Cases of polio-like illness, AFM, rise in US

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TAMPA, Nov 14, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Puzzled by a rise in US children with
sudden paralysis in their arms or legs, health officials said Tuesday they
are probing whether a virus or auto-immune disorder may be to blame.

A total of 252 cases of the disorder known as acute flaccid myelitis (AFM)
are currently under investigation nationwide, an increase of 33 since last
week, said Nancy Messonnier, director of the National Center for Immunization
and Respiratory Diseases at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC).

With 80 confirmed cases so far this year, 2018 looks to be on pace with
prior peak years like 2014 (120 cases) and 2016 (149 cases), Messonnier said.

More than 400 cases have been confirmed through lab tests since 2014, the
first year the syndrome emerged.

A couple dozen cases were confirmed in 2015 and 2017.

Messonnier said she understands parents’ alarm but stressed that the
disorder remains “rare.”

Most cases involve children aged two to eight. Almost all complained of
fever and respiratory illness three to 10 days before suddenly experiencing
paralysis in their arms or legs.

For some, the paralysis went away, but at least half have not recovered,
said Messonnier.

The CDC has tested 125 spinal cord fluid samples, and half were positive
for rhinovirus or enterovirus, which commonly cause symptoms like fever,
runny nose, vomiting, diarrhea and body aches.

Yet scientists are still stumped about the precise cause of the sudden
paralysis, since these viruses are common but AFM is not.

“We are trying to figure out what the triggers are that would cause someone
to develop AFM,” Messonnier told reporters.

“It may be one of the viruses we have already detected. It may be a virus
that we haven’t yet detected. Or it could be that the virus is kicking off
another process that is actually triggering — through an auto immune process
— AFM,” she said.

“CDC is a science-driven agency. Right now, the science doesn’t give us an
answer.”

Perhaps most frustrating for parents, there is no way to prevent it, and no
targeted therapies or interventions.

“Parents and caregivers are urged to seek immediate medical care for a
child who develops sudden weakness of the arms or legs,” said the CDC latest
report on AFM, released Tuesday.

Messonnier said the CDC has not been tracking every case of AFM since 2014,
leading to gaps in the federal agency’s knowledge of the illness, which
experts are now trying to fill.

One child with AFM is reported to have died in 2017.