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From: Ian A. York
Newsgroups: sci.med
Subject: Re: Flu or Coxsackie B cold virus destroys young woman's heart
Date: 6 Mar 1998 19:24:33 -0500
In article <6dpq7e$p16$1@news.fsc.fujitsu.com>,
Susan Johnson <susanj@nms.fnc.fujitsu.com> wrote:
>Just this week, a 35-year-old mother of three in
>Vancouver Canada died after her heart was destroyed
>while fighting off either influenza or the
>Coxsackie B cold virus.
[ ... ]
>I was wondering how often this occurs, and if
Viral myocarditis is surprisingly common. At least, I was surprised when
I heard the stats a few weeks ago. From my notes (the talk was on
coxsackie myocarditis) there are some 1 million cases of viral myocarditis
per year in the USA (and presumably around 100,000 in Canada, assuming the
usual 10:1 US:Canada ratio), of which 90% are asymptomatic, leaving around
100,000 symptomatic cases per year. These include young, healthy people.
One of the symptoms is death with no warning; spontaneous recovery is
more common, but around 10% go on to have chronic problems. Diagnosis is
difficult, and many cases are probably misdiagnosed.
The above is for 'normal' people; I don't see anything specifically on
transplant recipients, but I would assume that (as with most infectious
diseases) transplant recipients are more susceptible because they're
immune suppressed.
Ian
--
Ian York (iayork@panix.com) <http://www.panix.com/~iayork/>
"-but as he was a York, I am rather inclined to suppose him a
very respectable Man." -Jane Austen, The History of England
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