Connect with us

Health

In pics | Bubonic plague in China: Here’s all you need to know – ClickLancashire

Published

on

ADVERTISEMENT

Chinese authorities stepped up precautions after an Inner Mongolian city, Bayan Nur, confirmed a case of bubonic plague. It is not yet known how and why the patient got infected by the plague. This includes hunting, consuming, and handling of tissue of the infected animals.
Amid COVID-19 outbreak that has brought the world’s major economies to their knees, fear of another pandemic has created a panic in China after a suspected case of bubonic plaguewas reported on Sunday. They also asked residents to report sick or dead marmots.
Chinese news agency Xinhua recently reported a case of what is believed to be the bubonic plague. It is characterized by painful swollen lymph nodes or “buboes”.
It’s typically transmitted by fleas, which are infected by rodents.
The scary part is, even Bubonic plague can explode, and it has in the past.
The World Health Organization (WHO) says that people with the infection often develop symptoms after an incubation period of one to seven days.
A photo from 1900 of rat catchers at Darling Harbour in Sydney during one of the last outbreaks of bubonic plague in Australia.
Infectious droplets. Cough droplets in the air of a contaminated person can cause pneumonic plague.
A few cases of bubonic plague occur every year in modern times, particularly in Mongolia and northern China. The bacteria multiply in the lymph node closest to where the bacteria entered the human body.
Antibiotics are used to treat the disease and reduce the risk of transmission within 48 hours. During that time more than 50 milliondeaths were reported in Europe. If the infection is confirmed, then this case will be the third in a week. In 2017, there were more than 300 cases in Madagascar with a study in medical journal The Lancet confirming less than 30 people died as a result.
In May 2019, two people in Mongolia died from the plague, which they contracted after eating the raw meat of a marmot, the same type of rodent the 15-year-old came into contact with.
Some Chinese health officials and worldwide experts have downplayed the danger of G4, noting that it has been circulating for years without causing an outbreak in humans.
“Unlike in the 14th Century, we now have an understanding of how this disease is transmitted”. When left untreated, bubonic plague can become septicemic or pneumonic.
Four plague cases have been detected in the Inner Mongolia region since November.

Click here to view the original article.

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Advertisement

Trending