By Amy Burkholder,CNN
(Dec. 19) - A high school varsity athlete, a sturdy guy with a health
history blissfully free of blips, 18-year-old Joseph Spencer had little
reason to think anything was seriously wrong when he got sick last
April.
The vomiting, chills, fever -- "It must be the flu," he thought.
Within hours, Spencer's fever was 104 degrees. Within days, he was in
the intensive care unit at Providence Portland Medical Center in Oregon
with full-blown pneumonia. Spencer's doctor was afraid this sturdy
teenage boy was going to die.
"His lungs had filled up with water, it was hard to get oxygen into
him," explains Dr. David Gilbert, an infectious disease expert and
Spencer's physician at Providence. "Things got so bad, I thought we
were at risk of losing him."
But as perplexing as what would make a hardy young man so sick -- so
quickly -- was his diagnosis: adenovirus, the virus that usually causes
nothing worse than a nasty cold.
"In the past, we considered adenovirus a 98-pound weakling," says Dr.
Dean Erdman, leader of the respiratory diagnostic program at the
Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta. "But adenovirus is causing
severe disease and, in some cases, death in normal, healthy people."
At least 1,035 people in Oregon and a handful of other states have been
infected by adenovirus so far this year. One of the largest outbreaks
was at an Air Force base in Texas. Watch Dr. Sanjay Gupta explain the
killer cold virus »ut by far the deadliest outbreak is in Oregon, where
seven patients have died.
"Fortunately, Joe survived," says Gilbert. "Twenty percent of our
patients did not survive this severe infection."
The bug causing the serious disease is called "adenovirus 14," one of
the 51-odd strains of adenovirus that typically cause anything from
colds to conjunctivitis and gastroenteritis. While adenovirus isn't a
new bug on the block -- it was first identified in 1955 -- researchers
believe it has mutated into a more virulent form, first identified in
2005.
"We were very surprised when we ran into this much more aggressive form
of adenovirus, which took otherwise healthy people and put them into
our intensive care unit with life-threatening pneumonia," says Gilbert.
It is important for doctors to think of adenovirus when confronted with
an ill patient -- recognizing early symptoms before they become
life-threatening. Infectious disease experts say shortness of breath,
cough and fever are all symptoms you should not ignore.
But how big a threat is adenovirus 14 really?
Adenoviruses are ubiquitous, scrappy bugs -- they exist on everything
from pens to countertops to inside our noses. They are spread through
contact with a surface, or through the air we breathe. Most people
won't suffer life-threatening illness if exposed to adenovirus 14, and
that strain of the virus is still pretty rare, but since few people
have antibodies to it, there's opportunity for a new virus to spread
rapidly throughout the population.
"Adenoviruses kill people," says Gilbert, adding that when these
infectious viruses do spread, they spread fast.
"We are asking physicians is to be alert, not to panic -- but be
alert," says the CDC's Erdman, who stresses that influenza remains a
much larger public health concern, killing and causing far more serious
illness annually than adenovirus.
Experts stress that one of the most important things for doctors to
recognize is whether a patient has an acute respiratory illness. It
could be adenovirus, something they may not connect to severely ill
patients.
As far as treatments for adenovirus 14, there aren't any -- doctors
focus on managing symptoms -- but researchers are trying to determine
if any antiviral drugs could be effective.
The CDC stresses that while a flu shot is a good idea and you should
get one, it won't protect you against adenovirus 14. But common sense
will: keeping household surfaces clean with a good virus-buster like
bleach, avoiding and covering up coughs and sneezes, and of course,
hand washing.
Spencer is taking life a little slower these days. He still has gaps in
his memory, probably due to oxygen loss. He's made lifestyle changes,
including popping vitamins as religiously as he now washes his hands:
He keeps bottles of hand sanitizer in his car and on his nightstand.
Most of all, he wants people to know that adenovirus is out there, and
what it can do.
"I never thought this would happen to me. You'd think it only happens
to unhealthy people," he says, pausing to find the words to finish his
sentence. "I always thought of myself as a healthy guy until this
happened.
"People need to be aware there's a killer out there."
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Common Cold Mutates, Becomes Stronger
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