[leish-l] Baghdad Boil --

modabberf at who.int modabberf at who.int
Fri Dec 12 14:18:26 BRST 2003


It actually goes way beyond that, as early as 14-15th century - even I was
not around then!
Farrokh Modabber 

-----Original Message-----
From: leish-l-admin at fat.org.br [mailto:leish-l-admin at fat.org.br]On
Behalf Of Jennie Blackwell
Sent: Monday, 8 December 2003 11:01
To: Peter Singfield
Cc: leish-l at fat.org.br
Subject: Re: [leish-l] Baghdad Boil --


Te name Bagdad Boil has been used for cutatneous leishmaniasis in Iraq
and in text books for as long as I've been thinking about leishmaniasis,
which is 30 years!

On Fri, 5 Dec 2003, Peter Singfield wrote:

>
> New name for cutaneous Leishmaniasis??
>
> Baghdad Boil' disease afflicts 148 GIs in Iraq
>
> 05.12.2003 [17:15]
>
>
> Nearly 150 U.S. soldiers in Iraq have been diagnosed with a parasitic skin
> disease and hundreds more could unknowingly be infected, doctors reported
> Thursday.
>
> Doctors fear that soldiers returning from the front may consult doctors in
> the United States who have never seen the disease. Complicating matters:
> The best drug used to treat it is not licensed in the United States.
>
> Leishmaniasis, which soldiers have coined the "Baghdad Boil," is carried
by
> biting sand flies and doesn't spread from person to person. It causes skin
> lesions that if untreated may take months, even years, to heal. The
lesions
> can be disfiguring, doctors say.
>
> So far, 148 soldiers have confirmed cases, but hundreds more are expected,
> says Army Lt. Col. Russell Coleman, an entomologist who spent 10 months in
> Iraq with the 520th Theater Army Medical Laboratory. He reported the
> outbreak Thursday to the American Society of Tropical Medicine and
Hygiene,
> meeting in Philadelphia.
>
> Sand flies are active during warm weather, and soon after U.S. troops
> arrived in Iraq in late March, "we started seeing soldiers basically eaten
> alive," Coleman says. "They'd get a hundred, in some cases 1,000 bites in
a
> single night."
>
> Insect repellents and bed nets are standard issue, Coleman says, but many
> units failed to pack them when they were deployed.
>
> The sand flies have vanished with the cooler weather in Iraq, but because
> of a long incubation period, lesions may not appear for six months or
> longer after infection occurs. Coleman and Army Lt. Col. Peter Weina, a
> leishmaniasis expert still in Iraq, predicted in April that there would be
> 400 cases.
>
> All affected soldiers are being sent to Walter Reed Army Medical Center in
> Washington, D.C., to be treated with the drug Pentosam.
>
>
>  USA Today
>
> Article found at:
>
> http://www1.iraqwar.ru/iraq-read_article.php?articleId=28318&lang=en
>
>
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Jenefer M. Blackwell
Glaxo Professor for Molecular Parasitology
Cambridge Institute for Medical Research
Wellcome Trust/MRC Building
Addenbrooke's Hospital
Hills Road
Cambridge CB2 2XY

Telephone: +44 1223 336947
Secretary: Denise Schofield +44 1223 762812
Fax: +44 1223 331206
Email: jennie.blackwell at cimr.cam.ac.uk


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