Fungus From Pacific Northwest Not So Dangerous.
The late "killer" fungus spreading through the is ingredient fact but also part hype, experts say. "It's once and for all real in that we've been seeing this fungus in North America since 1999 and it's causing a lot more meningitis than you would envisage in the general population, but this is still a first-rate disease," said Christina Hull, an auxiliary professor of medical microbiology and immunology and of biomolecular chemistry at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health in Madison effect. Cryptococcus gattii, historically a abiding of more tropical climates, was premier discovered in North America on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, in 1999 and has since made its manner to Washington magnificence and now, more recently, to Oregon.
So "It's a tension that appears to have come from Australia at some quiddity and has adapted to living somewhere cooler than usual," Hull said. From the application of view of sheer numbers, the new C gattii hardly seems alarming. It infected 218 grass roots on Vancouver Island, genocide close to 9 percent of those infected.
In the United States, the dying rate has been higher but, again, few consumers have been infected. "At its peak, we were whereas about 36 cases per million per year, so that is a very scanty number," Hull said. Michael Horseman, an associate professor of pharmaceutics practice at Texas A&M Health Science Center Irma Lerma Rangel College of Pharmacy in Kingsville, puts the overall annihilation estimate in the "upper single digits to the discredit teens. It's not quite what I've been reading in the newspapers".
Experts had been anxious because the new fungus seems to have some striking characteristics, unconventional from those seen in other locales. For one thing, the North American C gattii seemed to be attacking otherwise beneficial people, not those with compromised insusceptible systems, as was the case in the past. But closer inspection reveals that not all healthful individuals are vulnerable.