Respiratory virus EV-D68

mkrnhr

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Maybe Ebola is not the only virus ongoing mutation. A respiratory virus (probablyEV-D68) is sending hundreds of children to hospitals in Missouri and possibly throughout the Midwest in the USA:
_http://edition.cnn.com/2014/09/06/health/respiratory-virus-midwest/index.html
_http://myfox8.com/2014/09/06/respiratory-virus-suspected-in-midwest-childrens-hospitalizations/
_http://www.khi.org/news/2014/sep/03/respiratory-illness-sickens-hundreds-kc-children/
 
A respiratory virus is now being reported in Denver, Colorado. I first noticed a confusing report on Investment Watch, Friday August 29 which described " Hand, Foot, and Mouth" in Overland Park, Kansas. With a second report in Missouri describing similar symptoms but labled Enterovirus 68.

_http://investmentwatchblog.com/children-under-attack-in-kansas-city-two-viral-outbreaks-one-hospital-basically-locked-down-to-non-patients/

The First is Hand, Foot, and Mouth… No Biggie? Right… But I was working while this station was on it’s afternoon news cycle and several times they stated Children’s Mercy Hospital had stopped allowing non-patients in the hospital for fear of Hand, Foot and Mouth affecting any immuno-compromised children who were already admitted.

No mention of Children’s Mercy Hospital in THIS ARTICLE OR VIDEO? But the live news cycle mentioned this several times.

_http://www.kmbc.com/health/doctors-see-spike-in-cases-of-common-childhood-virus/27775414# (video)

Ok Story #2… Made the Drudge Report: MYSTERY: MO hospital treats hundreds of children for unusual virus…

So this second virus is called Enterovirus 68. Media Hype aside… This is a virus that seems to strike QUICKLY. Targets children, and is causing hospitals to see FLU Season levels of patients.

_http://fox4kc.com/2014/08/28/unusual-respiratory-virus-enterovirus-68-strikes-metro-kids/


Severe respiratory virus impacting hundreds of kids reaches Colorado
_http://kdvr.com/2014/09/05/severe-respiratory-virus-impacting-hundreds-of-kids-reaches-colorado/

DENVER — A potentially severe virus that has plagued hundreds of children across a 900-mile stretch in the Midwest in recent weeks has made its way to Colorado.

The severe respiratory illness, which in some cases is believed to have been brought on by human enterovirus-68, an uncommon respiratory viral pathogen, is impacting mostly children, including several in Colorado.

Angie Anania, a spokesperson for Rocky Mountain Hospital for Children in Denver, said five different children have been checked into their hospital because of this virus this week alone.

One 13-year-old was discovered unconscious and barely breathing on Wednesday. He was placed on a ventilator and has slowly improved, Anania said, but he was still in the hospital’s intensive care unit as of Friday.

“At that point, we were freaking out. I mean a cold, then within an hour we’re in the hospital and we’re not sure he’s going to make it,” said mom Jennifer Cornejo. Her 13 year old son Will is recovering after losing consciousness and being put on a ventilator after what seemed like, just a common cold.

On Tuesday, Will was starting to feel sick. Jennifer said, “Really couldn’t imagine that we would be ending up in critical condition.” Now the teen is posting pictures on Instagram of the whole ordeal, but said it was scary. “I thought I was going to die,” Will said.

Will has asthma. After several treatments, he still couldn’t breathe. Jennifer said, “He was completely unconscious and he was turning white and his lips were blue.” So she called 9-1-1 and he was eventually airlifted to Rocky Mountain Hospital for Children. “The air medic told me he was too critical to go by ambulance,” Jennifer said.

Will’s suffering from the same symptoms as four other kids in his pediatric intensive care unit.

“The initial symptoms that we see are the same as any common cold; coughing, runny nose. But the thing that`s different is the severity of respiratory symptoms,” said Dr. Raju Meyappan.

More than 20 others in the same hospital are fighting the virus, just a less severe form. “Our pediatric floor is extremely busy with patients with similar symptoms, as are surrounding hospitals,” said Dr. Meyappan. In fact, more than 900 kids have been treated at Children’s Hospital since August 18th. Dr. Meyappan at RMHC said it’s likely Will and the others have Enterovirus D68 (EV-D68).

“We’re basing this off the clustering that we’re seeing.”

