February 11, 2009 2:29 PM

Vampire Bats Eyed For Venezuela Deaths

(AP)  At least 38 Warao Indians have died in remote villages in Venezuela, and medical experts suspect an outbreak of rabies spread by bites from vampire bats.

Laboratory investigations have yet to confirm the cause, but the symptoms point to rabies, according to two researchers from the University of California at Berkeley and other medical experts.

The two UC Berkeley researchers - the husband-and-wife team of anthropologist Charles Briggs and public health specialist Dr. Clara Mantini-Briggs - said the symptoms include fever, body pains, tingling in the feet followed by progressive paralysis, and an extreme fear of water. Victims tend to have convulsions and grow rigid before death.

Dr. Charles Rupprecht, chief of the rabies program at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, agreed with their preliminary diagnosis.

"The history and clinical signs are compatible with rabies," Rupprecht told The Associated Press on Friday. "Prevention is straightforward: Prevent bites and vaccinate those at risk of bites."

Venezuelan health officials are investigating the outbreak and plan to distribute mosquito nets to prevent bat bites and send a medical boat to provide treatment in remote villages on the Orinoco River delta, Indigenous Peoples Minister Nicia Maldonado told the state-run Bolivarian News Agency on Thursday.

Outbreaks of rabies spread by vampire bats are a problem in various tropical areas of South America, including Brazil and Peru, Rupprecht said.

He said researchers suspect that in some cases environmental degradation - including mining, logging or dam construction projects - may also be contributing to rabies outbreaks.

"Vampire bats are very adaptable," Rupprecht said. And when their roosts are disrupted or their normal prey grow scarce, "Homo sapiens is a pretty easy meal."

More study is needed to confirm through blood or other samples from victims that it is the rabies virus in Venezuela, researchers say.

At least 38 Warao Indians have died since June 2007, and at least 16 have died since the start of June 2008, according to a report the Berkeley researchers and indigenous leaders provided to Venezuelan officials this week.

All victims died within two to seven days from the onset of symptoms, Briggs said.

One village, Mukuboina, lost eight of its roughly 80 inhabitants

all of them children, he said.

During a study trip Briggs and Mantini-Briggs made through 30 villages in the river delta, relatives said the victims had been bitten by bats. The couple have worked among the Warao in Delta Amacuro state for years and were invited by indigenous leaders to study the outbreak.

"It's a monster illness," said Tirso Gomez, a Warao traditional healer who said the indigenous group of more than 35,000 people has never experienced anything similar.

Another tropical medicine expert, Dr. Daniel Bausch of Tulane University in New Orleans, agreed the symptoms and accounts suggest rabies transmitted by bats, and if confirmed, "probably a vaccination campaign would be in order."

The common vampire bat, which feeds on mammals' blood, swoops down and generally approaches its sleeping prey on the ground. The bat then makes a small incision with its teeth, and an anticoagulant in its saliva keeps the blood flowing while it laps up its meal with its tongue.

The researchers in Venezuela have begun taking precautions. Mantini-Briggs, a Venezuelan former health official, said she started to wonder about her own health Friday while talking with biologist Omar Linares, a bat expert at Caracas' Simon Bolivar University.

She remembered there was blood on her sheet after sleeping in a hammock in a village two weeks ago. Initially she dismissed it as nothing important, but she also remembered her finger hurt that morning and that she saw two small red dots there.

Linares suggested she get rabies shots immediately.

"They're vaccinating me," Mantini-Briggs said. "I'm sure a bat bit me."

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment
by libsluv2spit August 11, 2008 7:25 PM EDT
no bats in san francisco..they all died of AIDS

*batabing bataboom*
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by laurelblosso August 10, 2008 5:33 PM EDT
What a terrible shame for the victims....
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by terrorislamw August 10, 2008 12:52 AM EDT
and the vampires name is HUGO,,,
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by downsteamjim August 9, 2008 6:59 PM EDT
This explains why the pressure in your tires is so low. Vampire bats suck but Obama blows and life stays in harmony.
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by ybotheratall August 9, 2008 11:35 AM EDT
drinuk, shut up. No one wants to hear your fake mercury agenda.
Reply to this comment
by drinuk August 9, 2008 10:06 AM EDT
Just a matter of time before Big Pharma are warning of a pandemic and want every kid vaccinated with anti-bat serum laced with Mercury and alliminum, across the whole of North and South America.
Reply to this comment
by erasmus81 August 9, 2008 4:06 AM EDT
"I''''ve always wondered about the fear of water thing. It is also the case with animals. Any explanations?" Posted by cbsfan73 at 11:48 PM : Aug 08, 2008

It damages the muscles for drinking and swallowing.
It causes contactions and spasms in the breathing muscles when they try to drink.


Reply to this comment
by deacon20081 August 9, 2008 3:57 AM EDT
I''''ve always wondered about the fear of water thing. It is also the case with animals. Any explanations?
Posted by cbsfan73
----------------------------
Once infected , rabies can remain latent for several weeks or even months. However, once the virus emerges, the patient quickly experiences an assortment of symptoms, including fever, depression, confusion, muscle spasms, extreme thirst, loss of muscle tone, salivation, and sensitivity to light and touch. Some victims become hydrophobic, meaning that they are afraid of water . As the virus progresses, it causes encephalitis, an inflammation of the brain, and neurological symptoms get progressively worse.

Reply to this comment
by cbsfan73 August 9, 2008 2:48 AM EDT
I''ve always wondered about the fear of water thing. It is also the case with animals. Any explanations?
Reply to this comment
by sociald63 August 9, 2008 2:32 AM EDT
grab some garlic and carry a cross -
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