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    News and Articles on Q fever



    Blame Your Genes: Some People Eight Times More Likely To Suffer From Prolonged Illness With Infection  Dec 10, 2008
    9, 2008) People with certain high-risk gene combinations* are eight times more likely to suffer from a severe and prolonged illness when they have an infection, according to UNSW researchers. This group of people is significantly more likely to have an intense illness during the acute stage of an infection when fever, aches and pain strike to signal the start of the body s immune response. (Science Daily)

    Blame your genes for lengthy illness  Dec 1, 2008
    It analysed differences in immune response among 300 people diagnosed with acute glandular fever, Ross River virus or Q fever infections in the central western NSW town of Dubbo. Researchers looked at the genetic variants of five cytokines, protein hormone messengers of the immune system which defend against infection. (The Age)

    Creating security risks  Aug 12, 2008
    In 2006, researchers at Texas A&M were exposed to brucellosis and Q fever. As an investigator for the Government Accountability Office reported to Congress last fall, the greater number of researchers handling bioweapons agents has increased the risk of such accidents. (International Herald Tribune -- Ed/Op)

    Anthrax case raises issues about risk level  Aug 4, 2008
    Later, three researchers at the same lab were infected with Q fever, another cattle-borne disease that can cause serious but generally not fatal illness in humans. After the two incidents belatedly became public, federal officials temporarily shut down the laboratory, citing a series of safety shortcomings, like unapproved experiments and staff members given access to the dangerous agents even though they had not been approved to handle them. (San Francisco Chronicle)

    CDC suffers power failure  Jul 13, 2008
    May 25, 2007: Nine workers were tested for possible exposure to Q fever, a bioterror agent, after a ventilation system in Building 18 malfunctioned and pulled potentially contaminated air into a "clean" corridor ... Duct tape now seals the Q fever BSL-3 lab door in what CDC says is an added precaution until a new door is installed. (Atlanta Journal-Constitution)

    Thompson: Biotech still an achievable dream  Jun 29, 2008
    Your Connection to the. Web Search powered by YAHOO. (Athens Banner-Herald)

    CDC action at germ lab questioned  Jun 23, 2008
    Nine CDC workers were tested in May 2007 for potential exposure to the Q fever bacteria being studied in the lab, CDC officials said this week in response to questions from The Atlanta Journal-Constitution ... Q fever, which causes high fevers and sometimes fatal heart problems, is most commonly spread when humans inhale bacteria-laden dust from contaminated animal waste ... The CDC Q fever lab's air containment systems have since worked properly, agency officials said; the lab is safe and poses... (Atlanta Journal-Constitution -- Travel)

    Questions arise over CDC germ lab  Jun 22, 2008
    Q fever is a disease caused by the bacteria Coxiella burnetii ... Only about half the people infected with Q fever will show signs of illness, such as high fevers that last a week or two, severe headaches, confusion, nausea, pneumonia and chest pain ... Only about 1 percent to 2 percent of people with acute Q fever die from it. (Atlanta Journal-Constitution)

    Legionnaire Microbe's Tricks Discovered  Jun 21, 2008
    "Because of their life style, trying to identify how these organisms cause disease has been really difficult,'' said Craig Roy, professor at the Yale School of Medicine in the section of microbial pathogenesis. Roy and his group described one innovative way the organisms inflict their damage with impunity. Some gram-negative pathogens such as Legionella pneumophila, and Coxiella burnetii, the cause of Q fever, actually secrete proteins into eukaryotic cells, or cells with a nucleus. But exactly... (Science Daily)

    Vets question chemical tests  Jun 12, 2008
    During the tests, conducted amid Cold War concerns about Russia's weapons capabilities, the military tested germs such as bacteria that could cause tularemia and Q fever, serious diseases more commonly found in animals. Also used were nonlethal simulated agents, including E. coli, now known to pose health dangers. (Pocatello Idaho State Journal, ID)

