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West Nile Virus Spreads

Worldwide mosquitoes transmit various diseases to more than 700 000 000. people annually and will be responsible for the deaths of 1 of every 17 people currently alive! "CDC August 2002"

During the summer of 1999, several mysterious deaths due to encephalitis in the New York area, prompted officials at the CDC to investigate. Many dead birds (crows and blue jays) had also been reported in the same area just before the human deaths. Soon West Nile Virus was confirmed to be the cause of death in the birds and humans.

West Nile Virus causes encephalitis (inflammation of the brain). It is carried by birds which have been infected through mosquito bites. The virus is located in the mosquito's salivary glands. During blood feeding, the virus may be injected into the animal or human, where it may multiply causing illness and death. Once an infected bird migrates, then is bitten by mosquitoes in the new area, these newly infected mosquitoes can then transmit the disease to humans and other animals. West Nile virus, had been found in humans, birds and other vertebrates in Africa, Eastern Europe, West Asia, and the Middle East, but until 1999 had not been documented in the Western Hemisphere.

It is not known from where the U.S. virus originated, but it is genetically, most closely related to strains found in the Middle East. Some believe it was brought here by migrating birds, or maybe even the diabolical intentional release of infected birds! However it got here, West Nile Virus appears to be firmly established in the United States, and researchers expect its continued spread like wild fire throughout the states.

As of August 5, 2002, state health departments have released information on 90 cases of West Nile virus related human illness this year, including 4 deaths. From 1999 through 2001, there were 149 cases of West Nile virus human illness in the United States reported to CDC and confirmed, including 18 deaths.

August 2002, West Nile virus has been documented in Alabama, Arkansas, Connecticut, the District of Columbia, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, West Virginia and Wisconsin.

In 2001, West Nile virus was detected in 27 mosquito species in the states. To date it is being detected in over 91 new species. Which means it is spreading quickly to other species of mosquitoes. Most of these species feed at night, however several additional species of infected mosquitoes recently found are day feeders. In the colder zones of the United States, West Nile encephalitis cases occur primarily in the late summer or early fall. In the southern climates where temperatures are milder, West Nile virus can be transmitted year round.

Crow samples are especially important because crows appear to be highly sensitive to the virus. Dead crows can therefore act as sentinels for local transmission of the disease since they normally travel less than 200 miles. Infected crows can also help state and local health departments determine the risk to humans.

Ticks and even fleas may soon be involved in the transmission of West Nile Virus!

Infected mosquitoes are the primary source for West Nile virus. Although ticks infected with West Nile virus have been found in Asia and Africa, their role in the transmission and maintenance of the virus is uncertain. West Nile virus has been shown to infect horses, cats, bats, chipmunks, skunks, squirrels, and domestic rabbits.

Click Here for More information and Natural Products to repel Mosquitoes!

Some excerpts taken form Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Website.

For more information on West Nile virus, see the following webpages:

USGS Home Page on West Nile Virus http://www.usgs.gov/west_nile_virus.html

USGS Fact Sheet on West Nile Virus http://www.usgs.gov/wnvfactsheet.html

USGS National Wildlife Health Center and related web pages http://www.umesc.usgs.gov/nwhchome.html http://www.umesc.usgs.gov/http_data/nwhc/news/whal9902.html

USGS Biological Resources Page on West Nile Encephalitis http://biology.usgs.gov/mosquito/mosquito.htm

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvbid/arbor/arboinfo.htm

I came across the following and found it interesting.

Can mosquitoes transmit AIDS? Mosquitoes cannot transmit HIV because the virus neither survives nor replicates in mosquitoes and the blood from the last bitten person is not flushed into the next person during subsequent feeds. In addition, the circulating viral load of most HIV-infected persons is so low that the theoretical risk that a mosquito bite would transmit HIV is estimated to be less than 1 in 10, 000, 000. (American College of Physicians-American Society of Internal Medicine)

The obvious question here is, If HIV cannot possibly be transmitted by mosquitoes, WHY is there a chance in 10, 000, 000. of it happening to even one person????

Symptoms of West Nile encephalitis

Most infections are mild, and symptoms include fever, headache, and body aches, occasionally with skin rash and swollen lymph glands. More severe infection may be marked by headache, high fever, neck stiffness, stupor, disorientation, tremors, convulsions, muscle weakness, paralysis, coma and death.

There is no specific therapy. In more severe cases, intensive supportive therapy is indicated, often involving hospitalization, intravenous fluids, airway management, respiratory support (ventilator), prevention of secondary infections (pneumonia, urinary tract, etc.), and good nursing care. There is currently no vaccine against West Nile encephalitis.

How to Protect Yourself and Your Loved Ones

Keeping the immune system strong will help protect you and your family against the severe form of this life threatening disease and other mosquito borne diseases. Immune Support for Children and Adults.

To help with the itch and swelling of mosquito bites click HERE!

