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Hong Kong Scarlet Fever Outbreak Spurs Drug-Resistance Fears

Scarlet Fever Hong Kong

By MARGIE MASON   06/27/11 07:33 AM ET   AP

-- Ultramodern Hong Kong is tussling with a centuries-old bug long forgotten in many developed countries – an outbreak of drug-resistant scarlet fever that has killed the first children there in a decade. And with it is the rise of a mutated strain that appears to be more contagious.

The number of cases has spiked this year to more than 500, with health officials issuing warnings in the southern Chinese city jammed with 7 million people and hypersensitive to any type of disease outbreak. Experts warn the main strain of the bacterial infection is likely transmitted easier. It is 60 percent resistant to two drugs of choice, up from a resistance level of 10 to 30 percent previously.

The illness leaves children with a fever, sore throat, bright red tongue and sandpapery rash. Penicillin still cures it, but doctors worry options will be limited if the germ eventually outsmarts that antibiotic before a vaccine is developed.

"That's the cause of lots of nightmares," said Dr. Edward Kaplan. He heads a World Health Organization research center at the University of Minnesota that focuses on the strep germ, which causes scarlet fever. "The fact that we still have penicillin is something we all get down on our knees and say prayers about each night."

The widespread availability of penicillin and the development of other new antibiotics in the 20th century virtually wiped out diseases that were once major killers in developed countries, such as tuberculosis. But the overuse and misuse of drugs – patients not finishing a full prescription or taking antibiotics for a virus when they are only effective against bacteria – have allowed old bugs to fight back and eventually overpower antibiotics, rendering some of them useless.

Penicillin, once useful to treat a number of ailments from gonorrhea to pneumonia, has lost much of its potency due to resistance that has built over decades. Some say it's a miracle it still works for the streptococci group that causes an array of diseases from strep throat to toxic shock syndrome and flesh-eating disease.

"That's the one thing that we're both a bit fearful of and also, in one respect, really surprised that the bug hasn't developed penicillin resistance yet," said Mark Walker, a microbiologist and strep expert who heads the Australian Infectious Disease Research Center. "We're very lucky. We still have a treatment we can use and additionally there are vaccines that are under development."

But even penicillin has its problems because many people are allergic to it. That means trying older antibiotics or newer drugs of last resort, which doctors typically try to avoid for fear of rendering those drugs useless, too. A vaccine against the germ that causes scarlet fever is likely years away.

Pockets of drug-resistant scarlet fever, which typically spreads through coughing and sneezing and is most common in children under 10, have sprung up over the past few decades in various parts of the world. And while the Hong Kong deaths and rise in cases are disturbing, the resistance seen in the standard treatments erythromycin and clindamycin is not new, Kaplan said.

A 7-year-old girl who died in May became the first recorded scarlet fever death in Hong Kong in at least 10 years, while a 5-year-old boy also died last Tuesday. Both deteriorated quickly in the hospital and were killed by toxic shock syndrome resulting from the infection. The children were infected with two different common strains of scarlet fever that are circulating simultaneously, both antibiotic resistant. However, the one that appears to be dominant also has undergone a genetic mutation that may make it easier to spread, said Kwok-yung Yuen, head of Hong Kong University's microbiology department, who sequenced samples taken from the current outbreak.

The nearly 550 cases of scarlet fever so far this year are about double Hong Kong's annual total. Local media also are reporting some 9,000 cases detected in mainland China, also about twice the normal rate there, but it's unclear if it's becoming a regional problem because many countries do not track the common childhood illness, according to the World Health Organization.

Scarlet fever, also called scarlatina, was once a highly feared scourge in Europe and the United States. Clothes, bedding and toys were often burned and children were sometimes isolated after infection, as portrayed in the popular 1920s children's book, "The Velveteen Rabbit." Experts say they fear rising drug resistance could one day take the world back to a time when there were no easy treatments.

"This will really turn us back to 1940s in terms of treatment of infectious disease if this trend continues," Yuen said.