News about this rare virus first started popping up in Kansas City, Mo., where doctors said they’ve seen 300 cases of this respiratory virus in the past week, all of which were of varying in severity and spotted in children of all ages.

Since those reports out of Kansas City doctors in St. Louis, Mo. said they have seen about a dozen children who were severely impacted by the virus this week.

While those St. Louis doctors continued to say it is not entirely uncommon to see this particular strain of respiratory virus pop up this time of year as school starts back up, the number of reported cases is up about 50 percent in their area, which is unusual.

And finally, doctors at Columbus Public Health in Ohio said respiratory symptoms that typify this virus were the chief complaint of an average of 52 patients per day in the hospital’s emergency department.

A good deal of the children hospitalized in the past few weeks due to this virus have tended to be those who have a history of asthma or wheezing. But that’s not true in all cases.

The chief symptom of the virus is trouble breathing. If your child ever experiences difficulty breathing, Anania said, it is urgent to get them to a hospital immediately.

Though there is no anti-viral medicine for enterovirus-68 and no vaccine, doctors across the country have said it is effectively treated in most cases through supportive care, including the administration of oxygen.
 
There is also this article on SOTT:

Mysterious respiratory illness is spreading in Ohio, causing unusually high number of cases

Unusually high levels of respiratory illness have been reported this week in Nationwide Children's Hospital's emergency department, and samples are being sent out for testing to see whether a rare virus might be to blame.

"Obviously, it's a concern," Dr. Mysheika Williams

Roberts, medical director and assistant commissioner at Columbus Public Health, said of the volume of respiratory cases. "What we are experiencing is unusual for us this time of year."

Last week, respiratory symptoms were the chief complaint of an average of 52 patients per day in the hospital's emergency department. From Sunday through Tuesday of this week, respiratory symptoms were the chief complaint of an average of 73 patients per day, a 40 percent increase.

Some of those illnesses might be cases of human enterovirus 68, Roberts said. That virus apparently has sickened dozens of kids in the Kansas City, Mo., area, in recent weeks.

Nationwide Children's officials said they hope the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention can confirm whether any of the local hospital's patients with respiratory problems are HEV68 cases.

It wasn't immediately clear how many of Nationwide Children's recent cases of respiratory illness might be caused by HEV68, nor was it clear how many possible HEV68 cases resulted in hospitalization.

The hospital is testing only severely ill patients for the virus, which usually is not fatal but can cause wheezing and shortness of breath. There is no vaccine.
 
Several questions come to mind regarding this sudden outbreak of illness affecting infants/young children and ongoing current events.
It's not my intention to down-play the seriousness of what is now being labeled "Respiratory virus EV-D68" or mitigate it in any way but questions arise due to the timing and intensity of this event?

Just prior to this outbreak, the U.S. experienced a massive influx of immigrant "children," many unaccompanied by adults, crossing over the Mexico Border. Truth is, our Borders have been porous for a number of years. And prior to this massive influx, DHS sought bids for a Jan. 29 Contract seeking help in handling over 65,000 unaccompanied alien children. The Contract basically side stepped Laws, legally put in place, to counter such an offensive. Instead, DHS sought to "accommodate" this influx, including forcing Military Bases to Shelter Illegal Immigrants before many were relocated.

DHS secretary confirms administration anticipated surge in illegal immigration
_http://freebeacon.com/national-security/dhs-anticipated-60000-illegal-child-border-crossers-in-january/

Thursday July 24, 2014 - “In January, in our budget process, we estimated that we were going to have 60,000 unaccompanied kids coming in,” he said, noting that resources for the influx were “ramped up.”

The border crisis grew worse during the period between March, April, and May when “unprecedented levels” of children crossed the border, he said. The surge peaked with thousands of illegals reaching the U.S. border in early June.

The illegal immigrants have created a security and humanitarian crisis that has taxed both law enforcement and health authorities who are trying to deal with the immigrant children. Thousands have been housed on military bases and there have been outbreaks of disease at the detention centers, including pneumonia and swine flu.

Fighting back: Residents force feds to scrap plan to house illegals at Va. college
_http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2014/jun/16/residents-force-feds-to-scrap-plan-to-house-illega/ (Video)

Monday June 16, 2014 - The government’s plan to temporarily shelter hundreds of minors illegally crossing the Southwest border at Saint Paul’s College in Lawrenceville, Virginia is on hold.

