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Momtezuma Tuatara
18-02-09, 05:39 AM
http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/health-and-wellbeing/health-news/scarlet-fever-scourge-of-the-19th-century-is-coming-back-1622990.html

Scarlet fever, scourge of the 19th century, is coming back


3,000 contracted disease last year, raising fears it is making an unwelcome return

By Jeremy Laurance, Health editor


Monday, 16 February 2009

http://www.independent.co.uk/multimedia/archive/00132/gyde2_132982t.jpg (http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/health-and-wellbeing/health-news/scarlet-fever-scourge-of-the-19th-century-is-coming-back-1622990.html?action=Popup)
Teri Pengilley / The Independent

Ed Gyde, 40 caught the infection from his three year old son, James, and was eventually in hospital being administered with intravenous antibiotics, oxygen, and asthma inhalers

http://www.independent.co.uk/independent.co.uk/images/i_photos.gif enlarge (http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/health-and-wellbeing/health-news/scarlet-fever-scourge-of-the-19th-century-is-coming-back-1622990.html?action=Popup&gallery=no)

Scarlet Fever, the disease which killed thousands during the 19th century, is making a comeback, public health specialists have warned.


Almost 3,000 cases of the disease were recorded in 2008 in England and Wales, the highest number for a decade, and there are fears its virulence may be increasing. The Health Protection Agency has launched a programme of "enhanced surveillance" to monitor infections and spot any unusual features that could signal a change in the disease.

Winter is the peak season for scarlet fever but the increase seen in the past two months is "above that seasonally expected", according to the HPA. Alerts have been issued to regional health protection staff and consultant microbiologists. A letter has also been prepared for circulation to hospital emergency wards and GP surgeries warning them to be alert.

Scarlet fever, also known as Scarletina, is caused by a bacterium, Group A Streptococcus, which is the most common cause of bacterial sore throat ("strep throat"). Symptoms of scarlet fever usually include a sore throat, fever and swollen glands.

Most cases are easily treated with antibiotics. In rare cases the disease can lead to pneumonia, throat abscess, sinusitis and meningitis.
In severe cases, the bacteria may become invasive, causing necrotising fasciitis (the "flesh eating" bug), septicaemia and toxic shock syndrome. An increase in cases of invasive strep A is of particular concern because it can be deadly, killing up to one in four of those diagnosed. The risk is highest in those already seriously ill with reduced immunity, but also depends on the type of infection and the strain.

Scarlet fever caused devastating epidemics through the 19th and early 20th centuries, and killed almost5 per cent of those infected in 1914.
Sufferers were isolated for weeks and their clothes and bedding burnt to prevent contagion. Over the past century, the number of cases and virulence of the infection has declined for reasons not fully understood.
Experts say the disease follows a cycle, rising and falling roughly every four years and that is mirrored by a rise and fall of the more deadly invasive variant. Cases have hovered between 1,600 and 2,500 over the past decade but rose to 2,913 last year. Theresa Lamagni and colleagues from the HPA say in the journal Eurosurveillance: "It is possible the significant influenza activity this winter may be contributing by increasing transmission ... and/or rendering individuals with influenza more susceptible ..."

The disease may also be becoming more severe. The authors note that no unusual strains have been identified but the number of infectious caused by one of the more dangerous strains is suspected to have risen.

Case Study: I could not breathe ...'

*Ed Gyde, 40, spent a week in hospital with pneumonia after he caught scarlet fever earlier this year. The chief executive of Audience PR, a communications consultancy, caught the infection from his three-year-old son, James, and was eventually in hospital being administered with intravenous antibiotics, oxygen, and asthma inhalers.

"It was a horrendous experience. My skin was like sandpaper. It was as if my body had been taken over," he said.

The disease struck the family after their return from a holiday. James escaped with a mild infection, but his father was not so lucky. "For five or six days I was unable to sleep with the cough and fever. Then my skin peeled off as if I had very bad sunburn ... I was coughing, thirsty and weak and couldn't breathe."

Momtezuma Tuatara
18-02-09, 05:42 AM
Editted to add that there was a vaccine used for it, and discussed extensively in the medical literature, in the early 1920's. It was very quietly withdrawn, because it caused such serious side effects, in both children and adults.

Since then, they've tried making a vaccine for this repeatedly, and constantly failed. So far...

You have to wonder if, finally, there is one ready to be tested.

Oh yes, and another thing. If the vaccine they had used in the 1930's had been continued (it had very nasty side effects and was quietly taken out of the schedule) would the decline have been attributed to it, and would the increase be blamed, like whooping cough in New Zealand, on the great unwashed who refused science's magic bullets?

Serephina
18-02-09, 07:33 AM
They've tried making a vaccine for this repeatedly, and constantly failed. So far...

You have to wonder if, finally, there is one ready to be tested.

I'd put money on it :coffee:

GreenGully
18-02-09, 08:19 AM
Interesting. I had scarlet fever when I was 7. The first dr thought it was rubella, but once I got home (I was visiting my grandmother interstate) my regular gp diagnosed me properly. I was not given antibiotics. I remember a prolonged very high fever, severe fatigue and a rash that followed. I got better pretty quickly.

Cobluegirl
19-02-09, 01:55 PM
hmm....wonder if that is what we had this year... would one have to have a high fever to have it? We were sick..but not deathly sick? my feet did peel though...

Cobluegirl
30-12-11, 02:55 PM
HAHA came looking for info on scarlet fever. Didn't remember posting on this thread. It is totally making its way through our county.

How do you treat it? I did read somewhere that Belladonna is good for preventing and treating...

Momtezuma Tuatara
31-12-11, 06:57 AM
HAHA came looking for info on scarlet fever. Didn't remember posting on this thread. It is totally making its way through our county.

How do you treat it? I did read somewhere that Belladonna is good for preventing and treating...Good diet, cod liver oil and vitamin C.

And if a child has a really good diet in the first place, then it's likely that if they get it, you will only puzzle over what it might be, rather than deal with a full blown case.

gilima
01-01-12, 02:05 PM
One of my sons had it ( well so the dr. said) a few years ago. He had a fever a sore throat & a mild rash & the dr. said that since he has strep + a rash and swollen glands it was scarlet fever. Anyhoo, he wasn't feeling very sick,was acting very normal and I had only taken him in for a diagnoses since I naively thought it might be measeles.........
So, either he just had a very mild case or he didn't have it all. He did think that he had "garlic fever" because that's what he thought the dr. said and since he loves garlic, for some reason he thought he got a fever from it LOL it has become a family joke. I remember thinking that if this is what people were dying from 100 years ago maybe I am missing something. maybe it was a different strain, or something else or a complication of something else.
The dr. did scare me that if he didn't take antibiotics he would probably land up in hospital and have complications etc; so I did take the prescription, but didn't give it to him !! I gave him plenty of SA & CLO ( like mt said) and I also gave him homeopathic remedies and upped his probiotics.