- PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Hundreds
of youngsters in at least seven states have broken out in mysterious
rashes,
which some health investigators think might be caused by a new or
yet-to-be-identified
virus.
-
- The red, itchy rash appears to be more an annoyance than
a serious health threat, but it has managed to temporarily close schools,
worry parents and frustrate school administrators, for whom answers have
been elusive.
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- Students in Pennsylvania, New York, West Virginia,
Virginia,
Ohio, Oregon and Washington state have complained about rashes on the face,
arms, legs and body. For the most part, the rash goes away when the
students
leave school.
-
- "For something like this to occur almost
simultaneously
in different parts of the country is, to my knowledge, unprecedented,"
said Dr. Norman Sykes, who examined about 30 suburban Philadelphia students
who came down with the rash this month.
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- In the Quakertown Community School District, where nearly
170 students at all nine schools were confirmed to have the rash, an
environmental
company collected air and water samples and examined carpets, floor mats,
vacuum bags and clothing, but all tested negative for contaminants.
-
- "We may never know what this thing is,"
Quakertown
Superintendent Jim Scanlon said.
-
- Most school systems have ruled out an environmental
cause,
but not the Peninsula School District in Gig Harbor, Wash., where more
than 50 students and teachers complained about a rash.
-
- Test results showed an abnormally high level of dust,
dandruff and skin particles - probably caused by an overactive ventilation
system that took too much moisture out of the air.
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- "People are very concerned about their
children,"
said Peninsula Superintendent Jim Coolican, who does not suspect a virus.
"We say it's not a long-term problem, but people say, 'How do you
know? How do you know it won't be a problem for my child 10 years from
now?'"
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- Sykes, a dermatologist and professor at Jefferson Medical
College in Philadelphia, suspects the culprit in Quakertown is a mutation
of the childhood illness known as fifth disease or a virus not yet known
to science.
-
- Fifth disease, so-called because it was once considered
one of the five main childhood illnesses, produces a low fever and
cold-like
symptoms, followed by a rash that creates a "slapped cheek"
appearance
and a lacy red rash on the trunk, arms and legs.
-
- Though Sykes' patients had those same symptoms, a blood
test turned up no evidence of the virus that causes the disease. Sykes
then performed a more sophisticated test and found DNA evidence of fifth
disease virus. But nine other students tested negative for fifth
disease.
-
- "We only know a tiny, tiny percentage, certainly
less than 10 percent, of the organisms that are in and on our bodies,"
said infectious-disease expert Madeline Drexler, author of "Secret
Agents: The Menace of Emerging Infections."
-
- Dr. Suzanne Jenkins, of the Virginia Department of
Health,
also suspects a virus as yet unknown by science. The virus probably lives
in the gastrointestinal tract, and can be spread by coughing, sneezing
or failing to wash one's hands after using the bathroom, the epidemiologist
said.
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- Scanlon, the Quakertown superintendent, believes some
of the rashes might have been caused by psychosomatic "hysteria."
And some rashes were not rashes at all - high school students rubbed
themselves
with sandpaper in a futile attempt to get the school shut down, he
said.
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- "We sat there itching and then it got all red and
bumpy and then it started stinging. I put a paper towel on it so it
wouldn't
burn that much," said 8-year-old Samantha Makl, who went to the
hospital
on the first day of the Quakertown outbreak.
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- Quakertown parent Keith Ruppel said the rashes are
distracting
his two children from their school work.
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- "I really wish they could find the cause,"
said the father of a 10-year-old boy and 12-year-old girl. "But you
can't keep them out of school."
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- http://www.nandotimes.com
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