Los Angeles Times

L.A. sees rare mosquito-borne illness

- By Laura Newberry laura.newberry @latimes.com

A San Fernando Valley resident has contracted a mosquito-borne illness that hasn’t been recorded in Los Angeles County since 1997, health officials said Monday.

The elderly woman became ill with St. Louis encephalit­is in late August, the L.A. County Department of Public Health said.

St. Louis encephalit­is, a rare disease similar to West Nile virus, is transmitte­d through mosquito bites and can cause brain inflammati­on, paralysis and sometimes death. Six cases of the illness were reported across the U.S. in 2017, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

In California, only five people tested positive for St. Louis encephalit­is from 2008 to 2017. The San Fernando Valley case is the state’s first reported instance of the disease this year.

The announceme­nt comes days after the state confirmed that at least four people in California have died of West Nile virus in 2018.

Most people infected with St. Louis encephalit­is feel perfectly healthy, while others experience mild flulike symptoms, according to the CDC. But in severe cases — most commonly among those older than 50 — the disease can lead to fever, coma and convulsion­s.

Residents can avoid the illness by wearing insect repellent and emptying water from potential mosquito breeding sites such as flower pots, buckets and kiddie pools, said Los Angeles County Health Officer Muntu Davis.

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