    Q Fever makes an appearance  May 31, 2008
    REGIONAL -- Local health officials are cautioning local residents about the presence of Q Fever in the community, as several patients have been identified and treated through Myrtue Medical Center. "Recently, several cases of Q Fever have been identified in our area, and we would like to provide some information about the disease and sources of additional information," said Myrtue Medical Center Community Health Director Vickie Gillespie ... Q Fever is caused by bacteria, which can not only be... (Harlan Tribune, IA)

    The Causes of Infection  Apr 16, 2008
    Examples of illnesses caused by rickettsia are typhus and Q fever. Chlamydia are responsible for a common form of sexually transmitted disease. (Suite101.com)

    New Technique Will Speed The Development Of Vaccines, Study Shows  Mar 28, 2008
    She is using it to screen proteins from Coxiella, a bacterium that causes Q fever and is considered a possible bioterrorism threat. If you have the genome, you don t have to touch the organism. (Science Daily)

    Group sues to halt Livermore microbe research  Mar 15, 2008
    The new Biosafety lab, first planned in 2002, is designed so scientists can work with living microbes that cause anthrax, bubonic plague, Q fever, tularemia and many others - all agents that bio-warfare experts believe terrorists might use in attacks on American population centers. The Livermore scientists are using the dangerous organisms in an effort to devise rapid tests to detect their presence if terrorists ever do release them, and also to develop effective countermeasures against them. (San Francisco Chronicle -- Science)

    Report: Rare Q Fever Killed 2 in Nevada, Infected 8...  Mar 4, 2008
    Report: Rare Q Fever Killed 2 in Nevada, Infected 8 Total ... A rare bacterial disease known as Q fever is turning up in a rural northern Nevada county that also is home to a childhood leukemia cluster, according to a published report ... The Reno Gazette-Journal reported Saturday that Nevada had eight reported cases of Q fever in 2007, six of them in Churchill County. (Fox News)

    Feds laud state health lab  Feb 29, 2008
    A biosafety level 3 facility can work with potentially airborne microorganisms that pose high risk of infection, including tuberculosis, certain types of encephalitis and the bacterium that causes Q fever. It has tight access restrictions and protection requirements. (Honolulu Star-Bulletin)

    A&M Regents OK $1 Million Payment To Restart Biodefense Program  Feb 27, 2008
    One worker became infected with Brucella in 2006 and three others were exposed to Q fever. Both diseases are rarely fatal in humans, but can cause high fever and flulike symptoms. (KWTX.com, TX)

    Staff begins moving into Rocky Mountain Labs addition  Feb 24, 2008
    There they study diseases like plague, tularemia, Q fever and Rocky Mountain spotted fever ... In the 20th century, the causes for Rocky Mountain spotted fever, Q fever and Lyme disease were not only discovered at Rocky Mountain Laboratories, but the bacterium was named for the Rocky Mountain Laboratories' scientists, Bloom said. (Missoulian, MT)

    Local student learns at Centers for Disease Control  Feb 8, 2008
    After graduation from BVU, Nicole took a position as an Emerging Infectious Diseases training fellow in the Q Fever laboratory at the CDC. Last month, Nicole started another fellowship and is working in the Special Pathogens Branch at the CDC and has plans to eventually pursue a graduate degree. Storm Lake Pilot Tribune 2008. (Storm Lake Pilot Tribune, IA)

    Hepatitis C Top Illness to Sicken County  Jan 23, 2008
    A case of Q fever also was confirmed in 2007. There were no reports of the tick-borne illness in 2006. (Missourian Publishing, MO)

    High Number of Two Food-Borne Illnesses Reported  Nov 6, 2007
    Retailers are hanging up their Christmas decorations, but families are still putting away their pumpkins. When does the Christmas season begin for your family. (Missourian Publishing, MO)

