UT Southwestern joins national clinical trial that seeks to uncover long-term effects of West Nile virusMay 18, 2007UT Southwestern Medical Center has joined a national clinical trial to identify the long-term health effects of West Nile virus infection and to learn more about the disease's progression, symptoms and mortality. In the trial, initiated by the National Institutes of Health Clinical Center, researchers at 13 U.S. sites are observing the natural course of the virus over a year in people who have either a fever or neurological diseases due to West Nile infection. Study participants undergo brain imaging and blood, neurological and cognitive testing. "Little is known about the long-term effects of infection, so information gathered in this trial could help bridge the gaps in current knowledge of West Nile and aid in the design of better treatments," said Dr. Roger Bedimo, assistant professor of internal medicine at UT Southwestern and chief of infectious disease at the Veterans Administration North Texas Health Care System. Dr. Bedimo is principal investigator of the trial site at UT Southwestern. West Nile virus, transmitted by mosquito bite, arrived in the U.S. in 1999 and has become a seasonal illness that flares up between May and October. The young, the elderly and people with weak immune systems are most at risk. About 7 percent of all U.S. cases of West Nile appear in Texas each year. Last year, 23 percent - or 81 cases - of Texas' 354 verified human infections were in Dallas County. West Nile virus infection has three main forms. Most people have no symptoms and their immune system clears out the virus. One in 5 people develops a fever - West Nile Fever - that causes mild flu-like symptoms. One in 150 develops serious neurological illness, such as severe headache, muscle weakness, cognitive impairment, coma, seizures and encephalitis and myelitis. Since there is no vaccine, doctors can only treat symptoms of the disease. Several researchers at UT Southwestern, including Dr. Michael Gale, associate professor of microbiology, are studying at the molecular level how the disease evades the body's immune defenses in hopes of finding a vaccine to protect against the harmful North American strain of the West Nile virus. For now, avoiding mosquito bites is the best prevention. Physicians recommend wearing insect repellant that contains the chemical DEET when people go outdoors. Also keep doors, window screens and tents in good repair, and get rid of standing water - prime mosquito breeding grounds - around the house. Diagnosing a typical case of West Nile involves testing for antibodies in the blood. In a case involving neurological disease, a diagnosis involves a spinal tap. Positive cases are reported locally to the Dallas County Department of Health and Human Services. For this current trial, UT Southwestern will be seeking participants who have been diagnosed by their primary-care physician in outpatient clinics and those admitted to UT Southwestern University Hospital, Parkland Memorial Hospital or the Dallas VA medical center. Patients must be at least 18 to be enrolled, and other inclusion and exclusion criteria apply. After an initial evaluation, participants would be evaluated five more times over a year. "There are many concerns as to what the long-term consequences of West Nile virus infection are, so we want to shed light on this," Dr. Bedimo said. The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center |
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| Related West Nile Virus Current Events and West Nile Virus News Articles On the Trail of a Vaccine for Lyme Disease: Yale Researchers Target Tick Saliva A protein found in the saliva of ticks helps protect mice from developing Lyme disease, Yale researchers have discovered. The findings, published in the November 19 issue of Cell Host & Microbe, may spur development of a new vaccine against infection from Lyme disease, which is spread through tick bites. UC Davis researchers identify dominant chemical that attracts mosquitoes to humans Scientists at the University of California, Davis, have identified the dominant odor naturally produced in humans and birds that attracts the blood-feeding Culex mosquitoes, which transmit West Nile virus and other life-threatening diseases. What are coral reef services worth? $130,000 to $1.2 million per hectare, per year: experts Experts concluding the global DIVERSITAS biodiversity conference today in Cape Town described preliminary research revealing jaw-dropping dollar values of the "ecosystem services" of biomes like forests and coral reefs - including food, pollution treatment and climate regulation. Immune cells predict outcome of West Nile virus infection Infection with West Nile virus (WNV) causes no symptoms in most people. However, it can cause fever, meningitis, and/or encephalitis. What determines the outcome of infection with WNV in different people has not been determined. Surgical masks and N95 respirators provide similar protection against influenza A McMaster University study has found that surgical masks appear to be as good as N95 respirators in protecting health-care workers against influenza. La Jolla Institute announces 2.0 launch of major database to aid vaccine development worldwide Key improvements in a major infectious disease database that will aid vaccine development worldwide were unveiled today with the 2.0 launch of the National Institutes of Health-sponsored Immune Epitope Database and Analysis Resource (IEDB). OHSU scientists partner with others to form center aimed at combating infectious diseases Oregon Health & Science University and the University of Washington, along with a number of partner institutions across the Northwest, have received federal funding to form a regional research center aimed at combating emerging or re-emerging infectious diseases that pose a serious threat to human health. Field stations foster serendipitous discoveries in environmental, biological sciences North America's biological field stations have long been home to a rich legacy of research results, scientists say, making them important places for serendipitous discoveries in the biological and environmental sciences. New wheat disease could spread faster than expected Both plant and human diseases that can travel with the wind have the potential to spread far more rapidly than has been understood, according to a new study, in findings that pose serious concerns not only for some human diseases but also a new fungus that threatens global wheat production. New test may help to ensure that dengue vaccines do no harm As vaccines against a virus that infects 100 million people annually reach late-stage clinical trials this year, researchers have developed a test to better predict whether a given vaccine candidate should protect patients from the infection, or in some cases, make it more dangerous, according to an article just published in the journal Clinical and Vaccine Immunology. More West Nile Virus Current Events and West Nile Virus News Articles |
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