10/31/11

Armadillos linked to leprosy in humans - CNN.com

Armadillos linked to leprosy in humans
By Carina Storrs, Health.com
April 28, 2011 12:07 p.m. EDT
There have been several anecdotal reports of leprosy in humans who have handled, killed or eaten armadillos.
There have been several anecdotal reports of leprosy in humans who have handled, killed or eaten armadillos.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Leathery-shelled mammals can be found in 10 Southern U.S. states
  • Armadillos are the only animals besides humans to carry leprosy
  • Early signs of leprosy can be easy for patients and doctors to overlook

(Health.com) -- Several years ago, an 81-year-old woman with a raised patch of dry skin on her arm visited Mississippi dermatologist John Abide, M.D.

Although the lesion looked only slightly abnormal, a series of lab tests revealed that it was a symptom of leprosy.

"I thought, 'Leprosy, are you kidding me?'" says Abide, whose practice is in Greenville. His surprise was understandable.

Each year only about 150 people in the U.S. are infected with leprosy, a bacterial disease that can lead to nerve damage and disfigurement. In most cases, people are infected after being exposed to saliva from an infected person, usually while traveling to parts of the world, such as Africa and Asia, where the disease is more prevalent.

But Abide's patient didn't fit this description.

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A new study in the New England Journal of Medicine may provide an explanation for her case: armadillos. The leathery shelled mammals, which can be found in 10 states throughout the Southeastern U.S., are the only animals besides humans known to carry leprosy.

There have been several anecdotal reports of leprosy in humans who have handled, killed or eaten armadillos, or who may have been indirectly exposed by gardening in soil where the animals burrow, as was the case for Abide's patient.

But until now, experts haven't been able to confirm that armadillos could pass the disease to humans. The study provides the strongest evidence to date. Researchers analyzed the genomes of leprosy-causing bacteria collected from seven patients and one armadillo.

After identifying specific strains of the bacteria, they compared them with a larger group of infected people and armadillos from around the world.

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Of the 50 patients and 33 wild armadillos the researchers analyzed from the U.S., 25 patients and 28 armadillos shared a genetically identical strain of leprosy bacteria. And at least 8 of the 25 patients carrying the strain reported contact with armadillos.

"It's difficult to demonstrate specific causality," says Richard Truman, Ph.D., one of the study authors and the chief of microbiological research at the National Hansen's Disease Program, in Baton Rouge, Louisiana (Leprosy is also known as Hansen's disease.)

However, he adds, the chance that the humans with the armadillo-specific strain were infected by some other means is about 1 in 10,000. The armadillo population in the U.S. has been estimated at 30 to 50 million, and studies suggest that, in some places, up to 15 percent have leprosy.

For now the infected animals are concentrated in Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Arkansas, and Alabama, but the armadillo population appears to be spreading north and east and could bring leprosy with it.

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Truman says that people in those areas may eventually see a minor increase in risk, but so far leprosy has not been detected in animals on the East Coast.

"Leprosy is a rare disease and will remain a rare disease," he says. Still, doctors should be on the lookout for signs of the disease, says James Krahenbuhl, Ph.D., director of the National Hansen's Disease Program. "Most physicians are unaware that leprosy even exists in the U.S., and they miss the diagnosis."

Leprosy usually becomes a chronic disease, Krahenbuhl explains, but it can be cured if it is treated with multiple drugs in the early stages, when the disease has only caused skin lesions. Left untreated, it can progress to nerve damage in some patients.

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Abide suspects that new cases of leprosy in the U.S. are underreported, because the early signs can be easy for patients and doctors to overlook until decades later, when more serious symptoms appear.

"It kind of makes me wonder, as subtle as it is, if I'm missing something," he says. Up to 30 percent of residents in the rural area he serves have been in contact with armadillos, Abide estimates.

He urges his patients not to touch, handle, or eat the animals, and to steer clear of souvenirs made from armadillo carcasses, which are popular in Texas. The new study should help raise awareness, he says.

When he tells his patients that armadillos cause leprosy, he explains, "They kind of look at me like I'm crazy."

Armadillos linked to leprosy in humans - CNN.com

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Cain: I've been 'falsely accused' - The Hill's Video

Cain: I've been 'falsely accused'

By Justin Sink - 10/31/11 12:05 PM ET

Herman Cain said Monday he has been “falsely accused” of sexual harassment.

Cain told Fox News that he has never sexually harassed anyone and that he is unaware of any settlements reached between two women and a Washington trade group he headed in the 1990s.