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-- Ultramodern Hong Kong is tussling with a centuries-old bug long forgotten in many developed countries – an outbreak of drug-resistant scarlet fever that has killed the first children there i...
-- Ultramodern Hong Kong is tussling with a centuries-old bug long forgotten in many developed countries – an outbreak of drug-resistant scarlet fever that has killed the first children there i...
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ryakiddinme5
ryakiddinme5
08:13 AM on 06/28/2011
GATHER THE PEOPLE UP? COMING TO A CITY NEAR YOU
ryakiddinme5
ryakiddinme5
08:12 AM on 06/28/2011
THIS YEARS PANIC PANDEMIC - PLEASE STOP THIS NONSENSE
07:19 AM on 06/28/2011
Just a few more new "monkey's for some Germ Warfare experiment. Lets hope they keep it on that side of the Ocean, this is one import we do not need!!
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thepetermedic
06:46 AM on 06/28/2011
keep it over there thank you
12:35 AM on 06/28/2011
Scarlet fever causes congestive heart failure in elderly years. Both my parents had scarlet fever when they were kids and they both ended up with heart disease (fluid build-up in the heart and lungs) in their elderly years.
02:21 AM on 06/28/2011
All strep infections have the potential to cause rheumatic heart disease, an autoimune condition. Scarlet fever results when the Strep bacteria is itself is infected with a virus (bacteriophage) that causes it to produce a specific toxin. This is, to some extent, why the children are dying of "toxic shock".
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
07:35 AM on 06/28/2011
Scarlet fever can result in rheumatic fever. This is easily treated. Linking heart disease in old age on a childhood infection, especially when no treatment was required through the intervening fifty years, is tough to justify.
12:33 AM on 06/28/2011
ok as much as i don't want to stand up for stalin. allow me to state another fact. Bacteriophages where heavily researched in the ussr and i would assume under him. They tend to be highly useful in cases where bacteria are resistant to antibiotics yet they exist in nature anyway. I honestly believe that the main reason they are not used in the U.S. at least when faced with a resistant antibiotic is either the drug companies not wanting to lose money or the government not wanting to admit the USSR may have ever been superior to us in any way, shape, or form. Frankly i say shame on them. To think only of their own profits while children are dieing. Even worse that it may be needless. in layman's terms they are viruses that attack bacteria. Often we fear viruses making us sick. Yet these viruses could make us well. Their production is also relatively cheap. I understand politicians have their pride and businessmen have their pockets. However, to attempt to slow or halt a probable life saving treatment in this situation is unforgivable.

buffaloflorek you sound like a wicken based on the comment however no matter how much divine aid is sent. if it is blocked by those with power out of pride it is pointless. I am not a believer in any faith but. May GOD have mercy upon their souls.
06:25 AM on 06/28/2011
Uh, this is a story about the Chinese. Where are they in taking Stalins lead. Please.
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
07:36 AM on 06/28/2011
You definitely don't want to take stalins. Stalins are murderous noxious dwarves.
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mosuro
Snake Oil
08:52 AM on 06/28/2011
stalin....oh boy
12:22 AM on 06/28/2011
Anthony Weiner should resign
11:58 PM on 06/27/2011
May Mother Goddess correct the harm we have cause..May she assist all who need her.,May her love and healing spread world wide. Blessed Be
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drmindhealer
Clinician, Educator, Artist, Healer
10:37 PM on 06/27/2011
Some of the commentary here is disturbing. Thinning out the population? Shutting down the CDC? Sounds like Darwin on crack. The human population has contributed to this and add to it MRSA, Tuberculosis and a host of other diseases we egotistically thought we had beaten and you've got a big problem. We need to stop thinking small and think globally as much as there are those who hate that idea. What affects other nations will eventually affect us. In the end, the bugs do not discriminate.
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12:09 AM on 06/28/2011
TB etc were done with here in the USA and that's why we HAD a system of regulated entry where even individuals with conjunctivitis were quarantined. Ellis Island wasn't club med.
Drug resistant Tb and other diseases are brought in with illegal immigration and lax policies for health documentation for all overseas "visitors"--in the not-so-distant past you even had to prove you were vaccinated for smallpox etc to arrive as a tourist.
06:52 AM on 06/28/2011
You cant stop the spread of disease in this small world at the border anymore. Eventually it will come to you. You can only slow the transmission. Some U.S. kid in China gets it. Comes home and spreads it to his friends and family. Only a matter of time.
06:46 AM on 06/28/2011
somewhere along the line the bugs will mutate...they are driven by the same life force we all are driven by...survival. One day one or more of these diseases may be like the plague. Its only a matter of time.
09:52 PM on 06/27/2011
While I do not advocate Illness or Poverty on any nation, I must take this time to speak up. Much has been written about the decline of the USA and the rise of India & China.

