Monday, February 21, 2011

Farm House Plans Ireland

goat flu in Germany

22 people in Hesse on Q-fever illness
21/02/2011
in northern Hesse Waldeck-Frankenberg far 22 people in the Q-fever illness. Those affected complained of high fever, chills and severe headaches . The infectious disease is transmitted in Germany mostly by Sharp. The animals are regarded as skin carriers of Q fever.
Health authorities reported that cases in the district Bromskirchen in Frankenberg-Rengershausen and were reported in Hall Mountain in neighboring Arnsberg. According to media information in the region for at least 22 people have been infected
source. Http://www.heilpraxisnet.de/naturheilpraxis/22-menschen-in-hessen-an
-q-fever-sick-38912.php




Q-fever in the Netherlands feverish battles

The Netherlands kill Tens of thousands of goats to contain a mysterious disease. Your agent can also be dangerous to humans and is in the U.S. as a B-gun. in pregnant goats female matures, the young lamb. With him grow billions of bacteria that multiply in the mother's body exploded - the causative agent of Q fever
, Coxiella burnetii. The disease, also people can be dangerous is rife, currently on Dutch farms. 2300 residents suffering from fever there last year, six died as a result. To stop the spread, have already slaughtered thousands of animals - while the science does not know exactly why, at the disease so many people ill.


The Netherlands export more feta cheese than Greece - make it possible
300 000 goats. (© Photo: AP)

animals sense the infection difficult, however, often suffer from early-pregnant females or stillbirths. With amniotic fluid and placenta, the bacteria get into the open. There they form permanent forms for years and withstand drought and heat. Until they are inhaled, for example, by a walker who walks through a pasture. A single germ can be enough to infect a human. The first signs of infection are flu-like symptoms such as fever, chills, and frontal headache. The symptoms are relieved by antibiotics though. "Completely destroy the bacteria but can not. They withdraw into the spinal marrow, blood-forming cells and the macrophages of the immune system," says George Baljer, an expert on infectious diseases in animals at the University of Giessen. "There, take the drugs not go." Years later, they can cause meningitis or heart valve infection.


apply in the U.S., the bacterium that was first described in 1935 at Australian slaughterhouse workers, as a biological weapon to spread category, less lethal than anthrax, but with the potential disorder and anxiety. The name dates back to the first contested origin of the fever - and is the abbreviation for "query" is questionable
read the article.
http://www.sueddeutsche.de/wissen/ q-fever-in-the-netherlands-feverish-kill-1.70135
Ziegenzucht, Niederlande, dpa

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