“I have never sexually harassed anyone – anyone. And absolutely these are false allegations,” Cain said Monday in an interview with Fox News.

“I have never sexually harassed anyone. And yes, I was falsely accused while I was at the National Restaurant Association and I say falsely because it turned out after the investigation to be baseless. The people mentioned in that article were the ones who would be aware of any misdoings and they have attested to my integrity and my character. It is totally baseless and totally false. Never have I committed any sort of sexual harassment.”

The Cain camp has come under intense scrutiny since publication Sunday of an article by Politico that said two women left the National Restaurant Association after complaining of sexually inappropriate behavior by Cain. The report said the women received financial settlements to leave the trade group, and that as a part of those deals they agreed not to discuss their complaints.

Cain told Fox, however, that he was unaware of any settlement made by the restaurant group.

“If the restaurant did a settle I wasn’t even aware of it. And I hope it wasn’t for much because nothing happened,” he said when asked about a financial deal.

"So if there was a settlement it was handled by some of the other officers that worked for me at the Association," Cain said.

The comments by Cain continue a furious push back by his campaign that started Sunday night.

Mark Block, Cain’s chief of staff, said Monday he was not personally aware that Cain agreed to any settlements with women at the trade group, which Cain headed from 1996 to 1999. He also said Cain had never sexually harassed anyone.

“Herman Cain has never sexual harassed anybody. Period. End of story,” Block said on MSNBC. “Every negative word and accusation in the article is sourced to unnamed or anonymous sources and this is questionable at best,” Block said.

On Sunday, the campaign released a statement blaming "inside the Beltway media" and "Washington establishment critics" for what it said were unsubstantiated claims.

The charges come as Cain finds himself at the top of some polls of GOP voters. The former president of the National Restaurant Association and CEO of Godfather’s Pizza has jumped to the top of the Republican contest on the strength of several debate performances and his 9-9-9 tax plan, which would impose 9 percent income, sales and corporate taxes in place of the current tax system.

The Republican front-runner acknowledged that the charges would give some voters pause and could damage his campaign.

“Obviously some people are going to be turned off by this cloud that some people wanted to put over this campaign,” Cain said. But he insisted that he had never acted in a harassing way, and that he had never been accused of acting improperly other than in these instances.

“The only other allegations will be trumped up allegations, there's nothing else,” Cain said.

This story was posted at 11:44 a.m. and updated at 12:05 p.m.




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After Soldier’s Death, a Chinatown Family Seeks Answers - NYTimes.com

Soldier’s Death Raises Suspicions in Chinatown

Brendan Mcdermid/Reuters

Pvt. Danny Chen's final journey in Chinatown this month. He died in a guard tower in Afghanistan, possibly in a suicide.

Friends and relatives crowd into Su Zhen Chen’s small apartment in an East Village housing project, bearing food and solace for her and her husband. A community leader sometimes shows up to pay respects, or a military official arrives with papers to sign. Adults gather in the cramped living room for hushed chats in Chinese as children do homework at the kitchen table. For Ms. Chen, these are welcome distractions.

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From left, the parents of Pvt. Danny Chen, Yan Tao Chen and Su Zhen Chen, along with Lucy, one of his relatives.

Chang W. Lee/The New York Times

A photo from Private Chen's scrapbook, with his mother at his side.

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But at night, when the apartment goes quiet, the grief surges back, and Ms. Chen sits with a portrait of her son, her only child, and ponders what unfolded on a dusty military base half a world away. “It’s so sad that he loved the Army and this happened,” she said.

On Oct. 3, her son, Pvt. Danny Chen, was found shot to death in a guard tower on an American outpost in Afghanistan. He was 19 years old.

Three days after his death, a military official told Ms. Chen and her husband, Yan Tao Chen, that investigators had not yet determined whether the shot to the head was self-inflicted or fired by someone else.

But the official also revealed, the Chens said, that Private Chen had been subjected to physical abuse and ethnic slurs by superiors, who one night dragged him out of bed and across the floor when he failed to turn off a water heater after showering.

Since then, the military has given little information about its investigation to the Chens, immigrants who speak no English.

And though military officials have reassured the Chens that a thorough investigation is being conducted, their grief is laced with suspicion, shared by their supporters in the local Chinese community, that they will never learn the truth.

For decades, Asian-Americans have had an uneasy relationship with the military, enlisting at lower rates than other ethnic groups.

Many Asian-American families have emphasized higher education and white-collar occupations, rather than the armed services, as a way to get ahead in America, experts say. The dearth of high-profile Asian-Americans in the upper echelons of the military may have also discouraged enlistment.

