LOS ANGELES: Some
10,000 visitors to California's Yosemite National Park could have been
exposed to a deadly virus that kills one in three victims and cannot be
treated, officials said Friday.
So far, six cases of the rare
hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS) have been confirmed -- two of whom
have died -- while a "multiple" number of other suspected cases of the
rodent-borne disease are being investigated.
Yosemite authorities
closed down the "Signature Tent Cabins" earlier this week at Curry
Village, a popular lodging area in Yosemite Valley, the tourist center
of the scenic park visited by millions of people every year.
The
National Park Service (NPS) has written to some 2,900 people who booked
stays in the Boystown area tent lodgings between June 10 and August 24,
alerting them to keep an eye out for symptoms of HPS.
The Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimated the number of people
who actually stayed in the tent cabins -- those who booked plus their
guests -- at 10,000.
"On August 24, 2012, the tents were
disinfected and visitors were relocated. People who stayed in the tents
between June 10 and August 24 may be at risk of developing HPS in the
next six weeks," it said.
The incubation period for HPS is
typically two to four weeks after exposure, with a range of a few days
up to six weeks. Symptoms include fever, chills, myalgias, cough,
headaches and gastrointestinal ailments.
"The disease often
progresses rapidly to respiratory distress, requiring supplemental
oxygen and/or intubation, non-cardiogenic pulmonary edema and shock,"
the CDC said.
"There is no specific treatment available, but
early recognition and administration of supportive care greatly increase
the chance of survival."
Since the disease was first identified
in 1993, there have been some 60 cases in California and 587 cases
nationwide in the United States, around a third of which have been
fatal.
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