Talk:Vibrio vulnificus

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[edit] Trimmed info

  • I've removed some of the information regarding individuals susceptible to V. vulnificus infections on the grounds that: a) the list was very long; and b) many of the conditions listed would cause affected folks to be susceptible to many GI infections (i.e. not V. vulnificus-specific. In case anyone disagrees with any of the specifics, I've pasted the paragraph I heavily edited below....
There are people who are especially vulnerable, including those with immunocompromised state (human immunodeficiency virus, cancer, bone marrow suppression, achlorhydria (decreased gastric acid production), and diabetes), end-stage renal impairment, liver impairment (particularly cirrhosis)[1], and haemochromatosis[2]. With these cases, the bacterium usually enters the bloodstream, where it may cause fever and chills, septic shock (with sharply decreased blood pressure), and blistering skin lesions [7]. According to the CDC in Atlanta, about half of those who contract blood infections die.

...and the relevant references...

  1. ^  Kizer KW (1994). "Vibrio vulnificus hazard in patients with liver disease". Western Journal of Medicine 161 (1): 64-5. PMID 7941517. 
  2. ^  Bullen JJ, Spalding PB, Ward CG, Gutteridge JM (1994). "Hemochromatosis, iron and septicemia caused by Vibrio vulnificus". Archives of Internal Medicine 151 (8): 1606-9. PMID 1872665. 

MarcoTolo 02:07, 6 April 2006 (UTC)

I'm not sure if this is a good idea. Vibrio vulnificus is a rare cause for infection, and most people do not develop it unless they are predisposed. The sources are pretty good, you know. JFW | T@lk 21:03, 6 April 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Treatment is easy?

I dare anyone to say that an infection with a mortality rate approaching 50% is "easy to treat"! That comment is a little trite, isn't it? What works in a petri dish may not necessarily translate well in real life. I hope you don't mind that I've slashed that. --Gak 21:09, 29 December 2006 (UTC)