In New York’s Asian population, the reaction to Private Chen’s death has underscored this feeling, and community leaders say the case threatens to chill attitudes toward the military.

“The family deserves the truth — the honest truth,” said Melissa Chen, one of Private Chen’s aunts.

Private Chen kept a journal while deployed, relatives said, but military investigators have so far shared only three pages of it with the family. On one, a cartoonish face with an angst-ridden expression is scrawled alongside the misspelled message: “Watever happens happens.”

On another, a list of notes, in what looks like Private Chen’s handwriting, describes procedural failures, including “Didn’t clear weapon,” “Didn’t hydrate,” and “No attention to detail (little things).”

Relatives said they had no idea what to make of the pages. The military’s decision to release them while retaining the rest of the journal has only added to their bewilderment.

A spokesman for the Army Criminal Investigation Command said officials in Afghanistan were conducting a “thorough, in-depth investigation” into Private Chen’s death.

“We’re not only investigating to determine the cause and manner of his death, but also the circumstances leading up to his death,” said the spokesman, Christopher Grey. “We take this investigation and the tragic loss of Private Chen very serious and will not close our investigation until we are fully confident we have determined exactly what transpired.”

He added that no other details would be released until the investigation was completed.

From the little that the military has told them, family members believe that investigators are focusing on suicide as the cause of death. If that is the determination, the case may echo that of another Asian-American, Lance Cpl. Harry Lew, a Marine from California who killed himself in April in Afghanistan after fellow Marines allegedly subjected him to a brutal hazing. Last week, the Marines were ordered court-martialed.

But among Private Chen’s relatives and friends in New York City, nobody will accept that he killed himself. “I know him well enough to know he would not commit suicide,” Ms. Chen said in Taishanese, a Chinese dialect, her voice hardening in anger. “I suspect someone went after Danny.”

In interviews with Private Chen’s relatives and friends, and in a review of a personal journal he kept and letters he wrote to his parents, a portrait emerges of a child of Chinatown who, amid self-doubt about his physical abilities, strived to succeed in the military.

Private Chen’s father worked as a chef in Chinese restaurants, and his mother was a seamstress in a garment factory. He was a good student who led a subdued social life, playing video games and watching movies with cousins and a small group of friends. In recent years, he took up handball.

Early on, he wanted to be a New York City police officer, his parents said, and planned to spend a few years in the military before joining the police. “He wanted to catch bad guys,” his father said.

His mother said she tried to talk him out of enlisting because of the dangers. His father supported his choice, however reluctantly, because it seemed honorable.

To recruiters, Private Chen was probably a welcome sight. Asian enlistment rates have historically been low, and military officials have been trying to raise those numbers. The Asian population in the United States is nearly 5 percent, according to the 2010 Census.

For most of the past decade, Asians have been less than 3 percent of all military recruits, rising to 3.2 percent in 2010, officials said.

At the same time, minority advocates have expressed concern over the treatment of Asians in the military.

“There has to be an environment where they are integrated, protected and supported,” said Elizabeth R. OuYang, president of the New York chapter of OCA, a civil rights group. “It’s unclear that that’s the case.”

Private Chen was the first of his extended family to serve in the American military.

At basic training in Fort Benning, Ga., Private Chen’s experience did not seem unusual. He endured rigorous training, tedium and occasional homesickness, according to a journal he kept and weekly letters he sent to his parents.

He confessed to doubts about whether he was strong enough to make it, describing himself as “the weakest one left.” Yet he never suggested that he would quit, and was often enthusiastic about some of the training, particularly weapons instruction.

He revealed that he was teased by other recruits because of his race, but seemed to take it in stride. “I get made fun of for being Asian/Chinese everyday but it’s not hard core,” he wrote his parents. “All for the sake of jokes. I get them back, too.”

He completed training in April and was assigned to a brigade at Fort Wainwright in Alaska. In August, he was deployed to an outpost in volatile Kandahar Province in Afghanistan.

The details of Private Chen’s life in Afghanistan remain a mystery to his friends and parents in New York. Several members of his battalion did not reply to e-mails seeking comment, and none of them have reached out to his family. A press officer for the brigade denied requests for interviews because of the investigation.

During deployment, Private Chen called home three times and sounded upbeat, his parents said.

“I’d ask him how he was doing over there, is it hard? And he would say ‘I knew it would be hard,’ ” his mother recalled. “I asked him if anybody was bullying him, and he replied, ‘That’s to be expected.’ ”

On Sept. 20, he sent a Facebook message to Raymond Lam, a childhood friend from New York City.

