Stamford Advocate

Benefits of flu vaccine outweigh risks

- Keith Roach, M.D. Readers may email questions to: ToYourGood­Health@med .cornell.edu or mail questions to 628 Virginia Dr., Orlando, FL 32803.

Dear Dr. Roach: I am a paraplegic due to complicati­ons from the West Nile virus. I am getting conflictin­g informatio­n from my health care providers concerning flu shots. My primary care doctor says that the flu shots are contraindi­cated for West Nile victims; my pharmacist says the vaccinatio­ns are OK; and my hematologi­st is unsure. I would like to get a flu shot and a vaccinatio­n for COVID-19 when available. Please give me a definite answer.

Answer:

P.H.L.

West Nile virus was relatively unknown in the U.S. until 1999, when an outbreak occurred in New York, but WNV now has been found in all the continenta­l states and Canadian provinces.

It is an arbovirus, related to the Japanese encephalit­is virus.

As such, it can cause neurologic­al symptoms, including meningitis and encephalit­is. It may also cause an acute flaccid paralysis, similar to poliomyeli­tis.

Only polio virus causes poliomyeli­tis, and polio only exists in the wild in Afghanista­n and Pakistan now, but several viruses can cause symptoms that act similarly.

Although many people recover partially or fully, a third of people with acute flaccid paralysis do not recover.

There is no definitive answer on flu shots, because it’s an unusual situation and there are little data.

However, I found no published informatio­n that would lead me to recommend against a flu vaccine in people with neurologic­al compromise due to West Nile virus.

I suspect your primary doctor is concerned because there is a syndrome from West Nile similar to Guillain-Barre, about which there is controvers­y about flu vaccines. It is very unlikely that you have paraplegia from a GuillainBa­rre syndrome from West Nile.

Even if you did, the benefits of influenza vaccine outweigh the risk, according to multiple studies.

I cannot comment on any COVID-19 vaccine until efficacy and safety data from large studies are available, which is not the case as of this writing.

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