Deadly bug hits beaches

marine1

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Deadly bud, my ass.
We are polluting the oceans at such a rapid rate - :mad:


http://www.iol.co.za/news/south-africa/kwazulu-natal/deadly-bug-hits-beaches-1.1227227


A Durban doctor, who contracted a deadly flesh-eating bacteria through a cut on his leg while surf-skiing in the ocean, is lucky to be alive and not to have lost the limb.

Dr Peter Breedt of Hillcrest, a surf-ski enthusiast, is one of several people who have got sick after surfing or swimming at city beaches in recent months.

And, as we enter one of the hottest months of the year, one of the country’s leading water-quality experts, microbiologist Professor Eugene Cloete, dean of Stellenbosch University’s Science Department, has warned about the dangers of swimming in the sea if one has cuts, wounds or chronic liver disease.

Breedt said that, together with a medical colleague, he had diagnosed that the naturally occurring bacteria, Vibrio vulnificus, had eaten away the tissue of his foot after he had gone paddle-skiing from Ushaka Beach to the Bluff and back, in November. His wound has still not healed.

“I had a little scratch on my leg and I went surf-skiing. The water was really smelly with a sulphur kind of smell,” Dr Breedt said.

“I have spoken to surgeons who say they see it quite often and that you can get it from swimming in river mouths,” Breedt said. Breedt said he started feeling sick and a black area developed on his foot six hours after surf skiing.

“I took lots of antibiotics and had three operations to cut away the dead skin and I had skin grafts,” Breedt said. “It’s hard to believe that from being healthy one minute I could get so sick.”

Breedt said he believed he was alive because he was a doctor and had acted quickly.

Professor Cloete described Vibrio vulnificus as one of the most dangerous pathogens that occur in the ocean – it grows where salt concentrations are high and temperatures warm.

“The vibrio genos can grow in salt water when the ambient temperature is between 15°C and 35°C. It has been found in shellfish and in undercooked oysters.

“However, if you get it into a wound it causes septicaemia and shock and if it gets into the bloodstream you will get very sick.”

Cloete said the mortality rate was up to 50 percent if the bacteria entered the bloodstream and treatment within 48 hours was vital.

“If you go beyond 48 hours the fatality rate increases,” Cloete said.

“If you have got sores you should not be going into the sea because you are exposing the body to potential contamination, not only to vibrio vulnificus but to a number of organisms. I would not go into the sea with cuts, and if you scratch yourself on the rocks you could be exposed.

“People with chronic liver disease are more vulnerable because (if swallowed) it can enter the blood through the gastro-intestinal tract.”

Cloete said he was not sure if the minimum infective dose had been established but if swallowed the bacteria would cause diarrhoea and vomiting.

“It is more rare than other water-borne diseases and not even as common as salmonella and e.coli. But we might think it is rare because it is not well reported.”

The only other reported case of vibrio vulnificus infection in Durban was in 2002 when fisherman Eric Erasmus died after he contracted the bacteria while collecting sand prawns in Durban harbour.

author RW Johnson had his leg amputated in 2009 after cutting himself on a rock, but the bacteria, aeromonas hydrophila, was believed to have been responsible for his infection.

eThekweni Municipality deputy head of water and sanitation, technical support, Frank Stevens, said the water was tested five times a month at 33 beaches, including Wedge, North Beach and uShaka. He said the city spent R3 million annually on monitoring.

Stevens said vibrio vulnificus was found globally and was not part of normal beach water testing anywhere in the world.

“The public should avoid swimming in close proximity to river mouths and stormwater outlets within 24 hours of a storm event. Heavy storms, such as were experienced in December, are likely to impact beach water quality until such time as the river returns to its normal flow,” Stevens said.

He said the city measured e.coli and enterococcus following US and EU standards.

“The quality has generally been good but unacceptable levels are experienced from time-to-time, usually due to high-rainfall events which result in, for example, flushing of paved areas and the surcharge of manholes,” Stevens said.

When levels were unacceptable the public was warned on boards at the beach and on the city’s website, he said.

Sewage from waste water works was controlled in terms of the Green Drop programme in which the city was the best performing metro, he said.

“Stormwater is a problem faced in every city. First-flush interventions have been put in place but do not solve the problem. All citizens need to take their actions into consideration,” Stevens said.

Three of a group of five surfers, who swam in the sea at Wedges Beach last week, said they had become violently ill with gastroenteritis.

Lee van Vuuren said the water was murky but they had not thought much of it until they woke up the next day vomiting.

