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Bloomberg News
Man
Suffers Brain Illness After Smallpox
Vaccination, CDC Says
Atlanta, May 22 (Bloomberg) -- A
38-year-old man developed brain inflammation
and a seizure after getting a shot against
smallpox, the first such complication seen
in the government anti- bioterrorism program
that began in January, the U.S. Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention said.
The man suffered a seizure on May 3, more
than three weeks after the vaccination,
according to a report from the CDC's
National Center for Infectious Diseases. Ten
days after his inoculation, the man had
trouble breathing and later became confused,
agitated and moody, the report said.
More than 36,000 civilian health and
emergency workers and 430,000 U.S. soldiers
have been inoculated through the Bush
administration's program, the first civilian
use of the vaccine since smallpox was wiped
out as a natural threat more than 30 years
ago. The program began after attacks with
the anthrax germ raised concern that
terrorists might gain access to stores of
smallpox virus held in the U.S. and Russia.
Manufacturers of the smallpox vaccine
include the U.K.'s Acambis Plc and Baxter
International Inc., based in the Chicago
suburb of Deerfield, Illinois.
Researchers are investigating whether the
vaccine played a role in the man's brain
illness. Brain inflammation, or
encephalitis, was a rare complication when
the vaccine was in wide use in the 1960s and
1970s, occurring in about two to 12 people
of every million inoculated, the report
said.
The smallpox shot contains a live virus
called vaccinia that causes mild reactions
such as fever in about one of three
recipients, and serious skin and eye
infections in as many as one out of 1,000.
Complication rates may change in the
government's current program because the
vaccine is being used in adults rather than
children, and fewer people have immunity to
vaccinia virus, according to a report from
the U.S. Institute of Medicine.
Disease trackers are also investigating
18 cases of heart complications, including
two deaths, that occurred in vaccinated
civilians. The study will be published
tomorrow in the CDC's Morbidity and
Mortality Weekly Report.
Last Updated:
May 22, 2003 12:00 EDT
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