    Ecologists Uncover Links Between Fever And Living Fast, Dying Young  Nov 2, 2007
    1, 2007) Fever is an effective defence against disease, but new research suggests that not all animals use it when exposed to infection. The study, published online in the British Ecological Society's journal Functional Ecology, found large differences in fever responses among closely related species of mice and suggests that an animal's reproductive strategy could explain some of this intriguing variation. (Science Daily)

    How Safe Are Our Bio-Labs?  Oct 9, 2007
    The CDC then dispatched investigators who uncovered a host of other violations, including unauthorized experiments, failure to report three other infections of Q fever, failure to have all technicians vetted by the FBI, and missing pathogens and infected animals. "Unfortunately, the CDC's August investigation revealed not only shortcomings on Texas Art, but also shortcomings on the part of CDC's own oversight," said Bart Stupak, chairman of the House Oversight and Investigations Committee. (Time.com)

    Deadly Germ Labs Unchecked  Oct 5, 2007
    The major known cover-up came at Texas Are lab officials failed to report worker exposures to Brucella bacteria and Q fever. One worker became seriously ill but recovered. (CBS News)

    CDC pledges stepped-up scrutiny for germ labs  Oct 5, 2007
    The Sunshine Project, through the Texas open records law, discovered not only the Brucella infection but the exposure of three other workers to the agent that causes Q fever, a virulent but uncommon infection linked to another bacterium. Dr. Richard Besser, the CDC's antiterrorism coordinator, told the House hearing that the agency is looking to improve its inspection program. (Boston Globe)

    Mishandling of germs on rise at U.S. labs  Oct 5, 2007
    Texas Aboratory failed to report, until this year, one case of a lab worker's infection from Brucella bacteria last year and three others' previous infection with Q fever - missteps documented in news reports earlier this year. The illnesses are characterized by high fevers and flu-like symptoms that sometimes cause more serious complications. (Herald Online, SC -- Health)

    CDC Considers Increased Lab Scrutiny  Oct 5, 2007
    " The CDC inspects high-security research laboratories once every three years, although there are additional inspections when an accident is reported or a lab changes its research. Rep. Bart Stupak, D-Mich., chairman of the House Energy and Commerce investigations subcommittee, said CDC inspectors who visited the Texas A&M lab last year - shortly after a worker was exposed to Brucella bacteria - didn't catch the problem. The lab was required to report the exposure to the government immediately,... (Tampa Bay Online, FL -- News)

    More than 100 incidents reported at labs handling deadly germs  Oct 2, 2007
    At Texas A&M, officials failed to report until this year one case of a lab worker's infection from Brucella bacteria last year and the previous infection of 3 others with Q fever. The increase in accidents is raising concerns about the oversight and procedures at high-security labs. (KSLA.com, LA)

    CDC Inspections Didnt Find Most Serious Problems At A&M  Sep 26, 2007
    KWTX.COM Most Popular. The Supreme Court says it will rule on whether execution by lethal injection is constitutional. (KWTX.com, TX)

    Texas teen battles back from mystery illness  Sep 23, 2007
    dozen or more possible explanations Rocky Mountain spotted fever, West Nile virus, Legionnaires disease, Lyme disease, Q fever, tuberculosis, adenovirus, hantavirus and more. As long as it s not the hantavirus, we ll be OK, Bob tells Donna. (KHOU.com, TX)

    Outbreak of Q fever investigated  Sep 21, 2007
    Q fever tends to be more common around the lambing season. An outbreak of a rare illness called Q Fever, which is caught from infected livestock, is being investigated in the Cheltenham area ... Epidemiologist Dr Deirdre Lewis said: "Q fever is generally a mild infection but we know that it can cause complications, so we've been keen to look into this as thoroughly as we can. "We've not had any reported cases of Q fever in Gloucestershire residents since 2002, so seeing 28, mostly from the... (BBC News -- Health)

    Cue a mystery as Q fever strikes 28  Sep 21, 2007
    A rare but highly infectious outbreak of Q fever is being investigated after health officials confirmed that 28 people in Gloucestershire had contracted the bug, which is spread by livestock ... Contact with livestock or animal products is often enough to catch Q fever, although it is dangerous only in a few cases ... GPs across the area have been asked to consider Q fever when testing any patients who show pneumonia-like symptoms. (Guardian Unlimited)