The Obama administration Monday abruptly halted plans to shelter some of the children surging across the border at a defunct college in rural Virginia, as the White House has continued to see its efforts to house the children throughout the country be thwarted by opposition from local officials.

Indeed, one early hiccup in the government’s efforts to find places to house the children was that the military, which offered housing on several bases, refused to let the children onto bases until seven days had elapsed from the time doctors had administered inoculations.

Question, "What inoculations did the doctors - administer?"


A Quarantine Station map and Immigrant map were posted in the Re: Ebola & Updates thread. Check the map at end of the article titled "US Outbreak Of “Rare” Illness Spreads To More States" - the mysterious respiratory illness is affecting States - directly in the "center" of the U.S.? Not in the areas reported to be part of recent immigrant housing?

Quarantine Station map and Immigrant map
_https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hKTgFPbkZZg

Published on Aug 7, 2014

Take a look at these 2 maps and see ....... if overlapping ....... they a line almost perfectly.

US Outbreak Of “Rare” Illness Spreads To More States
_ http://www.allnewspipeline.com/Rare_Virus_Spreads_To_3rd_US_State.php

Published September 6, 2014

Exactly how “rare” is an illness that has sickened more than 900 children since August 18, 2014 in just one state? How “rare” is it when multiple states are on alert and reporting up to 20-30 suspected cases a day with one state reporting a spike of 40 percent? Then one must ask, how is a virus supposedly so “rare” spreading from state to state?

Missouri was the first state to report more than 300 cases of suspected human enterovirus 68 aka HEV68 or EV68, which is being described as “rare” and “uncommon,” yet state after state is seeing children being brought into hospital with severe respiratory problems.

Cases in Missouri, Colorado, Ohio, with some reporting that Kansas and Illinois are on the list and other reports indicating there has been a 40 percent increase in patients coming into emergency rooms with respiratory symptoms, with the Columbus Dispatch saying the number has risen in Ohio to an average of 73 patients per day with these symptoms.



Which begs the question, "Why hasn't this mysterious respiratory illness, labeled human enterovirus 68 (enter-a-virus), shown up in a more compromised group (illegal immigrants) reported as suffering from pneumonia and swine flu, measles, scabies, chicken pox, TB and strep throat?" A Media black-out?

Also, the timing of this respiratory virus comes on the heels when children go back to School, many starting August 16th and have received the mandatory scheduled vaccinationsto enter the school system. Bad vaccines?

Many questions and few answers.
 
This may not correlate with the respiratory virus outbreak but there has been a report of unusual circumstances in the death of a NIH scientist who worked at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland, specializing in tropical diseases, particularly malaria. His Wife is a scientist with a PhD in molecular biology.

_http://www.baxterbulletin.com/story/news/local/2014/08/31/missing-man/14906287/

Monday September 1, 2014

Local veterinarian Dr. Rob Conner and his sister, Penny Oxford, got into a car last Tuesday and drove all night from Mountain Home to Maryland to help their sister, Kelley Rogers, search for her missing husband, 54-year-old Martin John Rogers, who left for work Aug. 22 and never returned.

At first, the search for the happily married father of three was low key, according to Conner, who said the family thought he might have needed a few days to rest. But, when he didn't come home and didn't go to work, the search grew in scope and became more serious.

Rogers is a scientist with the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Md. He met Kelley, a Mountain Home High graduate, while she was working on her Ph.D. in molecular biology at Yale.

One of the theories authorities and volunteers are working under is that Rogers may be experiencing a dissociative fugue state, a relatively rare condition sometimes brought on by traumatic events or extreme levels of stress.

After a few days with no word from Rogers, Kelley and the family made the decision to take the search public.

Volunteers created a Facebook page and soon sightings of Rogers began pouring in. Authorities said one sighting on a trail about one hour away near Shepherdstown, W.Va., was highly credible. Other sightings along the same path were deemed less credible, but possible, Conner said.

The only confirmed sighting was on the day he disappeared. Surveillance video and use of a credit card confirmed a sweaty Rogers, who was wearing a green-checked shirt and tan khaki pants. He wasn't seen until two days later on the trail.

"It's a mystery. This is not a man who would abandon his family. He's a loving husband and a doting father," Conner said. "He has always been responsible; this is just not who he is, so clearly something has happened."


As the search continues, Rogers' children, 16-year-old Emma, 15-year-old Carter and 10-year-old David, have started school. Kelley continues to run both the family's household and the search for her husband.


