CDC warns of potential outbreak of rare, life-threatening condition in children
The polio-like illness tends to spike every two years, according to the CDC, which has tracked the data since 2014
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The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) issued a warning to parents and clinicians Tuesday that a rare polio-like condition that affects children could appear this year.
The agency said it is preparing for a possible outbreak of acute flaccid myelitis (AFM), a life-threatening condition that affects the nervous system, specifically the area of the spinal cord called the gray matter, according to the CDC.
WHY WE DON'T KNOW MORE ABOUT RARE POLIO-LIKE ILLNESS
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The condition typically causes arm or leg weakness but can lead to paralysis over the course of a few hours or days and requiring one in four hospitalized children to rely on a mechanical ventilator to help them breathe, according to the CDC. In some cases, patients may become permanently disabled, the agency said.
The polio-like illness tends to spike every two years, according to the CDC, which has tracked the data since 2014. That means cases may spike amid the coronavirus pandemic, which has already infected more than 4.7 million Americans.
POLIO-LIKE ILLNESS THAT PARALYZES CHILDREN MAY BE CAUSED BY VIRAL INFECTION: STUDY
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"Clinicians need to remain vigilant for AFM and promptly evaluate patients even as frontline health care workers, family, physicians and other medical professionals continue to work under the constraints of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic," CDC Director Dr. Robert Redfield said. "While phone and telemedicine can be used for initial evaluations, AFM is a medical emergency that requires immediate medical care and monitoring, as this condition can progress rapidly to respiratory failure."
Clinicians should look out for AFM in patients experiencing sudden limb weakness, especially during the months of August through November. Furthermore, "respiratory illness or fever and the presence of neck or back pain or any neurological symptoms should heighten the clinicians’ concern," he said.
However, Redfield said it is still unclear how the pandemic and social distancing measures may affect the circulation of the illness.
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"AFM cases may be fewer this year or the outbreak delayed," he said. "But we know this, that AFM is a public health priority."
In 2018, the U.S. faced the third and largest outbreak of AFM with 238 confirmed cases in 42 states, according to Dr. Tom Clark, a pediatrician and deputy director of the Division of Viral Diseases.
Most cases were in young children around the age of 5 years old. AFM developed primarily in patients from August through November.
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