    CDC lab in disease scare upgraded  Sep 15, 2007
    None of the employees contracted Q fever, an animal disease that can cause high fevers in humans, but the preliminary scare was real enough that all 10 were given both an initial and follow-up blood test, officials said ... "It was limited to only those folks who were in that adjacent space next to the Q fever lab." ... Mechanical failures were also to blame in the Q fever lab. (Atlanta Journal-Constitution -- World)

    A&M President Promises To Fix Bioweapons Lab Problems  Sep 7, 2007
    The inspections came after one worker was infected last year with Brucella and three others were exposed to Q fever. Both diseases are highly contagious in animals and rarely fatal in humans. (KWTX.com, TX)

    Feds Wont Allow A&M To Resume Research On Toxic Agents  Sep 5, 2007
    The CDC has been investigating practices and conditions at the labs after one worker became infected last year with Brucella and three others were exposed to Q fever. More Stories. (KWTX.com, TX)

    Government Won't Let A&M Do Some Toxins Research  Sep 5, 2007
    The agency, part of the federal Department of Health and Human Services, has been investigating practices and conditions at the labs after one worker became infected last year with Brucella and three others were exposed to Q fever. Both diseases, highly contagious in animals, are rarely fatal in humans but can cause high fever and flulike symptoms. (CBS 11, TX)

    CDC publishes investigation report, warns Texas A&M of indefinite ban  Sep 5, 2007
    Since April, CDC officials have been investigating an Aent researcher, who was exposed to Brucella, while cleaning a lab cage, and three researchers, who were exposed to Q fever, both of which are CDC-listed bioterrorism agents. The University could face a funding suspension or up to $500,000 in fines for failing to report the cases. (The Battalion, TX)

    CDC reprimands Texas A&M over lab safety  Sep 5, 2007
    The CDC report doesn't indicate whether the university will face a penalty for failing to report one lab worker's infection with Brucella and three others' exposure to Q fever last year ... At least seven cases where Texas A&M allowed unauthorized access to select agents, including Brucella and Q fever ... Around that same time, three other researchers received blood tests that showed they had elevated levels of Q fever antibodies, indicating they had been exposed. (KHOU.com, TX)

    Infectious bacteria, viruses live in local labs  Aug 25, 2007
    According to media reports, internal records showed that three lab workers were exposed to Q fever and one became ill after being infected with brucella, both livestock diseases that can infect humans. In 2004, researchers at the Children's Hospital Research Institute in Oakland injected live anthrax from a lab in Maryland into mice. (North County Times)

    Pathogens prevalent in unpasteurized milk  Aug 21, 2007
    Although Coxiella probably doesn't survive the human digestive process, and more than 50 percent of Coxiella seroconversions in humans are asymptomatic, C. burnetii can, nonetheless, cause Q fever in humans. Dr. Gibbons-Burgener noted that in 2004, an elderly Wisconsin dairy farmer developed acute Q fever after assisting with calving ... Q fever is characterized by the sudden onset of one or more of the following symptoms: high fever, severe headache, general malaise, muscle soreness, confusion,... (Scientific American)

    Biolabs, CDC get Congress' attention  Aug 8, 2007
    Davis cited two lab accidents at Texas Aersity that resulted in exposing staff to Brucella and to Q fever. He noted the university waited a year to alert CDC, which has suspended government research on bioterrorism agents there while it investigates. (Atlanta Journal-Constitution)

    Vice president for research resigns after CDC investigation  Aug 3, 2007
    CDC officials were back on campus in June investigating three researchers exposed to Q fever, another CDC-listed bioterrorism agent. Ewing will return to the Department of Mathematics to resume his post of tenured professor. (The Battalion, TX)

