AP/ June 10, 2011, 12:22 PM

Aggressive fungus strikes Joplin tornado victims

A woman salvages what she can from what remains of her house on May 28, 2011 in Joplin, Mo.

A woman salvages what she can from what remains of her house on May 28, 2011 in Joplin, Mo. / Getty Images/Joe Raedle

JOPLIN, Mo. - A Joplin doctor said Thursday his hospital treated five Joplin tornado victims for a rare, aggressive fungal infection sometimes found in survivors of other natural disasters.

Dr. Uwe Schmidt, an infectious disease specialist at Freeman Health System in Joplin, said three of those patients who contracted zygomycosis have since died, but he stopped short of blaming their deaths specifically on the infections.

"These people had multiple traumas, pneumonia, all kinds of problems," Schmidt said. "It's difficult to say how much the fungal infections contributed to their demise."

Photos: Joplin tornado devastation

Jacqueline Lapine, a spokeswoman for the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services, said the department has received reports of eight suspected deep-skin fungal infections among victims of the tornado. She said all of the victims had sustained trauma from the tornado with multiple injuries and secondary wound infections.

Zygomycosis, now known as mucormycosis, is a fungal infection that spreads rapidly and can be caused by soil or vegetative material becoming embedded under the skin. It's more prevalent in people with weakened immune systems or untreated diabetes but can affect healthy people who suffer trauma and are injected with contaminated soil.

All accounted for, Joplin toll tops 130

Dr. Benjamin Park with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said people who have had a traumatic skin injury that is not improving should seek medical attention immediately so the infection can be identified and treated promptly.

"These fungal infections are usually quite serious, and often have a case-fatality rate of 50 percent or higher," Park said in an email to The Associated Press. "Although persons with weakened immune systems and those with diabetes are the most common risk groups, otherwise healthy people can develop infection, particularly after a traumatic wound. Skin infection usually occurs following traumatic inoculation of the fungal spores into the skin."

Schmidt said he had seen only two cases of zygomycosis in his 30 years of practice, and both of those cases involved people with untreated diabetes.

"I never have seen personally this kind of fungal infection of the skin," he said.

Stacy Fender, a spokeswoman for CoxHealth, said Cox South hospital in Springfield has one patient who may have a fungal infection.

Overall numbers weren't available. The health department in Springfield-Greene County, where some patients were treated, declined to release information about patients sickened by the fungus, citing patient privacy concerns.

The Springfield News-Leader reported the department sent a memo Monday to area health providers warning them to be on the lookout for the infections.

Kendra Williams, the administrator of community health and epidemiology for the health department, said the fungus likely came from soil or vegetative materials imbedded in the skin by the tornado.

In the aftermath of the tornado, Freeman Health System treated more than 1,700 patients. Doctors from St. John's Hospital, which was hit by the twister, treated patients at makeshift facilities.

Schmidt said some wounds that were stitched up had to be reopened because they weren't adequately cleaned.

"These were very extensive wounds," Schmidt said. "They were treated in the emergency room as quickly as possible."

A week after the tornado patients began arriving with fungal infections.

"We could visibly see mold in the wounds," Schmidt said. "It rapidly spread. The tissue dies off and becomes black. It doesn't have any circulation. It has to be removed."

Schmidt said the infection is sometimes seen in survivors of mass trauma such as the 2004 tsunami in Indonesia.

"This fungus invades the underlying tissue and actually invades the underlying blood vessels and cuts off the circulation to the skin," Schmidt said. "It's very invasive."

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spencerjones says:
Regarding this deadly fungal pathogen: Joplin residents might want to learn more about colloidal silver, an all-natural anti-bacterial, anti-viral and anti-fungal agent that can be made at home for pennies.

There's an article titled ""New Study Proves Colloidal Silver Decimates Fungal Pathogens; Even Superior to Popular Anti-Fungal Drugs" at the following link: http://thesilveredge.com/fungalpath.shtml
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margroks says:
The article specifically mentions debris being embedded under the skin and not inert ingredients in medications. That sounds suspiciously like the people who continue to claim vaccines are responsible for autism despite the complete lack of any evidence for it. Inert ingredients are generally just that-things that have no real effect on human beings and appear as fillers. Since this is a pretty rare fungus, it seems unlikely that it has anything to do with inert ingredients since there would no doubt be a wave of infections if that were the cause rather than the few which seem to crop up often after natural disasters where debris does get into and under skin. It also appears to target those with weakened immune systems. I don't think I buy that argument though, granted there could be the occasional individual who does have an immune respinse to even an inert ingredient but that would be unusual. It sounds as if there is a lot of evidenc e that the fungus is the result of things liek hurricanes, etc., and not inert materials which are used exactly because they are known to be non-irritating to a majority of people.
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credibility2 says:
Wonder had the federal government been shamed into going into the area sooner (Katrina), if the feds are there at all in force, and immediately began tending to people or doing things to prevent such infections and other medical related, if things would be different.
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