Health
Related: About this forumThe potentially deadly Candida auris fungus is spreading quickly in the U.S.
https://www.npr.org/2023/03/21/1164912425/candida-auris-yeast-fungus-cdc-spreadMarch 21, 20232:12 AM ET
By Ayana Archie
The fungus Candida auris is becoming a more dangerous public health care threat, as the number of drug-resistant cases jumped in 2021, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Monday.
The fungus is resistant to several antifungal medications, but the CDC said it is not seen as a threat to healthy people. Still, the national public health agency is calling C. auris an urgent threat because of its resistance to medications. It can cause serious illness and death in people who are already sick, use invasive medical devices or have long or frequent stays at health care facilities.
About 30% to 60% of infected people have died from the yeast, though that is "based on information from a limited number of patients," the CDC said.
"The rapid rise and geographic spread of cases is concerning and emphasizes the need for continued surveillance, expanded lab capacity, quicker diagnostic tests, and adherence to proven infection prevention and control," CDC epidemiologist Dr. Meghan Lyman said.
[...]
hlthe2b
(106,238 posts)supply for several years (major unrelated fungal outbreak in India and supply chain issues).
And then there are resistance issues...
Many of the classes of antifungals may still work (Amphotericin B, Fluconazole and other triazoles, and the Echinocandin class drugs) but at levels that dramatically increase toxicity. That said some isolates have been found to be highly resistant to all three classes removing any remaining options.
Research on new antifungal drugs has languished, not only because of the pandemic COVID and other emerging viruses but because of the critical nature of bacterial resistance requiring a considerable emphasis on creating new antibacterial agents.
And THIS, at a time when we have such anti-science attitudes in Congress that $$$ for R&D at NIH and through grants to academic centers is quite an uphill battle.
Those of us in medicine see the acuity of the problem but will anyone listen?
orthoclad
(4,728 posts)We'll likely ignore it until it passes the exponential knee and becomes unavoidable, much like covid or global heating.
appalachiablue
(42,869 posts)czarjak
(12,394 posts)GenXer47
(1,204 posts)I'm just gonna be grateful for each day and not make any more plans in life.
orthoclad
(4,728 posts)C. auris developed the ability to tolerate human body temperatures and thus became dangerous. Research gives evidence that this is because it evolved to cope with global heating:
https://journals.asm.org/doi/10.1128/mbio.01397-19
See also https://democraticunderground.com/1127160590
One more consequence of petrochemical mining.
sl8
(16,245 posts)The DU link gives me a '403' error, though.
orthoclad
(4,728 posts)"More good climate news: fungus"