    Elderly woman dies of rare fever  Jul 30, 2007
    She was one of five people from the Riverland town of Waikerie to contract Q fever over the past few months, the outbreak linked to a local goat abattoir. All those involved lived near the abattoir. (NEWS.com.au)

    Chronic fatigue syndrome finally gains official respect  Jul 19, 2007
    Studies have linked the onset of chronic fatigue syndrome with an acute bout of Lyme disease, Q fever, Ross River virus, parvovirus, mononucleosis and other infectious diseases. "It's unlikely that this big cluster of people who fit the symptoms all have the same triggers," said Kimberly McCleary, president of the Chronic Fatigue and Immune Dysfunction Syndrome Association of America, the advocacy group in charge of the CDC-sponsored awareness campaign. (International Herald Tribune)

    A&M loses bid for biodefense site  Jul 13, 2007
    The CDC's investigation stemmed from two unreported cases of exposure in 2006 when researchers came in contact with the biological agents brucella and Q Fever. Regulations require incidents to be reported within a week, but Anistrators didn't report the exposures until this past spring. (The Battalion, TX)

    Chronic Fatigue: Clues In The Blood  Jul 9, 2007
    Since 1999, the team has been tracking the long-term health of individuals infected with Ross River virus (RRV), Q fever infection and Epstein-Barr virus, which causes glandular fever. These [35] genes might point to the nature of the disease process that underlies CFS, which is currently unknown, said Professor Lloyd, who is based in the School of Medical Sciences at UNSW. None of them are ones that I would have predicted, except for those relating to neurotransmitters, he concedes. (Science Daily)

    Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Is Linked to Genes, Infection, Researchers Find  Jul 6, 2007
    His team of researchers will extend their investigation to determine whether the same genes may be associated with chronic fatigue following bouts of infections such as Ross River virus and Q fever. Infectious mononucleosis is known as glandular fever in Australia and the U.K.. (Bloomberg -- Canada)

    Plague of Bioweapons Accidents Afflict U.S.  Jul 6, 2007
    The Q fever incident took place at Texas Aersity, which has now been while an investigation takes place ... And he claims Texas Acials have said they now regret reporting the Q fever incident. (Newsmax)

    Gene cluster linked to chronic fatigue  Jul 5, 2007
    The work was part of a larger project tracking the long-term health of people infected by three infections - the mosquito borne Ross River virus, Q fever bacterial infection and Epstein-Barr virus, which causes glandular fever - in the central NSW city of Dubbo. Prof Lloyd said the findings were the tentative beginnings of better understanding the disease. (Melbourne Herald Sun)

    Texas A&M says communication lapsed in bioagent case  Jul 4, 2007
    In the other case, three researchers tested positive for exposure to the weapons agent Q fever in April 2006. Davis said he disagrees with the CDC's interpretation of federal reporting guidelines in the Q fever case, which resulted in no illness. (Houston Chronicle)

    Biodefence work halted at US university  Jul 4, 2007
    Texas A&M records recently obtained by the Sunshine Project, a biodefence watchdog based in Austin, Texas, reveal that in April 2006 three workers showed signs of exposure to Coxiella burnetii, a bacterium carried in livestock that causes Q fever in humans ... Speaking in a press conference on Monday, Texas A&M interim president Eddie Davis said the delayed reporting of the Brucella exposure was an administrative mistake, and the Q fever positives resulted from testing beyond CDC requirements. (Nature News Service)

    Post the First Comment  Jul 4, 2007
    Interim President Eddie J. Davis said the brucella and Q fever exposures were never a threat to public health outside the laboratories ... The CDC suspended Ameland security-related research Saturday, following recent investigations involving exposure to bioterrorism agents brucella and Q fever ... The Q fever investigation was sparked by Sunshine Project Director Edward Hammond's allegations that Aed to report the Q fever exposure while the CDC was on campus investigating the brucella incident.... (The Battalion, TX)

