Rabies and Spelunking: An important query
Thomas E. Simms
tes at fdadr.cdrh.fda.gov
Fri Mar 15 09:31:00 EST 1996
A colleague, who is a spelunker, offers the following:
Following the 1994 NSS (National Speleological Society) Convention
in Brackettville, TX, a cluster of acute histoplasmosis among
cavers was documented. Most had explored 2 caves that had a
narrow tunnel crawl. This was reported by CDC investigators in a
poster session at 35th ICAAC.
Believe the poster may have referred to other types of agents
potentially aerosolized. The authors, D.A. Ashford, R.A. Hajjeh,
M.F. Kelley et al, may have further information. There are also
several bulletin boards and newsgroups directed toward the caving
community that may be a useful source of information for your
purposes (e.g., cavers at orion.ditell.com); also there is a web site
that connects to all the caving related pages
(http//hum.amu.edu.pl/~sgp/spec/links.html) including the NSS
homepage.
Tom Simms FFFF DDD A
TES at FDADR.CDRH.FDA.GOV F D D A A
Biologist, Microbiology Branch FFFF D D AAAAA
DCLD, ODE, CDRH, FDA, HHS F D D A A
F DDD A A
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Disclaimer:
The preceding comments are personal opinion and are not meant to
express the policies of the FDA.
*****************************************************************
In article <4i3f8c$ad8 at melon.myna.com>, burris at myna.com wrote:
|:>Does anyone out there have any recent epidemiological information on rabies
being transmitted to spelunkers via
|:>inhalation of aerosoled virus?
|:>
|:>I am particularly interested in confirmed cases of rabies contracted by
travellers who had previously
|:>explored caves in Mexico\US that are known to be bat roosting habitats.
|:>
|:>Hope you can help?
|:>
|:>Burris
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