Clear the areas around your home of ALL standing water. To develop, mosquitoes require an environment of standing water. They have adapted to complete their life cycle in diverse aquatic habitats, including fresh water, salt water marshes, brackish water, or water found in containers, old tires, flower pots or tree holes. The eggs of most species hatch in 2 to 3 days, and the larvae feed on organic matter in the water for about a week until they change into pupae. The pupae live at the surface of the water for 2 to 3 days before metamorphosing into adult mosquitoes.

If you have outdoor activities planed, spray the area with Pyrethrum. Pyrethrum is a powerful, rapidly acting insecticide, derived from the crushed and dried flowers of the daisy Chrysanthemum cinerariifolium. The Chemical industry will tell you Pyrethrum is toxic to human and to use Permethrin which is a human-made synthetic pyrethroid they say has low toxicity in mammals. But it cannot be used in certified organic gardens! Where as Pyrethrum can and the professional organic gardeners will tell you Pyrethrum is non-toxic to most mammals, making it among the safest insecticides in use. It is quickly inactivated by sunlight and air leaving no residue to harm the environment. The Environmental Protection Agency has approved it for more uses than any other insecticide. It's sold under trade names that include Pyrenon, Red Arrow (pyrethrins/rotenone) and Pyrellin (Pyrethrins/rotenone).

Deet is Poison! The CDC and the FDA continue to claim that DEET (N,N-diethyl-meta-toluamide) is the most effective repellent. Only formulas which contain 35% DEET are effective. DEET is a neurotoxin. It causes Encephalitis as effectively as West Nile virus!

DEET toxicity reports exist in medical literature. Many cases of encephalopathy, in children younger than 8 years of age have been reported. Though it is said that many of these persons had a history of long-term, excessive, or inappropriate use of DEET repellents. Can there be an appropriate use of POISON in children? Spaying this stuff on a child is the same as pouring it in their mouths! Studies show that a child, especially a young child, instinctively places their hand in their mouth approximately every 2 minutes! As for adults, 14 cases of contact urticaria and irritant contact dermatitis (mostly in soldiers) were reported in one year. How many were not reported we will never know.

Click HERE for a list of Natural insect repellents!

A NEW and EXCITING DISCOVERY!

Catnip Repels Mosquitoes More Effectively Than DEET

CHICAGO, August 27, 2001 — Researchers report that nepetalactone, the essential oil in catnip that gives the plant its characteristic odor, is about ten times more effective at repelling mosquitoes than DEET — the compound used in most commercial insect repellents.

The finding was reported today at the 222nd national meeting of the American Chemical Society, the world's largest scientific society, by the same Iowa State University research group that two years ago discovered that catnip also repels cockroaches.

Entomologist Chris Peterson, Ph.D., with Joel Coats, Ph.D., chair of the university's entomology department, led the effort to test catnip's ability to repel mosquitoes. Peterson, a former post-doctoral research associate at the school, is now with the U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service, Wood Products Insects Research Unit, in Starkville, Miss.

While they used so-called yellow fever mosquitoes (Aedes aegypti) — one of several species of mosquitoes found in the United States — Peterson says catnip should work against all types of mosquitoes.

Peterson put groups of 20 mosquitoes in a two-foot glass tube, half of which was treated with nepetalactone. After 10 minutes, only an average of 20 percent — about four mosquitoes — remained on the side of the tube treated with a high dose (1.0 percent) of the oil. In the low-dose test (0.1 percent) with nepetalactone, an average of 25 percent — five mosquitoes — stayed on the treated side. The same tests with DEET (diethyl-m-toluamide) resulted in approximately 40 percent to 45 percent — eight-nine mosquitoes — remaining on the treated side.

In the laboratory, repellency is measured on a scale ranging from +100 percent, considered highly repellent, to –100 percent, considered a strong attractant. A compound with a +100 percent repellency rating would repel all mosquitoes, while –100 percent would attract them all. A rating of zero means half of the insects would stay on the treated side and half on the untreated side. In Peterson's tests, catnip ranged from +49 percent to +59 percent at high doses, and +39 percent to +53 percent at low doses. By comparison, at the same doses, DEET's repellency was only about +10 percent in this bioassay, he notes.

Peterson says nepetalactone is about 10 times more effective than DEET because it takes about one-tenth as much nepetalactone as DEET to have the same effect. Most commercial insect repellents contain about 5 percent to 25 percent DEET. Presumably, much less catnip oil would be needed in a formulation to have the same level of repellency as a DEET-based repellent.

Catnip is a perennial herb belonging to the mint family and grows wild in most parts of the United States, although it also is cultivated for commercial use. Catnip is native to Europe and was introduced to this country in the late 18th century. It is primarily known for the stimulating effect it has on cats, although some people use the leaves in tea, as a meat tenderizer and even as a folk treatment for fevers, colds, cramps and migraines.

(American Chemical Society original source.) http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2001/08/010828075659.htm

Click HERE to purchase a NEW Natural insect shield made with Catnip Oil!

Copyright 2002 Herbal Remedies USA LLC & Deb Jackson

 

Bottle5.JPG (3199 bytes)Nature's Herbal Natural Mosquito & Insect Shield
w/Catnip Oil
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Based on actual research!

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