    OSU's 'nuke' a local cause for concern  Jul 3, 2007
    The Sunshine Project has reported that Three Texas Aersity biodefense researchers were infected with the biological weapons agent Q Fever in 2006. but Texas Acials did not report (the incident) to the Centers For Disease Control, as required by law. (Corvallis Gazette Times, OR)

    CDC halts bioweapon research at Texas A&M  Jul 3, 2007
    Brucella and Q fever are included in the ban ... The CDC was on campus last week investigating three researchers exposed to Q fever ... The e-mails reported a call made by Scott and White Health Clinic informing the occupational health program that three individuals from Professor James E. Samuel's lab had come in contact with Q fever. (U-Wire.com)

    CDC suspends Texas A&M bioweapons research  Jul 2, 2007
    Three researchers tested positive for exposure to the weapons agent Q fever in April 2006, two months after another researcher fell ill from contact with the another agent, Brucella. The diseases are rarely fatal in humans but can cause high fevers and flulike symptoms. (KSLA.com, LA)

    CDC investigates A&M  Jun 29, 2007
    Texas Ance again under investigation by the Center for Disease Control after three Aarchers were infected with Q fever, a CDC-listed bioterrorism agent ... CDC officials said Tuesday in The Dallas Morning News that they still haven't received documentation on the Q fever case ... The late brucella report and missing Q fever report are "part of what we're investigating," the CDC's Von Roebuck said in The News. (The Battalion, TX)

    Cases of Hepatitis C Disease Continue to Increase in County  Jun 28, 2007
    One case each of Rocky Mountain spotted fever and Q fever have been reported so far this year ... Q fever causes headache, malaise, nausea, vomiting and diarrhea. (Missourian Publishing, MO)

    More news reports...  Jun 28, 2007
    Texas Ance again under investigation by the Center for Disease Control after three Aarchers were infected with Q fever, a CDC-listed bioterrorism agent. . (The Battalion, TX)

    Health Department reports rise in tick-borne diseases  Jun 22, 2007
    Moehr said the cases reported in Jasper County have been lyme disease, ehrlichiosis, Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever and Q fever, an illness that can be spread by ticks, but can also be spread by cattle. Moehr said the tick has to attach itself to a person and remain attached for a long period of time before the person is in danger of catching a tick-borne disease. (Carthage Press, MO)

    Rare fever sickens three in Riverland  Jun 21, 2007
    The South Australian Health Department said a small cluster of people had been diagnosed with Q fever in the Riverland town of Waikerie since early April. SA Communicable Diseases Control Branch director Ann Koehler said three people had been diagnosed with the fever with another probable case expected. (Sydney Morning Herald -- Australia)

    Reports of Tick-Borne Illnesses Continue to Rise in County, State  Jun 9, 2007
    There have been three Lyme-like disease cases, three Rocky Mountain spotted fever cases and one Q fever case reported in the county ... Q fever is a mild infection spread from infected animals to humans ... People infected with Q fever usually have no symptoms or experience an acute viral infection similar to influenza. (Missourian Publishing, MO)

    Cattle council backs Q fever vaccine plant  May 18, 2007
    The Cattle Council of Australia has welcomed the start of work to build a new plant to produce the Q fever vaccine ... Q fever is caused by contact with livestock. (ABC News Online, Australia -- Health)

    Melbourne lab to research Q fever vaccine  May 17, 2007
    The future production of a vaccine for the debilitating disease Q fever is now more secure ... Q fever primarily affects meat and livestock industry workers, and has caused a number of deaths ... "Q fever is a very big problem in Australia and the vaccination is considered the most preferable way for meat workers to protect themselves against it," she said. (ABC News Online, Australia)

    Discovery Could Lead To Better Control Of Hemorrhagic Fever Viruses  Feb 13, 2007
    (November 20, 2006) -- Clinical signs and pathological changes in guinea pigs following an aerosol challenge with acute Q fever were similar to those seen in human acute Q fever indicating an effective animal model of. . (Science Daily)


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