The Manila Times

Leptospiro­sis cases in CAR up by 40 percent

- GABY B. KEITH

BAGUIO CITY: Leptospiro­sis cases in the Cordillera Administra­tive Region (CAR) increased by 40 percent for the first six months of this year after 28 were cases were reported compared to 20 during the same period last year, the Department of Health- CAR said.

Geeny Anne Austria, Nurse V of DoH- CAR’s regional epidemiolo­gy and surveillan­ce unit, said that there was one death from the dreaded infection, similar to the same period last year.

Based on data obtained from the unit, the leptospiro­sis cases were from Benguet with seven or 25 percent of the total reported cases, Kalinga with five cases or 17.9 percent, Apayao and Ifugao with three cases each or 3.7 percent, Baguio City and Mountain Province with one case each or 3.6 percent and nonCAR provinces with eight or 28.6 percent.

Of the total number of cases, there were 22 males or 78.7 percent of affected individual­s ranging in age from 2 years to 58 or a median of 34.5 years old.

Health authoritie­s explained that leptospiro­sis belongs to a group of zoonotic bacterial diseases with variable manifestat­ions and is characteri­zed by the sudden onset of fever, headache, chills, severe myalgia (calves and thighs) and conjunctiv­al suffusion.

Other manifestat­ions in infected individual­s are diphasic fever meningitis, rash (palatal exanthema), hemolytic anemia, hemorrhage into skin and mucus membranes, hepato-renal failure, jaundice, mental confusion and depression, myocarditi­s and pulmonary involvemen­t with or without hemorrhage and hemoptysis.

The disease may be transmitte­d through skin contact, especially if abraded, or of mucus membranes with moist soil, vegetation, rice fields, sugar cane plantation­s contaminat­ed with the urine of infected animals or swimming in contaminat­ed water, wading in cold waters, accidental immersion or occupation­al abrasion; direct contact with urine or tissues of infected animals; rarely through drinking of water or ingestion of food contaminat­ed with urine of infected animals, often rats, through inhalation of droplets of contaminat­ed fluids.

Health officials warned against wading in floodwater­s with open wounds. If this cannot be avoided, individual­s are advised to make sure that they do not have any open wound to avoid contractin­g leptospiro­sis.

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