Some days facts is scarier than fiction - 3 Die Of Rabies From Transplant


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Holy crap! That's horrible!

Part of my job at the humane society is scaring little kids about rabies, but it never occurred to me that you could get rabies from an organ transplant. I think I'll leave that out of my classes.

Daniel
 



This is pretty much a fluke occurence. Tragic, but a fluke. Testing for rabies on all organ donors would not be practical for something as unlikely as this to happen again. There were only 38 cases of rabies in humans from 1990 to 2000. An estimated 40,000 people per year are treated in the US for potential exposure to rabies (a little more than 0.01% of the US population), and most of these people likely did not in fact contract rabies, but receive the treatments as a precaution. So someone would have to be exposed, not know it, not receive treatment and die in such a way that their organs could be donated before symptoms of rabies begin to manifest.
 

Thornir Alekeg said:
This is pretty much a fluke occurence. Tragic, but a fluke. Testing for rabies on all organ donors would not be practical for something as unlikely as this to happen again. There were only 38 cases of rabies in humans from 1990 to 2000. An estimated 40,000 people per year are treated in the US for potential exposure to rabies (a little more than 0.01% of the US population), and most of these people likely did not in fact contract rabies, but receive the treatments as a precaution. So someone would have to be exposed, not know it, not receive treatment and die in such a way that their organs could be donated before symptoms of rabies begin to manifest.
Yes a fluke. It does make me wonder about the safty of my organs, I was treated for rabies and while the dog did not have them I still went through 10 of the 21 shots (which was made using the virus).
 

Fact or Fiction? Who wants to know?

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/3844441.stm

Iranian woman 'gives birth to frog'


An Iranian newspaper has reported the controversial story of a woman who claims to have given birth to a frog.
The Iranian daily Etemaad says the creature is believed to have grown from larva to an adult frog inside her body.

While it is unclear how this could have happened, the paper carries quotes from medical experts who say there are human characteristics to the animal.

It has been speculated that the woman, who has not been named, unknowingly picked up the larva while she was swimming in a dirty pool.

The woman, from the south-eastern city of Iranshahr, is a mother of two children.

The "so-called frog", as the newspaper puts it, has yet to undergo precise genetic and anatomic tests.

But it quotes clinical biology expert Dr Aminifard as saying: "The similarities are in appearance, the shape of the fingers and the size and shape of the tongue."

Medical history recounts stories of people who believed they had frogs - or even lizards or snakes - living and growing in their bodies.

One of the most famous was the 17th Century case of Catharina Geisslerin, known as "the toad-vomiting woman" of Germany.

When she died in 1662 doctors are said to have performed an autopsy, but found no evidence animals had ever lived inside her body.


BBC Monitoring, based in Caversham in southern England, selects and translates information from radio, television, press, news agencies and the Internet from 150 countries in more than 70 languages.
 

What bothered me about the popular press articles on the rabies transmission was that several of them thought to mention the conventional treatment regimen against rabies exposure. The same articles failed to mention that the regimen would have been utterly useless to an organ recipient, since it is an aggressive vaccination. Organ recipients are intentionally immune suppressed to reduce rejection.
 
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