Sunday, September 3, 2023

How to stay safe from flesh-eating bacteria found in post-hurricane floodwaters NBC Universal ERIKA EDWARDS AND PATRICK MARTIN September 2, 2023 at 10:00 AM

 

How to stay safe from flesh-eating bacteria found in post-hurricane floodwaters

Hurricane Idalia has moved on, but an invisible threat remains in its wake — health officials are urging millions of Labor Day weekend beachgoers to be aware that floodwaters left over may contain Vibrio vulnificus.

The rare and potentially deadly type of flesh-eating bacterium "shouldn't be taken lightly," Florida Health Department press secretary Jae Williams said. "It needs to be treated with proper respect — the same way we respect alligators and rattlesnakes."

Florida health officials started warning residents of the potential for such bacterial infections "as soon as the state of emergency was declared," Williams said.

Coastal areas of the state, as well as Georgia and the Carolinas, where Idalia's surges left behind standing water, were most at risk for Vibrio bacteria.

Vibrio thrive in estuaries, inlets and other areas of warm, brackish water that combine ocean water and freshwater. Hurricanes are good at creating these conditions.

Idalia's storm surges, for example, forced the salty seawater onto land, where it was met with heavy rain.

"The rainwater, being freshwater, dilutes the seawater and brings the salinity down," said James Oliver, a retired professor of microbiology at the University of North Carolina, Charlotte. That mixture creates the perfect condition for the bacteria to thrive and spread.

People walk up a flooded Ocean Boulevard in North Myrtle Beach, S.C. on Aug. 30, 2023 after the passage of Hurricane Idalia.  (Jason Lee / The Sun via AP)
People walk up a flooded Ocean Boulevard in North Myrtle Beach, S.C. on Aug. 30, 2023 after the passage of Hurricane Idalia. (Jason Lee / The Sun via AP)

There are several types of Vibrio, but V. vulnificus are the most dangerous.

The bacteria infect an estimated 80,000 people in the United States every year, killing about 100, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Those numbers tend to rise in the wake of hurricanes.

It's a phenomenon that's been reported during previous hurricane seasons. In the week before Hurricane Ian hit Florida last year, there were no cases of Vibrio infections in the area where the storm made landfall. The week after Ian stormed through, 38 people became infected. Three people had to have at least one leg amputated, and 11 died.

Similar increases were seen following Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

How do Vibrio infections occur?

The bacteria enter the bloodstream through a cut in the skin, usually on the foot or ankle as people wade through water. Once infected, people "get a little lesion that looks maybe like a spider bite," Oliver said.

But very quickly, the bacteria start destroying the surrounding tissue. The incubation period, he said, is about 16 hours.

Rapidly developing and fatal Vibrio vulnificus wound infection (Image appears courtesy of Elsevier. Copyright Elsevier 2016)
Rapidly developing and fatal Vibrio vulnificus wound infection (Image appears courtesy of Elsevier. Copyright Elsevier 2016)

The wound gets larger, redder and more painful. It is critical to seek medical help and get started on antibiotics as fast as possible. "Speed is essential. These are the fastest growing bacteria known to man," Oliver said.

Amputations may be necessary to stop the bacteria from spreading elsewhere in the body. In some cases, patients have been known to die within a day of exposure.

Eating raw oysters is the second way people become infected. Oysters eat their food by filtering water through gills.

"Just realize that you're eating a live animal and you're eating the intestinal contents of whatever it ate, which typically is Vibrio," Oliver said.

Rising Vibrio cases

Vibrio tend to be most active between May and October, usually in the warmer waters of the southeastern coast of the U.S., including parts of Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana and Mississippi.

But Vibrio infections have begun to pop up earlier, later and farther away than expected.

"The chances of getting it are increasing because it's spreading geographically and in larger numbers because of the warmer waters," Oliver said.

Last month, it was reported that three people in New York and Connecticut died from Vibrio infections.

Afsar Ali, a research associate professor in the department of environmental and global health at the University of Florida, said he has noticed Vibrio infections becoming more common during the past five years.

A UNCC doctoral student tests water samples for V. vulnificus at a North Carolina estuary. (Dr. James Oliver)
A UNCC doctoral student tests water samples for V. vulnificus at a North Carolina estuary. (Dr. James Oliver)

"I have seen the increasing numbers of Vibrio vulnificus cases," he said. "Every year, it is increasing."

In addition to rising water temperatures, Oliver noted, climate change is increasing the risk for Vibrio to thrive in another way.

Vibrio "will not grow or survive in full-strength seawater," he said. "But because glaciers are melting, it's decreasing the salinity of seawater."

Who is most at risk?

Millions of people wade in brackish water and throw down raw oysters every year without any problem.

But some groups appear to be more susceptible to Vibrio infections: men over age 40 and those with underlying health problems, especially liver disease.

