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06-12-2007, 07:14 AM
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Disease experts warn of 'silent killer'
Disease experts warn of 'silent killer' Parasites can damage heart tissue, nerve cells By Sharon KirkeyCanWest News Service Sunday, June 10, 2007
Tropical disease experts are warning of a new threat to Canada's blood supply, a "silent killer" that produces no symptoms for years while parasites slowly feed on a person's heart muscle and intestines. Chagas disease is endemic in parts of Central and South America where it has already infected up to 20 million people and kills more than 50,000 every year. Transmitted by blood-sucking "assassin" bugs, Chagas - named after the Brazilian doctor, Carlos Chagas, who discovered it in 1909 - can also be spread via infected blood transfusions. Now, the parasitic infection is drifting northward because of immigration patterns and travel - including adventure and eco-tourists to such Chagas-hit areas as Colombia and parts of Brazil. Chagas isn't a reportable illness in Canada; its prevalence is unknown. What's more, front-line doctors may know about West Nile virus or Lyme disease, but most would not know Chagas to see it, experts say. "I don't think the average primary care doc would know it [at] all," says Dr. Jay Keystone, professor of medicine at the University of Toronto. It can take 20 years or longer for the parasite to cause sufficient damage to nerve cells and tissue in the heart to put people into heart failure. People can have strokes because of heart arrhythmias. The disease can attack in other ways: Researchers recently reported the case of a 40-year-old man who was transferred to hospital from a Manitoba jail after a two-week history of headache, nausea, vomiting and drowsiness.
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06-13-2007, 04:33 AM
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"Silent Killer"
Thanks for this most informative post. For those clinicians like myself who are constantly exposed to blood and body fluids (Birth Center), it makes me feel even more conscious of the need to avoid contact with patient blood and to wash my hands even more frequently than I do (although I don't know how transmissible the parasite would be with incidental surface contamination  ). I care for many patients who have just arrived from Mexico and have no prenatal care whatsoever. No real way to confirm whether exposure to Chagas' has occurred. Sobering thought.
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Jan Grossberg, RN, BSN
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06-13-2007, 09:21 AM
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The most incredible thing is that the same canadian authorities who are saying that " no one really understands what the scope of the problem may or may not be for blood systems in North America" and that testing their blood supply are not able to understand " how extensively to test, what test to use and when testing should start", are at the same time ready to blame the JW couple in the sextuplet twin story...

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06-16-2007, 10:27 PM
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"Silent Killer"
Blame is often easier than compassion. It has become somewhat a cultural reflex all over the world, just as thoughtless as when I hit my patient's tibial reflexes and that leg pops up. We understand its ultimate source, but it's still VERY frustrating when caring parents' wishes are opposed in such an unjust way. 
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Jan Grossberg, RN, BSN
Editorial Team
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