Scientists Probe Why E. Coli Strain Is So Virulent
That leaves researchers puzzling over exactly why it's causing so many deaths, and wondering how long the epidemic will last.
At least medical scientists know quite a bit about its method of attack.
"To produce disease it really has to do two things. It has to attach to the intestinal wall and it has to produce toxin that gets absorbed into the body," says Dr. Robert Tauxe at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The bacterium, formally known as E. coli O104:H4, actually produces the same toxins that come from the more familiar E. coli O157:H7. But the germ in Europe uses a different method to attach to the intestine.
It's caused so many deaths that it has left medical researchers wondering whether the bacterium's method of attack is especially deadly or if it simply has spread to a whole lot of people.
"That's the key question," Tauxe says. "And the answer is not entirely clear."
This is somewhat uncharted territory. A Chinese genetics lab reported today that it actually sequenced the DNA of the germ, and it considers it a new variant. But Tauxe says the strain of E. coli is actually not entirely new.
"We have not seen outbreaks in contaminated food before," he says. "But there have been isolated cases identified in the past, in a number of different countries around the world."
Dr. Phillip Tarr from Washington University in St. Louis has seen more than his share of disease caused by this sort of bacterium. He is a pediatrician who has treated children afflicted with other dangerous strains of E. coli.
"What we think happens is the toxins get into the bloodstream and injure the blood vessels," he says. "And the blood vessels form little clots, and there's impaired blood flow to organs throughout the body."
This condition is called hemolytic uremic syndrome, and it hits the kidneys hard. In Germany, 470 people have been diagnosed with this severe condition. Usually, Tarr says, more than half of people who get this disease need kidney dialysis.
"In almost all cases it's temporary," he says. "Dialysis lasts a median of about eight days."
But dialysis doesn't save everybody, as is clearly the case in Europe. Tarr says obviously the first priority now is to figure out the best care for people currently sickened by the disease.
"After this is over we really need to determine how it could have been prevented, if possible, and how to prevent it in the future," he says. "And right now we need to know where it's coming from."
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