When the liver is damaged, it can increase levels of iron in the blood. And Vibrio bacteria "love to eat iron," Ali said. They use it to "just march on through your tissue, destroying everything they encounter."

The risk for these groups is much greater when exposed to Vibrio vulnificus through raw oysters, Oliver said.

"If you are a male over the age of 40, and you know you've got some liver disease, you want to avoid raw oysters like the plague," he said.

How to stay safe

Cooking oysters destroys the bacteria, making them a much safer option for consumption, experts say.

But for beachgoers, there is likely no way to avoid Vibrio.

"It is virtually guaranteed that if you wade into coastal waters this weekend, you will encounter such bacteria," Oliver said. "While that is a scary statement, it is important to understand that the risk for becoming sick from that encounter is extremely low for the vast majority of people."

If people have open wounds, they must cover them completely before entering brackish bodies of water or stay out of them.

"If you've got any sort of wound on your leg or develop a wound while you're at the beach, you really want to try to protect yourself and not expose yourself to water in those cases," said Dr. Rachael Lee, an associate professor in the division of infectious diseases at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.

"If you don't have wounds, then the risk of wading in the water is practically zero," she said.

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Former Chicago mayor eats Fukushima seafood amid nuclear wastewater panic: 'We are going to all eat it' Fox News PETER AITKEN September 2, 2023 at 1:26 PM

 

Former Chicago mayor eats Fukushima seafood amid nuclear wastewater panic: 'We are going to all eat it'

U.S. Ambassador to Japan Rahm Emanuel ate seafood to support the local fishing industry of Fukushima as China and South Korea continue to protest the treated nuclear wastewater discharge, which Emanuel argued was little more than economic coercion.

"If any one of the qualities of scientific rigor, international cooperation and full transparency had been adopted by China during the COVID crisis, lives would have been saved," Emanuel told reporters during a press gaggle at a supermarket.

"If President Xi has confidence in all the fish that comes from China near their nuclear plants, when Putin comes to visit, he can take him for a meal there," he chided as well.

Emanuel, formerly the mayor of Chicago, visited the city of Soma in Fukushima prefecture following the start of the wastewater discharge plan, which experts have explained will take decades to complete.

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Japanese officials pursued the plan in order to free up space for additional facilities needed to decommission the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant following its 2011 triple-meltdown disaster following an earthquake and tsunami.

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Fukushima nuclear wastewater
US Ambassador to Japan Rahm Emanuel eats peach as he visits Hamanoeki Fish Market and Food Court, as part of his trip to Soma City in Fukushima Prefecture on August 31, 2023.

The plant continues to produce wastewater since the melted fuel debris remains in the reactor and so requires constant cooling. Only after the material has been removed can the plant stop producing wastewater, which it has treated to limit its danger and kept on-site in tanks that have taken up all available space.

Tritium has leaked into the Fukushima groundwater since 2013, but the Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) has pumped the contaminated groundwater out every year since then.

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Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida on Thursday attended a lunch meeting with three of his cabinet ministers, all of whom consumed seafood and rice sourced from Fukushima in order to dismiss concerns about the safety of food from the region.

China fishing protest
U.S. Ambassador to Japan Rahm Emanuel visits Hamanoeki Fish Market and Food Court, as part of his trip to Soma City in Fukushima Prefecture on August 31, 2023.

"It is important to show safety based on scientific evidence and resolutely disseminate (the information) in and outside of Japan," Economy and Industry Minister Yasutoshi Nishimura told reporters.

Beijing immediately banned all Japanese seafood imports following Tokyo’s announcement of the plan to discharge the nuclear plant’s wastewater, which had been heavily diluted with seawater prior to release. South Koreans have condemned the plan, and Japanese fishermen worry that the discharge will make their products undesirable for decades, severely impacting business.

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Emanuel stressed U.S. support for Japan’s plan and added that he expected the U.S. to support Tokyo if it were to initiate a formal complaint with the World Trade Organization over China’s ban on seafood imports.

In addition to his lunch with the mayor of Soma, Emanuel bought fish at the supermarket, which he said he would serve to his children when they visit him over the weekend. He purchased fruits, flounder, sea bass and other produce – all sourced from Fukushima.

"We are going to all eat it," he told The Associated Press in a phone interview during his trip back to Tokyo. "As a father, if I thought there is a problem, I won’t serve it."

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The current pace of discharge will see the plant dump around 31,200 tons of treated water by the end of March 2024, freeing up just 10 of the 1,000 tanks at the plant since it continues to produce wastewater. Officials estimate that 30% of the tanks will empty by the end of the first decade, and the pace will speed up over that time as well.

Reuters and The Associated Press contributed ot this report.


Original article source:Former Chicago mayor eats Fukushima seafood amid nuclear wastewater panic: 'We are going to all eat it'

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