six are being monitored by their respective state health departments. None of these six travel contacts have monkeypox symptoms and their risk of infection is very low.”

The WHO officials have been tracking monkeypox’s path through Europe and North America for several weeks. However, with the data available so far, they do not know long the virus has been spreading.

Monkeypox is a zoonotic virus, which transmits disease from animals to humans. Cases typically occur near tropical rainforests, where animals that carry the virus live.

The monkeypox virus is a member of the orthopoxvirus family. It also has two distinct genetic strains or clades: the Central African (Congo Basin) clade and the West African clade. The Congo Basin clade is known to spread more easily and cause more severe symptoms.

Monkeypox naturally occurs in Africa, especially in west and central African nations. Cases in the U.S. are rare and associated with international travel from places where the disease is more common.

Monkeypox symptoms and signs include headache, skin rash, fever, body aches, chills, swollen lymph nodes, and exhaustion. It produces symptoms similar to smallpox, but milder.

The time from infection to the onset of symptoms, which is referred to as the incubation period, can range from five to 21 days. The illness typically resolves within two to four weeks.

Severe cases are more common among people with underlying immune deficiencies and young children. In recent times, the case fatality ratio of monkeypox is around 3-6%.

Transmission of the monkeypox virus among humans is limited, but it can happen through close skin contact, air droplets, bodily fluids, and virus-contaminated objects.

Most of the recent cases of monkeypox in the U.K. and Canada have been reported among attendees of sexual health services at health clinics in men who have sex with men.

Regarding this trend, Dr. I. Socé Fall, the regional emergencies director for the WHO’s Health Emergencies Program, cautioned:

“This is new information we need to investigate properly to understand better the dynamic of local transmission in the U.K. and some other countries.”

During a press conference on May 17, Dr. Fall acknowledged that public health officials still have much to learn about the monkeypox virus.

“But the most important thing is we really need to invest in understanding the development of monkeypox because we have so many unknowns in terms of the dynamics of transmission, the clinical features, the epidemiology. In terms of therapeutics and diagnostics also, we still have important gaps,” he said.

WHO experts believe that solutions for monkeypox calls must go beyond addressing the disease.

During the press conference, Dr. Michael Ryan, executive director of the WHO’s Health Emergencies Program, said: “[G]etting answers isn’t just about getting answers about the virus. We’ve got to get answers about the hosts, we’ve got to get answers about human behavior and practice, and we’ve got to operate at all levels to try and ensure that human populations are protected.”

For more insight, Medical News Today spoke with Dr. Kartik Cherabuddi, clinical associate professor in infectious diseases and director of the Global Medicine and Antimicrobial Management Program at the University of Florida.

“Being aware of the rash of monkeypox which presents as vesicles is very important. Additional measures include vigilance in those who have traveled in the past 30 days to countries that have reported cases of monkeypox [and] who have contact with a person who is confirmed or suspected of monkeypox.”
— Dr. Kartik Cherabuddi

Dr. Cherabuddi mentioned that smallpox vaccinations offer some protection against monkeypox. He said the Democratic Republic of Congo is currently employing ring vaccination for close contacts of confirmed cases.

The U.K. is also using ring vaccination, in addition to contact and source tracing, case searching, and local rash-illness surveillance, he added.

Smallpox and monkeypox vaccines

Dr. Cherabuddi believes that more cases will arise in the U.S., but it’s difficult to predict how many.

He said he was concerned that with fewer people in the U.S. having had smallpox vaccinations, this could be putting “a majority of the population below the age of 40-50 years at risk for infection[…]”

Dr. Ryan also noted that preventing the disease may not entirely rest on vaccines. He pointed out that “the protection offered by previous smallpox vaccination also has reduced[…]”

He said there might be a need to change agricultural, social, and food storage practices to prevent further outbreaks. Officials hope to help communities understand how the virus spreads so they can address it at its sources.

Dr. Cherabuddi told MNT that vaccines for monkeypox have also been approved for limited circulation.