“It sucks here all sandy and everything,” he wrote. “Prob gunna b bak at around May-June one of those i have no idea but whatever.”

“Is it like dangerous at all?” Mr. Lam asked in a message on Sept. 27. But Mr. Lam never heard back.

Six days later, three Army officials knocked at the door of the Chens’ apartment.

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After Soldier’s Death, a Chinatown Family Seeks Answers - NYTimes.com

October snowstorm gives N.J. a 'white Halloween' | NJ.com

http://www.nj.com

October snowstorm gives N.J. a 'white Halloween'

Published: Monday, October 31, 2011, 6:00 AM Updated: Monday, October 31, 2011, 7:11 AM
power-outage-snowstorm-nj.JPGRich Mancuso is interviewed in the pitch black living room of his Mountain Lakes home wearing a head lamp. The Mancuso family cope with no electricity for a second night after an October storm dumped a healthy dose of snow on North Jersey Saturday.

STATEWIDE —After a record October snowstorm that left at least two dead over the weekend, New Jersey is waking up to a white Halloween, with icy roads littered with downed trees and power lines, and heat and electricity still out for thousands.

Two NJ Transit lines are still shut down today, many schools are closed and State Police urge caution on the roads.

In Madison, the volunteer ambulance — which has a generator — set up an emergency shelter.

"I was so cold last night I had to have five blankets on me," Gerri Giordano said Sunday of Saturday night. "You could see your breath in the house it was so cold."

Linda Augustine, another Madison resident, said, "I woke up and it was all dark and the house was freezing. When we took the ride here, it was like a surrealistic science fiction landscape because power lines were down and trees were down."

Other shelters were set up at West Orange High School, Belleville Middle School, the South Orange Library, Glen Ridge Community Center, Bloomfield Civic Center and the Cedar Grove First Aid Squad, among other locations.

On Saturday, the freak nor’easter dumped as much as 19 inches of snow on parts of New Jersey, the most ever for the month of October since recordkeeping for the state began in 1895, said David Robinson, the state climatologist at Rutgers.

"No question that this is the largest October snowstorm on record in New Jersey," Robinson said Sunday.

The unusually early snowstorm arrived just two months after the devastating floods from Hurricane Irene, and seemed as bizarre as the earthquake that shook New Jersey a few days before that.

Snow Storm
Enlarge Steve Harvey gets help from friend John Cooke to pull his car out from under a tree and wet snow on Overlook Rd. in Long Valley. Large branches fell on the car and power lines overnight because of the heavy snow and knocked out power to the area. Long Valley , Nj 10/30/11 (Jennifer Brown/The Star-Ledger) Fall Snow Storm gallery (41 photos)

The storm’s heavy, wet snow stuck to leaves that hadn’t yet fallen from the trees, bending and breaking limbs or whole trunks that fell atop cars or utility lines. More than 600,000 households remained without power Sunday, including Gov. Chris Christie in Mendham.

Many could remain in the dark throughout the week.

Schools in Bloomingdale, the Chathams, Rockaway, Parsippany-Troy Hills, Washington Township in Morris County and other districts announced they would be closed today.

In a way, Halloween itself was postponed in Mountain Lakes, where the power outage prompted officials to reschedule an annual borough-wide celebration until Friday.

Commuters driving to work were urged to use caution this morning, while NJ Transit cancelled trains on its Morris & Essex Lines, including the Gladstone Branch and Montclair-Boonton Line.

State Police spokesman Sgt. Brian Polite, warned motorists to be wary of icy roads and to remove snow that had accumulated on their vehicles.

"Slow down, give yourself enough distance from the car in front of you," said Polite. "When you go out in the morning, remember to shovel your car off, because that is a violation and we will enforce it."

At least two deaths have been attributed to the storm.

In Wayne, one person was killed and two PSE&G employees were injured in a collision early Sunday. Police said Oscar Ramos, 40, of Haledon, was driving on Hamburg Turnpike when he struck a PSE&G truck being used to repair a downed power line near Alps Road. Police said Ramos died from his injuries.

Morris County residents recover from fall snowstorm Morris County residents recover from fall snowstorm Morris County residents, many without power, begin to recover from a fall snowstorm that toppled trees and knocked out power. (Video by John O'Boyle) Watch video

And in Franklin Lakes, where the streets were littered with downed power lines and trees, police said a an elderly man was killed by a fire Saturday. Peter Andre, 85, who uses a wheelchair, died from smoke inhalation, after he could not be rescued by his son, who also uses a wheelchair, or their housekeeper, police said.

