| Literature DB >> 12396911 |
Jean-Marie Maillard1, Marc Fischer, Kelly T McKee, Lou F Turner, J Steven Cline.
Abstract
The index case of inhalational anthrax in October 2001 was in a man who lived and worked in Florida. However, during the 3 days before illness onset, the patient had traveled through North Carolina, raising the possibility that exposure to Bacillus anthracis spores could have occurred there. The rapid response in North Carolina included surveillance among hospital intensive-care units, microbiology laboratories, medical examiners, and veterinarians, and site investigations at locations visited by the index patient to identify the naturally occurring or bioterrorism-related source of his exposure.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2002 PMID: 12396911 PMCID: PMC2730300 DOI: 10.3201/eid0810.020389
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
FigureDecision analysis developed during the North Carolina investigation for identifying and evaluating patients with possible systemic anthrax. PCR, polymerase chain reaction.
Surveillance methods used to identify potential cases of systemic anthrax or a source of exposure for the Florida index case of inhalational anthrax, North Carolina, October 2001
| Type of surveillance | Targeted population or outcome | Locations under surveillance |
|---|---|---|
| Intensive-care unit | Patients with illness compatible with systemic anthrax infectiona | 19 hospitals in North and South Carolinab |
| Microbiology laboratory | Bacterial isolates potentially consistent with | 19 hospitals in North and South Carolina |
| Medical examiner | Unexplained deaths possibly due to anthrax infection | Statewide |
| Veterinarian | Unexplained deaths in livestock | Statewide |
| Occupational | Unexplained illnesses or absences in employees | Tourist park visited by the index patient |
| Environmental | Evidence of | Residence of index patient’s relative; tourist park visited by the index patient |
aClinical syndromes included fever and 1) severe respiratory disease, 2) mediastinitis or mediastinal lymphadenitis, 3) meningitis, or 4) hemorrhagic gastroenteritis. bBased on the index patient’s route of travel, surveillance occurred in all 15 hospitals with intensive-care units in five North Carolina counties, as well as four regional referral centers in North Carolina (n=2) and South Carolina (n=2). cA suspicious isolate was defined as 1) nontyped Bacillus species, 2) unidentified nonhemolytic, nonmotile gram-positive rod, or 3) any other unidentified bacteria that was discarded or sent to a referral laboratory.