_http://www.baxterbulletin.com/story/news/local/2014/09/05/missing-scientist/15134427/

Friday September 5, 2014

The body of Martin John Rogers was found Thursday afternoon near his wrecked car down an embankment in western Maryland, according to a family spokesperson.

Rogers, 54, was last seen by his wife, Kelley, when he left their Darnestown, Md., home on Aug. 21 for his job at the National Institutes of Health. Rogers was a scientist working on tropical diseases, particularly malaria, at the world-renowned research center near Washington, D.C.


Authorities say a passing motorist called in an abandoned vehicle. Maryland State Police investigated and found Rogers dead, a short distance away from his car. Authorities did not say how they think Rogers died, and an autopsy will be performed to determine the manner and cause of his death.

The search

As the search for Rogers began a few days after he failed to show up for work, authorities and volunteers had only one confirmed sighting to follow as a lead.

That sighting came on the day he disappeared. Surveillance video and use of a credit card confirmed a sweaty Rogers, who was wearing a green-checkered shirt and tan khaki pants, checking into a Motel 8 a few hours after he left home. Authorities say a reported sighting of Rogers on a local trail two days later was likely credible.


_http://www.nbcwashington.com/news/local/Crews-Search-for-Missing-NIH-Scientist-Martin-Rogers-273126461.html

Thursday Sept 4, 2014

About two weeks after he went missing, police announced an NIH scientist has been found dead in his car.

Martin John Rogers, 54, left his Gaithersburg home around 7:30 a.m. on Aug. 21 to go to work. As he was leaving, he told his wife of 25 years that he was going to a meeting -- but his co-workers said he never showed up to work that morning.


Martin Rogers had worked at the National Institutes of Health for 15 years and specialized in tropical diseases.

Police said surveillance video captured Martin checking into a hotel in La Valle, Maryland, looking "stressed out." Last week, police received multiple reports of possible sightings along the C&O Canal towpath, including by Edwards Ferry, near Poolesville, Violettes Lock near Darnestown, and as far away as Cumberland.

In a news release late Thursday night, Montgomery County Police announced Rogers' body was found near an abandoned car parked close to MV Smith Road in Allegany County. Police say they believe foul play was not involved.


Discrepancies:

In the date ( Aug. 21/Aug. 22 ) and in the manner in which he was found dead.

"Rogers was found Thursday afternoon near his wrecked car down an embankment in western Maryland."

"Maryland State Police investigated and found Rogers dead, a short distance away from his car."

" police announced an NIH scientist has been found dead in his car."

" Police announced Rogers' body was found near an abandoned car parked close to MV Smith Road in Allegany County."
 
angelburst29 said:
Thousands have been housed on military bases and there have been outbreaks of disease at the detention centers, including pneumonia and swine flu.
angelburst29, you quote a lot of sources, and the question that came up for me is how reliably are these sources? Have you verified them? Are they consistently accurate? For example, the quote above just doesn't sound right to me; my propaganda radar activated. I don't know if the swine flu was real, if there was an outbreak, and how anyone would know there was an outbreak.
 
hlat said:
angelburst29 said:
Thousands have been housed on military bases and there have been outbreaks of disease at the detention centers, including pneumonia and swine flu.
angelburst29, you quote a lot of sources, and the question that came up for me is how reliably are these sources? Have you verified them? Are they consistently accurate? For example, the quote above just doesn't sound right to me; my propaganda radar activated. I don't know if the swine flu was real, if there was an outbreak, and how anyone would know there was an outbreak.

Federal health authorities contain pneumonia, swine flu outbreaks among illegal children in California
_http://freebeacon.com/national-security/outbreak-on-the-border/

July 14, 2014 - Health authorities at a Navy base in Southern California took steps last weekend to curtail an outbreak of pneumonia and swine flu among illegal immigrant children housed at the facility, according to U.S. officials.

The outbreak of disease among several of the nearly 600 immigrant children at the Naval Base Ventura County, located north of Los Angeles, initially was thought to be caused by deadly bacterial streptococcal meningitis, according to one official close to the issue.

However, a spokesman for the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) said he was not aware of any cases of meningitis at the base.

Naval officials, along with HHS and Centers for Disease Control (CDC) officials, sought to block the disease outbreak by quarantines and halting transfers of children into and out of the facility.