“An approved vaccine for monkeypox—MVA-BN—is not widely available. Tecovirimat (TPOXX), as both oral and IV medication is approved in the U.S. for treating smallpox and oral form in Europe to treat cowpox, monkeypox, and smallpox. The FDA also approved brincidofovir (Tembexa) in 2021 to treat smallpox. These medications are not widely available,” he said.

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Latest Legionnaires’ Outbreak in the Bronx Kills 1 and Sickens 18

A growing cluster of Legionnaires’ disease cases in the Bronx has resulted in the death of one person and illness in 18 others, eight of whom are currently hospitalized, the New York City Health Department said Wednesday.

The cases appear to be linked to four water cooling towers on top of buildings in the Highbridge neighborhood of the Bronx, where officials said they found Legionella pneumophila, the bacteria that causes Legionnaires’ disease.

“While most people exposed to the bacteria do not get sick, Legionnaires’ disease can cause severe illness or be fatal for those at higher risk, including people with pre-existing chronic health issues,” said the city’s health commissioner, Dr. Ashwin Vasan, in a statement. “That’s why it’s crucial that you seek health care as soon as you experience flulike symptoms.”

Outbreaks of the disease happen with some regularity in New York City, where aging water cooling tanks on top of buildings can become reservoirs for the bacteria. The disease is treatable by antibiotics if caught early enough.

The last known death in a cluster of cases was in 2018, and was linked to an outbreak of 18 cases in Upper Manhattan.

A 2018 health department analysis showed that between 200 and 700 cases were reported in the city each year, and that the rate was rising. Large clusters of cases, however, were uncommon, happening on average once or twice per year, the health department said.

In 2015, the city experienced its largest outbreak, when 138 people were sickened and 16 died of the disease in the Bronx. Afterward, the city instituted several prevention efforts, including a requirement that building owners test their water supply regularly for the bacteria.

But the disease persists — last year, a cluster of 18 cases in Harlem was linked, at least in part, to an infected water cooling tower at Harlem Hospital, a city public hospital.

With this latest outbreak, city health inspectors have been following up with residents to warn them of the cluster and ordered the owners of the towers to disinfect them.

On Wednesday, the health department called on New Yorkers with flulike symptoms, cough, fever or difficulty breathing who live in the Highbridge area to contact a physician immediately. Symptoms can also resemble other types of pneumonia, causing chills and muscle aches.

The disease is named after an outbreak linked to an American Legion convention in 1976 at the Bellevue-Stratford Hotel in Philadelphia. More than 2,000 Legionnaires attended, and afterward, 182 got sick and 29 died. The bacteria was later discovered growing in the hotel’s air conditioning system.

Legionnaires’ disease is more common in warm weather, when conditions are favorable for Legionella growth in cooling towers, whirlpool spas, hot tubs, humidifiers, hot water tanks and evaporative condensers of large air-conditioning systems, the health department said. It is caused by breathing infected water vapor and is not transmitted from person to person.

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Coronavirus vaccines may not prevent many symptoms of long covid, study suggests

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A large U.S. study looking at whether vaccination protects against long covid showed the shots have only a slight protective effect: Being vaccinated appeared to reduce the risk of lung and blood clot disorders, but did little to protect against most other symptoms.

The new paper, published Wednesday in Nature Medicine, is part of a series of studies by the Department of Veterans Affairs on the impact of the coronavirus, and was based on 33,940 people who experienced breakthrough infections after vaccination.

The data confirms the large body of research that shows vaccination greatly reduces the risk of death or serious illness. But there was more ambiguity regarding long covid.

Six months after their initial diagnosis of covid, people in the study who were vaccinated had only a slightly reduced risk of getting long covid — 15 percent overall. The greatest benefit appeared to be in reducing blood clotting and lung complications. But there was no difference between the vaccinated and unvaccinated when it came to longer-term risks of neurological issues, gastrointestinal symptoms, kidney failure and other conditions.