We have poverty here in the USA, our Nation Unenployment rate is near 11%. That is high, yet children do not beg for food or money as they do in Indian cities. I am not insulting the people of India, merely stating a fact. As "Wealthy" as India may be due to importation of US jobs, not all that wealth is spread out or down in their society. India is a military ally of the USA, a good friend in a troubled region.

China is a economic powerhouse in the , they have learned from the old USSR on how to harness that $$ power into military power and learned from USA how to harness the freemarket. Only in coastal developed regions is China "Modern", the rest of this huge nation is a backward agriculture based society still dealing with 3d world illness's (Swine Flu, Scarlett Fever, Etc..) that kil their children. They lack a OSHA or any oversite agency's thus construction and mining kill thousands every year. The COMMUNISTS dont care about human tragedy, just economic development (Learned from Stalin in the 1930's).

We here in the West, USA just need to keep our faith and eyes focused on the future, India & China have a loooong way to go to beat us..
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eyeforeye42
Do the right thing for the right reason
09:14 PM on 06/27/2011
Not a problem. More the reason to save tax dollars and close the center for disease control (CDC) and let mother nature do her thing in culling out the weak. Best part of this (or worst for some) is these diseases care less about rich or poor. If the rich think the CDC is important, perhaps it could be reorganized as a non profit like the March of Dimes and let the rich fund it exclusively. Why not? Our tax$ goes into this big military that protects their big wallets so why not let their big wallets fund something that protects them and their riches? (obviously this is a ridiculous notion but there are those who want to limit federal government at all cost. That is until an epidemic and then they blame the government for not being prepared.
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parkertnc
Beating a Dead Horse
08:30 PM on 06/27/2011
Wonder what lab this one was grown in? I hope the muslims never learn how.
08:06 PM on 06/27/2011
"farmers giving antibiotic­s to healthy animals to preclude disease".........The amount of antibiotics you can get from cooked meat is miniscule. That is simply propaganda from the vegan/animal rights crowd to scare the masses. The real culprit is the amount you get from your doctor because he hasn't got the guts to tell you that anti-biotics do not influences viruses. Since the 1950's doctors have prescribed anti-biotics as placebos. THAT is the problem. Until you can make a connection between better immunity in people who don't eat meat or those who eat only "organic" meat, your arguement is bogus.
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joran111
God and science DO coexist!
08:13 PM on 06/27/2011
Antibiotics are antibiotics, as far as the bacteria are concerned. If they become resistant to any one of a family of antibiotics, soon enough they will become resistant to them all. Doesn't matter if one is in a cow, another in a pig, and a third in a person.

Not only that, the bacteria will spread the resistance they've acquired with other bacteria, related or not.

That's one of the reasons we don't want antibiotics in animals.
12:24 AM on 06/28/2011
Correct
likes2kayak
Freedom to the USA!
09:41 PM on 06/27/2011
A month or so ago in China they were giving "growth accelerator" to Watermelon plants and decided that more was better... They sprayed them during a wet period and the plants exploded in the fields... Not to waste any of the ruined watermelons they cut them up and fed them to the pigs and the fish at the fish farms! Maybe drug resistance diseases isn't the only problems they will be having come along!
07:30 PM on 06/27/2011
Unfortunately, the populace is reaping the rewards of farmers giving antibiotics to healthy animals to preclude disease. Many allergies and drug resistance may be attributed to what is fed animals we use for food.
07:27 PM on 06/27/2011
Hey, maybe we wil finally get something to thin out the population.
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parkertnc
Beating a Dead Horse
08:31 PM on 06/27/2011
Just so you are in on it.
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gloriaswanson43
Ask and you will get more info.
07:00 AM on 06/28/2011
Let's start with you and yours....