Guest guest Posted April 17, 2008 Report Share Posted April 17, 2008 Second TB case on India flight U.S. HEALTH OFFICIALS SAY IT'S POSSIBLE PASSENGER CONTRACTED TUBERCULOSIS FROM SILICON VALLEY WOMAN By Mike Swift, Mercury News. Article Launched: 04/17/2008 01:30:45 AM PDT. Apr 17: Tuberculosis: a worldwide concern The Sunnyvale woman who flew to the United States in December after contracting a dangerous case of drug-resistant tuberculosis may have infected another passenger on the flight from India, federal officials said Wednesday, underscoring the slim but real threat of contracting the potentially deadly disease on an airplane. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released the information after an aggressive effort to contact and test 44 passengers from 16 states who sat near the woman on the flight. Although she had been diagnosed in India, she did not disclose that she had the disease until she went to the emergency room at Stanford Hospital upon her return to the Bay Area. " It's impossible to definitively link the positive test to the airline exposure at this point, " said , a CDC spokeswoman, noting that the other passenger could have contracted the disease in India as the Sunnyvale woman did. But " it is a possibility " the disease was spread on American Airlines Flight 293 on Dec. 13, a 16- hour Boeing 777 trip from New Delhi to Chicago's O'Hare International Airport. The threat of TB transmission on a commercial flight became a high- profile public issue last year, when Speaker, an Atlanta lawyer, flew to Paris with drug-resistant TB, potentially infecting others on two trans-Atlantic flights. The CDC's follow-up investigation has found that Speaker infected no one else in his travels. Sunnyvale woman suffers from a strain of disease that is resistant to both primary TB drugs, isoniazid and rifampin, making her case much more medically serious and expensive to treat. But the Sunnyvale woman may have been even more contagious during her flight than Speaker was, said the local public health officer in charge of investigating her case. " She had symptoms. She was coughing on the plane, " Dr. Marty Fenstersheib, Santa Clara County's public health officer, said Wednesday. " He wasn't really infectious, even though he carried that same organism. " The Sunnyvale woman was treated at Stanford Hospital for nearly three months, but she has been released and is being treated at home, and her prognosis is good. Nevertheless, because she has a multi-drug- resistant case, she faces a difficult course of treatment that could last as long as two years, Fenstersheib said. Her identity has not been revealed by health authorities. In the great majority of tuberculosis cases, infected people never get sick or become contagious. The bacteria is kept harmlessly dormant by the immune system. However, people who are HIV-positive, who have other conditions or who take drugs that weaken the immune system are at much higher risk. Public health officials believe the risk of TB transmission on a commercial airliner is probably minimal, and that there is risk only on flights longer than eight hours and only to passengers sitting within several rows of the infectious person. Several medical studies have found evidence for probable or possible transmission of TB to other passengers or flight crew members on long international flights. But the quality of ventilation on modern jetliners may make it even more difficult to transmit TB on an aircraft than in a home or in other social settings, TB experts say. " The evidence for transmission on airplanes is relatively incomplete and not that strong, " said Dr. Jereb, of the CDC's Division of Tuberculosis Elimination. The CDC investigated 68 such cases in 2007, involving 2,062 passenger contacts. Public health officials do not permit infectious TB patients to fly, issuing " do not board " orders through airlines and airports to prevent patients from flying if they are not willing to comply with the advice not to travel. Following the flight to Chicago, the Sunnyvale woman flew on to San Francisco International Airport, but the domestic flight was too short to be a risk for TB transmission. Santa Clara County health officials have followed up with family members and other local contacts at Stanford, and have definitely confirmed that she did not transmit TB once on the ground in Silicon Valley. Ironically, the fact that she was so sick may have helped protect people here. " She was sick enough that she wasn't out Christmas shopping, " Fenstersheib said. " Her symptoms led her to the hospital. That limited her potential exposure to other people. " http://www.mercurynews.com/healthandscience/ci_8955630 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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