CDC: West Nile virus can survive in blood
Friday, September 20, 2002
ATLANTA (AP) -- West
Nile virus can survive in donated blood and can probably be spread by
transfusion, federal health officials said Thursday.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released information
on seven transfusion cases associated with the virus and concluded that
in at least one case West Nile in a donor's blood stayed viable after
the donation.
CDC doctors called that case "highly suspicious" and wrote
that West Nile "probably can be spread by transfusion."
Previously, doctors weren't sure whether it was possible to spread
West Nile through blood, although a Georgia case in which donated organs
spread West Nile to four recipients in August raised the question.
Most West Nile victims contract the virus from an infected mosquito.
So far this year, the CDC has reported more than 1,640 human cases of
West Nile virus, including 80 deaths.
CDC researchers found that even if West Nile victims can spread the
disease through blood donations, not all patients who receive tainted
blood will become infected with West Nile. Doctors pointed to a July
case in which a 55-year-old woman received contaminated blood after an
orthopedic procedure but never tested positive for the virus.
Health officials urged recent transfusion recipients to see their
doctors if they develop flu-like symptoms. Patients can quickly be
diagnosed with West Nile based on their immune response to the virus,
and prompt reporting can help officials take infected blood donations
out of use.
There is no suitable West Nile screening test for blood donations.
The Food and Drug Administration, which regulates the nation's blood
supply, says it is studying whether such a test is necessary.
The CDC also warned doctors Thursday that West Nile can cause acute
polio-like paralysis in some cases. Physicians were urged to test
patients for West Nile if they report acute, painless paralysis but
don't appear to have had a stroke.
West Nile, which emerged in the United States just three years ago,
has struck other countries for decades.
Source: CNN/Health