Several of the children developed symptoms that included fever and were at first thought to be meningitis.

The swine flu case, discovered late last week, involved a 16-year-old Salvadoran boy who, like others at the facility, had been transferred recently from Nogales, Ariz.

The sick children were moved to local hospitals where they are being treated.


HHS spokesman Kenneth J. Wolfe said reports of respiratory illness at the naval base involved minors who had crossed the U.S.-Mexico border and who had been relocated.

“Preliminary reports indicate that several unaccompanied minors in the shelter had become ill with what appears to be pneumonia and influenza,” he said in a statement to the Free Beacon. The illnesses “likely pose little or no risk to the general public,” he added.

The arriving children have been screened at U.S. border stations for health problems and given medical treatment if needed, he said.

The boy who contracted swine flu was part of the flood of illegal immigrant children who have crossed the Mexican border into the United States over the past several months.

A U.S. official said that in addition to the Salvadoran youth treated for swine flu, another case of swine flu was detected in June at Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio, Texas. More than 1,000 immigrant children are being held at Lackland.


_http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Government/2014/07/17/Report-HHS-Sending-Illegals-with-Contagious-Diseases-to-States

July 17, 2014 - Children with fevers and pneumonia have been flown from Arizona to California, where they had to be hospitalized. Three other children are reportedly "in the ICU at local hospitals in California." And a "Ventura Naval Base suffered an outbreak of pneumonia and influenza among the unaccompanied minors inside the shelter" after illegal immigrant children with fevers, chicken pox, and the coxsackie virus were put on planes to the facility. In Texas, there have been at least two cases of swine flu confirmed.


_http://cancerincytes.scienceblog.com/2014/08/12/borderlands-children-health-vulnerabilities-of-immigrant-children-part-1/

August 12, 2014 - Dr. Mark Siegel, a professor of medicine at New York University’s Langone Medical Center, emphasizes that illegal immigration is a public health concern that requires medical attention to prevent possible emergent diseases from spreading. The risk is a compelling reason to urge the Centers for Disease Control to step in and add vigorous health screenings of immigrants to identify, contain and treat communicable diseases that have been detected in detainment states. Moreover, greater cases of drug-resistant TB and Dengue fever have appeared in the US near the border, and reports of measles, scabies, lice, strep throat and chicken pox have been issued from the temporary shelters. Several cases of pneumonia and swine flu (H1N1) have also been diagnosed among immigrant children.


_http://www.breitbart.com/Breitbart-Texas/2014/08/07/Feds-Bend-CDC-Rules-for-Sick-Illegal-Immigrants

August 7, 2014 - In some cases, Border Patrol agents and other Department of Homeland Security (DHS) staff have contracted diseases from infected migrants--many of whom are unaccompanied alien children (UAC)--in the U.S. illegally.

A DHS report issued last week stated, "Many UAC and family units require treatment for communicable diseases, including respiratory illnesses, tuberculosis, chicken pox, and scabies. DHS employees reported exposure to communicable diseases and becoming sick on duty. ... Two CBP Officers reported that their children were diagnosed with chicken pox within days of the CBP Officers' contact with a UAC who had chicken pox."

Agents have also been exposed to TB by the migrant population, according to the DHS report. Fox News recently reported that at least one Border Patrol agent contracted a "severe" case of TB from infected illegal immigrants who he was caring for.
 
Possible outbreak in Canada.

Enterovirus D-68 could be cause of surge of admissions at Ontario hospital
_http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/windsor/enterovirus-d-68-could-be-cause-of-surge-of-admissions-at-ontario-hospital-1.2766312

Monday September 15, 2014 - Windsor Regional Hospital in southwestern Ontario has seen a sudden surge of young patients with severe respiratory issues.

The children affected are mostly younger than five years old.

Windsor Regional Hospital

Musyj said staff are not sure if enterovirus D-68 is to blame — the virus is currently affecting thousands of children in the United States.

A blood test would be required to make that determination, Musyj said. He said he’s waiting on the province to decide whether blood tests should be administered.

There are concerns in other parts of Canada as well:

◾Saskatchewan’s chief medical health officer is advising parents to be aware of a respiratory virus that may be linked to dozens of cases of sick children in the U.S.

◾Alberta Health Services says it has seen a spike in “respiratory-related admissions” at the Alberta Children’s Hospital since the end of August.
 
