Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Japan issues urgent warning as deadly bacterial infection spreads

- ISTANBUL / DAILY SABAH WITH AGENCIES

EXPERTS are issuing urgent warnings about a rare but alarming bacterial infection spreading at an unpreceden­ted rate across Japan. Authoritie­s are grappling to uncover the root cause of this concerning trend.

Projection­s indicate that the number of cases in 2024 will surpass last year’s record highs. Moreover, there’s mounting concern that the most severe and potentiall­y deadly form of group A streptococ­cal disease – streptococ­cal toxic shock syndrome (STSS) – will persist in its spread. This fear escalates as highly virulent and infectious strains have been confirmed within Japan.

The National Institute of Infectious Diseases (NIID) said: “There are still many unknown factors regarding the mechanisms behind fulminant (severe and sudden) forms of streptococ­cus, and we are not at the stage where we can explain them.”

Provisiona­l figures released by the NIID recorded 941 cases of STSS were reported last year. In the first two months of 2024, 378 cases have already been recorded, with infections identified in all but two of Japan’s 47 prefecture­s.

While older people are considered at greater risk, the group A strain is leading to more deaths among patients under 50, according to NIID. Of the 65 people under 50 who were diagnosed with STSS between July and December in 2023, about a third, or 21, died, the Asahi Shimbun newspaper reported.

Most cases of STSS are caused by a bacterium called streptococ­cus pyogenes. More commonly known as strep A – it can cause sore throats, mainly in children, and lots of people have it without knowing it and do not become ill.

But the highly contagious bacteria that cause the infection can, in some cases, cause serious illnesses, health complicati­ons and death, particular­ly in adults over 30. About 30% of STSS cases are fatal.

Older people can experience coldlike symptoms but in rare cases, the symptoms can worsen to include strep throat, tonsilliti­s, pneumonia and meningitis. In the most serious cases, it can lead to organ failure and necrosis.

Some experts believe the rapid rise in cases last year was connected to the lifting of restrictio­ns imposed during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

In May 2023, the government downgraded COVID-19’s status from class two – which includes tuberculos­is and

Sars – to class five, placing it on a legal par with seasonal flu. The change meant local authoritie­s were no longer able to order infected people to stay away from work or to recommend hospitaliz­ation.

The move also prompted people to lower their guard, in a country where widespread mask-wearing, hand sanitizing and avoiding the “three Cs” were credited with keeping COVID-19 deaths comparativ­ely low. About 73,000 COVID-19 deaths were recorded compared with more than 220,000 in Britain, which has a population just over half that of Japan.

Ken Kikuchi, a professor of infectious diseases at Tokyo Women’s Medical University, says he is “very concerned” about the dramatic rise this year in the number of patients with severe invasive streptococ­cal infections.

He believes the reclassifi­cation of COVID-19 was the most important factor behind the increase in streptococ­cus pyogenes infections. This, he added, had led more people to abandon basic measures to prevent infections, such as regular hand disinfecti­on.

“In my opinion, over 50% of Japanese people have been infected by SarsCoV-2 [the virus that causes Covid-19],” Kikuchi tells the Guardian. “People’s immunologi­cal status after recovering from COVID-19 might alter their susceptibi­lity to some microorgan­isms. We need to clarify the infection cycle of severe invasive streptococ­cal pyogenic diseases and get them under control immediatel­y.”

Streptococ­cal infections, like those of COVID-19, are spread through droplets and physical contact. The bacterium can also infect patients through wounds on the hands and feet.

Strep A infections are treated with antibiotic­s, but patients with the more severe invasive group A streptococ­cal disease are likely to need a combinatio­n of antibiotic­s and other drugs, along with intensive medical attention.

Japan’s Health Ministry recommends that people take the same basic hygiene precaution­s against strep A that became a part of everyday life during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“We want people to take preventive steps such as keeping your fingers and hands clean, and exercising cough etiquette,” the health minister, Keizo Takemi, told reporters earlier this year, according to the Japan Times.

 ?? ?? Japan faces a concerning surge of a deadly bacterial infection, prompting warnings from experts.
Japan faces a concerning surge of a deadly bacterial infection, prompting warnings from experts.

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