USA TODAY US Edition

Two patients in China treated for plague

Officials: Risk for further infections ‘extremely low’

- Ryan W. Miller The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention calls pneumonic plague the “most serious form of the disease.”

Two patients in China were diagnosed with plague, the deadly and infectious disease tied to historic pandemics, local media reported.

The two people, from Inner Mongolia, were treated for pneumonic plague in Beijing’s Chaoyang district, local health officials said Tuesday, according to Caixin and state-media Xinhua.

The news outlets reported the patients received “proper treatment,” and disease control measures and prevention methods have been taken.

According to Caixin, the patients were treated at Chaoyang Hospital, which has since replaced all chairs in its emergency room.

The Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention said the patients were quickly isolated and health officials investigat­ed everyone who could have been exposed to them, The New York Times reported.

Chinese health officials also called the risk for further infections “extremely low.”

Pneumonic plague is one of three forms of the infectious disease and the only one that can be transmitte­d from person to person by inhaling infected droplets – for example, spread when someone breathes in cough droplets from an infected person.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention calls pneumonic plague the “most serious form of the disease.” All three forms are caused by the Yersinia

pestis bacterium.

Earlier this year, a Mongolian couple died from the bubonic plague after eating raw marmot meat. The case sparked a quarantine in the area for days, but no additional cases appeared to have been reported.

A person is infected with bubonic or septicemic plague usually via infected flea bite or handling infected meat. Either form of plague can develop into pneumonic plague if they go untreated and spread to the lungs, the CDC says.

Fever, headache, weakness and rapidly developing pneumonia are all symptoms of pneumonic plague, the CDC says.

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