This report is being distributed via the CDC Health Alert Network regarding a cluster of nine pediatric patients hospitalized with acute neurologic illness of undetermined etiology in Colorado.

_http://emergency.cdc.gov/han/han00370.asp

Friday Sept. 26, 2014 - The CDPHE, Children’s Hospital Colorado, and CDC are investigating nine cases of acute neurologic illness among pediatric patients. The cases were identified during August 9–September 17, 2014 among children aged 1–18 years (median age 10 years). Most of the children were from the Denver metropolitan area. All were hospitalized. Common features included acute focal limb weakness and specific findings on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the spinal cord consisting of non-enhancing lesions largely restricted to the gray matter. In most cases, these lesions spanned more than one level of the spinal cord. Some also had acute cranial nerve dysfunction with correlating non-enhancing brainstem lesions on MRI. None of the children experienced altered mental status or seizures. None had any cortical, subcortical, basal ganglia, or thalamic lesions on MRI. Most children reported a febrile respiratory illness in the two weeks preceding development of neurologic symptoms. In most cases, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) analyses demonstrated mild-moderate pleocytosis (increased cell count in the CSF) consistent with an inflammatory or infectious process. CSF testing to date has been negative for West Nile virus and enteroviruses, including poliovirus. Nasopharyngeal specimens were positive for rhinovirus/enterovirus in six out of eight patients that were tested. Of the six positive specimens, four were typed as EV-D68, and the other two are pending typing results. Testing of other specimens is still in process. Eight out of nine children have been confirmed to be up to date on polio vaccinations. Epidemiologic and laboratory investigations of these cases are ongoing.

The United States is currently experiencing a nationwide outbreak of EV-D68 associated with severe respiratory disease. The possible linkage of this cluster of neurologic disease to this large EV-D68 outbreak is part of the current investigation. CDC is seeking information about other similar neurologic illnesses in all states, especially cases clustered in time and place. CDC has particular interest in characterizing the epidemiology and etiology of such cases.
 
I live in Georgia and the young daughter of one of my co-workers got very sick with a respiratory ailment that started with some kind of stomach ailment/pain a day or two before. He said the doctor thought it might be the entero virus but I never heard if they did any official tests or not. It took her about 7 days from the start to recover.
 
angelburst29 said:
This report is being distributed via the CDC Health Alert Network regarding a cluster of nine pediatric patients hospitalized with acute neurologic illness of undetermined etiology in Colorado.

_http://emergency.cdc.gov/han/han00370.asp

Friday Sept. 26, 2014 - The CDPHE, Children’s Hospital Colorado, and CDC are investigating nine cases of acute neurologic illness among pediatric patients. The cases were identified during August 9–September 17, 2014 among children aged 1–18 years (median age 10 years). Most of the children were from the Denver metropolitan area. All were hospitalized. Common features included acute focal limb weakness and specific findings on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the spinal cord consisting of non-enhancing lesions largely restricted to the gray matter. In most cases, these lesions spanned more than one level of the spinal cord. Some also had acute cranial nerve dysfunction with correlating non-enhancing brainstem lesions on MRI. None of the children experienced altered mental status or seizures. None had any cortical, subcortical, basal ganglia, or thalamic lesions on MRI. Most children reported a febrile respiratory illness in the two weeks preceding development of neurologic symptoms. In most cases, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) analyses demonstrated mild-moderate pleocytosis (increased cell count in the CSF) consistent with an inflammatory or infectious process. CSF testing to date has been negative for West Nile virus and enteroviruses, including poliovirus. Nasopharyngeal specimens were positive for rhinovirus/enterovirus in six out of eight patients that were tested. Of the six positive specimens, four were typed as EV-D68, and the other two are pending typing results. Testing of other specimens is still in process. Eight out of nine children have been confirmed to be up to date on polio vaccinations. Epidemiologic and laboratory investigations of these cases are ongoing.

The United States is currently experiencing a nationwide outbreak of EV-D68 associated with severe respiratory disease. The possible linkage of this cluster of neurologic disease to this large EV-D68 outbreak is part of the current investigation. CDC is seeking information about other similar neurologic illnesses in all states, especially cases clustered in time and place. CDC has particular interest in characterizing the epidemiology and etiology of such cases.

I wonder if this is associated with vaccines too - but I guess we won't benable to find out, the CDC not being very forthcoming in this respect.
 
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