“This was disappointing,” said Ziyad Al-Aly, lead author and chief of research and development service at VA Saint Louis Health Care System. “I was hoping to see that vaccines offer more protection, especially given that vaccines are our only line of defense nowadays.”

“Long covid” refers to the constellation of symptoms that many people have reported months after their initial infections. Early in the pandemic, some patients who complained of lingering symptoms were dismissed by physicians who thought the manifestations might be psychological. But the condition has since become a major concern for the medical community.

The World Health Organization has defined post-covid syndrome as symptoms that last for at least two months and cannot be explained by alternate diagnoses. It cited evidence suggesting that as many as 20 percent of the half-billion people worldwide estimated to be infected with coronavirus may experience mid- and long-term effects.

This week, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released new estimates of the syndrome’s toll in the United States, suggesting it affects one in five adults younger than 65 who had covid, and one in four of those aged 65 and older. People in both age groups had twice the risk of uninfected people of developing respiratory symptoms and lung problems, including pulmonary embolism, the CDC found. Those in the older age group were at greater risk of developing kidney failure, Type 2 diabetes, neurological conditions and mental health issues.

The Veterans Affairs study, believed to be the largest peer-reviewed analysis in the United States on long covid based on medical records, looked at patients who either had two doses of the Moderna or Pfizer—BioNTech vaccines, or one dose of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine. It did not assess the impact of booster shots. While the study population contained a wide range of ages and racial and ethnic backgrounds, it did skew older, Whiter and more male than the United States as a whole.

The VA study also had no way to tell how different variants may change the risk of long covid. These breakthrough infections, for example, took place at a time when alpha, delta and prior variants were at high levels in the United States. It does not cover the period when the omicron variant and its subvariants began circulating in late 2021.

How long covid is accelerating a revolution in medical research

The findings add to the debate surrounding similar analyses trickling out from the United Kingdom, Israel and other countries that have shown conflicting results in terms of whether vaccines protect against long covid.

One British study published in the medical journal Lancet, for example, based on self-reported data from an app, showed a 50 percent reduction in risk among those who were vaccinated. On the other hand, a paper by University of Oxford researchers based on electronic records from the United States found that vaccination did not appear to reduce the risk of long covid for most symptoms.

The question of vaccines and long covid has been a critical one for doctors. Some patients have claimed a vaccine has cured them, while others have avoided the shots for fear of triggering symptoms.

Igor Koralnik, chief of neuro-infectious diseases at Northwestern Medicine, said recent research suggests neither is true. In a paper published in the Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology on Tuesday, Koralnik and his colleagues found that 77 percent of the 52 long-covid patients they are following had been vaccinated against the coronavirus, but the shots did not appear to have a positive or negative impact on cognitive function or fatigue.

“There is a neutral effect of vaccination. It didn’t cure long covid. It didn’t make long covid worse,” Koralnik said.

At the Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center’s Post-Acute COVID Syndrome Clinic, Christina Martin, an advance practice nurse, said that since November, her staff has noticed a “worrying trend” of vaccinated people having breakthrough infections and developing long covid.

When the clinic was founded a year ago, she said, they anticipated seeing fewer new patients by this time as more people became vaccinated. Unfortunately, they’ve seen the opposite, with patient numbers going up.

“We now feel that long covid is here to stay. … This will have profound implications on our health-care system and resources,” Martin said.

David Putrino, a long-covid researcher who serves as director of rehabilitation innovation at the Mount Sinai Health System in New York, shares those concerns. He worries that public health leaders are not taking the current surge seriously enough because they are discounting the risks of long covid.

Putrino said that demand for appointments at his medical center’s long covid clinic continues to increase and he does not anticipate a slowdown any time soon. The clinic has seen about 2,500 patients since opening in May, 2020.

“We failed in our health messaging that death is not the only serious outcome of a covid-19 infection,” Putrino said. “. . . I’m very concerned that what this is going to do is lead us into a continuation of this mass-disabling event we are seeing with long covid.”

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