Denville resident Josh Dechter said he looked out his window Sunday onto "a war zone," of downed trees and wires under a layer of glossy white.

"It was kind of pretty in a Tim Burton kind of way," said Dechter, 44.

State Police said travel on New Jersey’s toll roads — New Jersey Turnpike and Garden State Parkway — was normal Sunday.

Air travel in the region was also largely back to normal Sunday, said Hunter Pendarvis, a spokesman for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which runs Newark Liberty International, John F. Kennedy International and LaGuardia airports.

"We had crews out all night clearing runways," Pendarvis said. "The fact that this was such an early season snow did not have any impact at any of our airports."

But cancellations on Saturday did leave some travellers stranded Sunday and disrupted plans of the others.

At Newark Liberty Sunday, a group of Swedish vacationers were gathered in Terminal B, waiting for the SAS ticket counter to open, hoping to learn when they would fly back to Stockholm after their flight had been cancelled on Saturday afternoon. They said they were given a toll free number to call by an SAS gate agent after their flight was canceled Saturday, but the line was busy all weekend. They said they found hotels Saturday night, though they were not given vouchers for the extra night’s stay.

"Nobody knows where or when we’re going to Europe," said a member of the group, Magnus Sundstrom, who lives north of Stockholm.

Heavy wet snow responsible for downed trees and power lines throughout the state Heavy wet snow responsible for downed trees and power lines throughout the state An early-season snowfall blanketed areas of central and northern New Jersey causing traffic delays, widespread power outages and felled trees throughout the region. In Hunterdon County, a massive maple tree took down power lines closing parts of Cokesbury Road. (Video by Andre Malok / The Star-Ledger) Watch video

In other parts of Essex County, Sheriff Armando Fontoura said about 120,000 Essex residents were without power Sunday. He said many side streets still had wires and large tree limbs down. About a dozen people were in shelters in South Orange and West Orange.

Fontoura said PSE&G was getting help from out-of-state utility crews and from local public works departments.

"That’s a tough thing to coordinate," Fontoura said. All in all, he said, "We still have some serious, serious problems."

In Somerset County, Bridgewater Police Lt. Robert Wilt estimated that about a third of the township was without power after the storm. Parts of Route 28, Foothill Road, and other roadways were closed.

"We’re pretty much in a state of emergency here. We’re going from call to call," he said Sunday.

In Cranford, the storm downed countless trees and power lines, forcing drivers to zig-zag to avoid closed streets, or to skip driving altogether. Department of Public Works crews were out early, driving slowly through the streets with trucks and chippers, clearing debris.

"It seemed like it was raining tree limbs and tree branches last night," said public works employee Tim Meyer. "It almost seemed like a repeat of Hurricane Irene without the water."

By: Steve Strunsky and Ben Horowitz/The Star-Ledger

Staff reporters Dan Goldberg, Ryan Hutchins, Stephen Sterling, Jeanette Rundquist and Peggy McGlone contributed to this report.

Related coverage:

Trees suffer extensive damage under weight of New Jersey's October snowstorm

N.J. was ready for October snowstorm, Gov. Chris Christie says

Downed trees from snowstorm leave over half a million N.J. residents without power

Snowstorm causes power outages, more than 600K in N.J. affected

Gov. Christie declares state of emergency in N.J. following October snowstorm

N.J. gets its first snowfall of the season





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October snowstorm gives N.J. a 'white Halloween' | NJ.com

The Qaddafi Files: An FP Special Report | Foreign Policy

Qaddaffi

How much do we really know about the private life of Muammar al-Qaddafi? Foreign Policy digs deep into the secret archives and family photo albums of Libya's toppled tyrant to consider his legacy. In this special section, FP presents an exclusive collection of never-before-seen pictures and documents from Qaddafi's private homes and state intelligence ministries, collected by Human Rights Watch emergencies director Peter Bouckaert and photographed by freelance photojournalist Michael Brown. These images range from intimate portraits of Qaddafi with family members to shocking photos of torture victims; from a lean, handsome revolutionary, beaming in the early days after the coup, to the grizzled, bloated outcast he would become. It’s a unique, behind-the-scenes look at the curious and dynamic dictator, and we invite readers to assist us in identifying individuals and events in this rare trove of images.

stripes
  • When They Were Kings

    When They Were Kings

  • Qaddafi’s Family Scrapbook
The Qaddafi Files: An FP Special Report | Foreign Policy

 
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