Rabbit Fever (Pneumonic Tularemia)

A

Anonymous

Guest
LINCOLN, Nebraska (AP) -- Two men who mowed over a nest of rabbits, killing some of them, and another who cleaned the mower developed a rare disease known as rabbit fever, authorities said.

The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has launched an investigation into the incident. The disease, also called pneumonic tularemia, is generally treatable with antibiotics but can lead to pneumonia.

The illness is caused by a bacterium found in wild animals, particularly rodents and rabbits. People can become infected through bites from infected animals or infected insects, handling carcasses, eating contaminated food or, in rare cases, inhaling the bacterium. It is not transmitted person-to-person.

The CDC became interested because one of the three people appears to have the rare, inhaled form of the disease, said Lancaster County health official Tim Timmons.

Nebraska epidemiologist Tom Safranek said Wednesday he did not know whether the infected men were hospitalized or how they are doing now.

The United States averaged 124 cases of tularemia in 1999 and 2000, according the CDC, and three to four cases a year are typical in Nebraska.

Tularemia is caused by the organism Francisella tularensis, a bacteria studied widely during World War II as a biological weapon. Depending on how the person is infected, it can cause flu-like symptoms, skin ulcers, swollen eyes and a sore throat.

http://www.cnn.com/2003/HEALTH/06/25/rabbit.fever.ap/index.html
 
What's wrong with Nebraska?!!

They haven't also developed a case of "finding your ass in jail for cruelly chopping up little bunnies"? I bet they'd be as popular as child molesters!
 
What this article does not mention is that this bacterium is first cousin to yersinia pestis, and the resulting illness closely resembles bubonic plague in both the symptoms and difficulty curing it. From the CDC website: "In North America, plague is found in certain animals and their fleas from the Pacific Coast to the Great Plains, and from southwestern Canada to Mexico. Most human cases in the United States occur in two regions: 1) northern New Mexico, northern Arizona, and southern Colorado; and 2) California, southern Oregon, and far western Nevada. Plague also exists in Africa, Asia, and South America."

Lovely.

I recall a woman in Santa Barbara got this from accidently mowing over a squirrel and then cleaning the mower.
 
Philo T said:
They haven't also developed a case of "finding your ass in jail for cruelly chopping up little bunnies"? I bet they'd be as popular as child molesters!

It was probably an accident. I've done it before myself, although in my case none of the bunnies got sucked up into the blades. Here in the States, rabbits nest in the open, in little depressions in the ground. They're actual nests, like bird's nests, but very well hidden, and easy to overlook when mowing.
 
Beware of Wererabbits.

Case numbers of the infectious disease tularemia, also termed 'rabbit fever', have jumped in the United States over the past decade, according to a new report from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The disease, caused by the bacterium Francisella tularensis, can be transmitted to humans in many ways, including bites from infected ticks and deer flies, and skin contact with infected rabbits, hares, and rodents, all of which are particularly susceptible to the disease.

But there are far gnarlier routes of transmission possible: lawn mowing over the nests of animals infected with the disease has been reported to aerosolize the bacteria, infecting the unwitting gardener. ...

https://www.sciencealert.com/rabbit-fever-in-humans-has-surged-in-the-last-decade-cdc-reports





 
Back
Top