The Borneo Post

Mystery liver disease kills three children in Indonesia

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JAKARTA: Three children in Indonesia have died from a mysterious liver disease, the country’s health ministry said, raising to at least four the global death toll of a fatal ailment puzzling doctors from the US to Asia.

This severe strain of acute hepatitis has been identified in nearly 170 children across 11 countries in recent weeks -raising concerns from the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) of the disease’s “unknown origin”.

The symptoms afflicting the children include nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea and abdominal pain – before their livers showed signs of inflammati­on. At least one death was previously reported.

Indonesia’s Health Ministry said Monday in a statement that three children had died in hospitals in the capital Jakarta last month, a er displaying some of these symptoms.

The children also had fever, jaundice, convulsion­s and loss of consciousn­ess, it said.

“At the moment, the Health Ministry is investigat­ing the cause of the acute hepatitis by running a full panel of virus tests,” it said.

The ministry also called on parents to immediatel­y take their children to hospital if they showed any sign of the symptoms.

The emergence of a possible new disease afflicting only young children – most are under the age of 10 with no underlying conditions – has sent ripples of concern through a global health community already grappling with Covid-19.

The WHO said that, in Britain, there was an “unexpected significan­t increase” in cases among young, previously healthy children, as well as in Ireland and the Netherland­s.

In the United States, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) published a study Friday on a cluster in Alabama, where nine children had also tested positive for a common pathogen called adenovirus 41.

The pathogen is known to cause gastroente­ritis in children, but “it is not usually known as a cause of hepatitis in otherwise healthy children”, the agency had said.

Adenovirus­es are commonly spread by close personal contact, respirator­y droplets and surfaces.

There are more than 50 types of adenovirus­es, which most commonly cause the cold, but also many other diseases.

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