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Archive Number 20090626.2330
Published Date 26-JUN-2009
Subject PRO/AH/EDR> Q fever - Netherlands (04): fatalities

Q FEVER - NETHERLANDS (04): FATALITIES
**************************************
A ProMED-mail post
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[1]
Date: Thu 25 Jun 2009
Source: Dutch News [edited]
<http://www.dutchnews.nl/news/archives/2009/06/at_least_two_have_died_with_q.php>


At least 2 people have died suffering from the flu-like Q fever in the  
Den Bosch area, microbiologist Peter Wever told news agency ANP on  
Thursday [25 Jun 2009].

Both had been admitted to hospital after the diagnosis, but they may  
have died of complications or other factors, Wever, from the Jeroen  
Bosch hospital in Den Bosch, told ANP. Given that between 1 and 2  
percent of people admitted to hospital with the disease die, more  
deaths should be expected, he said. Some 600 people have been  
hospitalized with Q fever, ANP said, without giving a time frame.

Q fever was rarely known among humans in the Netherlands until 2007,  
when 168 cases were reported. In 2008, there were more than 1000  
cases. The disease is spread by livestock, which shed the bacteria in  
urine, feces, birth products, and milk. Q fever, which leads to  
spontaneous abortion in sheep and goats, causes flu-like symptoms in  
humans but can lead to lung infections.

--
Communicated by:
ProMED-mail Rapporteur Brent Barrett

******
[2]
Date: Fri 26 Jun 2009
Source: Expatica [edited]
<http://www.expatica.com/nl/news/dutch-news/Goat_borne-fever-kills-three_53971.html>


So far in 2009, 3 people in the Netherlands have died after  
contracting so-called Q fever, according to the national institute for  
public health and the environment.

Roel Coutinho, director of the institute, said one patient died in  
2008 and then 3 in 2009. All of the patients were suffering from  
additional serious medical conditions.

Some 1429 infected patients have been reported by general  
practitioners since the beginning of 2009. To limit the spread of the  
disease, 130 000 goats in the provinces of [North]-Brabant, Limburg,  
and Gelderland will be vaccinated.

--
Communicated by:
ProMED-mail
<promed@promedmail.org>

[The pathogenic organism of Q fever, often acquired by close exposure  
to animals, is infectious with a very low inoculum and may be  
aerosolized over a distance. It is not clear what contact the infected  
people had with animals or how close they were to farms.

_Coxiella burnetii_, the causative agent, was discovered in 1937. This  
organism is an agent that can be resistant to heat and desiccation,  
and is highly infectious by the aerosol route. A single inhaled  
organism may produce clinical illness. Indeed, in [non-human]  
primates, the dose to kill 50 percent of the primates was found to be  
1.7 organisms (1).

The organisms can be resistant to heat, drying, and many common  
disinfectants. These features enable the bacteria to survive for long  
periods in the environment. This very stable form of _C. burnetii_ is  
associated with compact small cell variants of the organism that are  
produced during standard replication along with the less resistant  
large cell form, metabolically dormant, and spore-like (2).

Infection of humans usually occurs by inhalation of these organisms  
from air that contains airborne barnyard dust contaminated by dried  
placental material, birth fluids, and excreta of infected herd  
animals. Humans are often very susceptible to the disease, and very  
few organisms may be required to cause infection.

Ingestion of contaminated milk, followed by regurgitation and  
inspiration of the contaminated food, is a less common mode of  
transmission. Other modes of transmission to humans, including tick  
bites and human-to-human transmission, are rare.

References
----------
1. Lille RD, Perrin TL, Armstrong C: An institutional outbreak of  
pneumonitis. III. Histopathology in man and rhesus monkeys in the  
pneumonitis due to the virus of "Q fever." Pub Hlth Rep 1941; 56:  
1419-25.
2. Norlander L: Q fever epidemiology and pathogenesis. Microbes Infect  
2000; 2: 417-24 [abstract available at
<http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10817644>.

The HealthMap/ProMED-mail interactive map of the Netherlands is available at
<http://healthmap.org/r/00uu>. - Mod.LL]

[see also:
Q Fever - Netherlands (03): update, animal vaccination 20090510.1744
Q Fever - Netherlands (02): (NB) 20090508.1721
Q fever, caprine - Netherlands: (LI) 20090331.1230
Q fever - Netherlands: sheep & goat vaccination 20090228.0841
2008
----
Q fever - Netherlands (04): sheep & goat vaccination 20081023.3352
Q fever - Netherlands (03): (NBR, GEL) 20080802.2367
Q fever - Netherlands (02): (NBR) 20080728.2306
Q fever - Netherlands: (NBR) 20080725.2267
2007
----
Q fever - Netherlands (Noord-Brabant, Gelderland) 20070809.2592]
........................................ll/mj/jw
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