Another surfer who got sick, Craig Knott, said: “We surf quite a bit in and around the piers and the water quality has not been great for quite some time but supposedly it’s just the storm water drains running but it’s almost like sewage in some cases – and smells.”

Dean Sepprings said he had had contracted an ear infection and a post-nasal drip.

Evan Basson said he had also become ill. “I can’t say it is the water but it was strange that we all swam and got sick,” Basson said.

Hillcrest mother Trisha Sandeman said she swam at the beach two weeks ago and had accidentally swallowed sea water.

“I am fit and I eat well and the following day I felt like I was coming down with a cold and my throat was inflamed. I had terrible sinuses and was off work and have only recovered now,” she said this week.

A Durban surfer, who asked not to be named, said earache had become common among local surfers and there was concern about sea water quality. “I personally have been very sick and had diarrhoea and a bad stomach,” she said. - Independent on Saturday
 
I used to swim like a fish in the ocean when I was a young lad in the seventies and eighties.

Now you would not catch me dead doing it.
 
Erm this has been going on for ages, just the quantity has increased?

One of my friends, mother got this back in the early 80's in Margate. I remember she went for maggot* treatment in the US.

*Reason I remember it so clearly is that they placed maggots on her leg so they could eat away the dead flesh in order to heal the wound.
 
Jaa you wont catch me in that water for sure sea temp at the moment is 24 .
lived on the beach when i was young even used to ski in the harbor but got sick from that
 
I know I'm being anally retentive by questioning the rather gruesome photo in the article of what appears to be someone's flesh eaten and cut away knee area, the article itself is primarily concerned with the foot of a doctor that was infected, of what relevance is the seemingly unrelated photo? I can only think the author of the article Googled for images related to flesh eating bacteria.
 
Hout Bay is particularly bad. You can actually sea the pooh floating in the water as well as other things.
 
I dunno, was in durbs last month and the place was the cleanest I've seen in ages.
OK I didn't bring my water sampling kit, but I did go far out into the ocean and didn't have any weird smells or see lots of rubbish.

The only thing that surprised me, which I have to mention again, is how crap the currys are in Durbs, nowhere near our quality.
 
Whatever's causing this is coming from the land - i've worked on the sea all my life & seawater HEALS cuts.
Never never never had crew with cuts that won't heal,seawater normally acts like a disinfectant & speeds up the healing process.
I'd put this one down to pollution as well marine1.
 
The only thing that surprised me, which I have to mention again, is how crap the currys are in Durbs, nowhere near our quality.

You never told us where you went and refuse to answer the question. We listed several places for you to go to.
 
I dunno, was in durbs last month and the place was the cleanest I've seen in ages.
OK I didn't bring my water sampling kit, but I did go far out into the ocean and didn't have any weird smells or see lots of rubbish.

The only thing that surprised me, which I have to mention again, is how crap the currys are in Durbs, nowhere near our quality.
You obviously went to the wrong place for curry if you want a good place ask the locals dont go to the places for tourists you will get terrible curry ( must be a vallie )
 
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Whatever's causing this is coming from the land - i've worked on the sea all my life & seawater HEALS cuts.
Never never never had crew with cuts that won't heal,seawater normally acts like a disinfectant & speeds up the healing process.
I'd put this one down to pollution as well marine1.

Also been a sea / water person my whole life.
This is what happens when sewerage from a burgeoning population is pumped into the sea & rivers are poisoned at the same time!
Sea water was always good for you, I remember when people from upcountry would go to the beach (durban) & collect bottles of sea water - not sure if that practice continues any longer
 
Never never never had crew with cuts that won't heal,seawater normally acts like a disinfectant & speeds up the healing process.
I'd put this one down to pollution as well marine1.

If you cut yourself in the sea on rocks, oysters etc it's a different story though and takes a long time to heal. Suppose it's different bateria that grows there. Take a old cut, scrape or sore into the sea and it helps a lot with the healing.

I do however agree with you that this crap is coming from the land, most like untreated sewage or polluted effluent!
 
In December I stumbled on medical waste including test tubes of blood on one of the beaches around the Bluff area. After seeing that I did not want to be barefoot on a Durban beach ever again.
 
You never told us where you went and refuse to answer the question. We listed several places for you to go to.

I skipped the one joint a few people said cause they were going on about how yummy the wittle lambs were but after silence of the lambs I just avoid lamb, went to the Britannia dump....., then on the same road but further down opposite billy the bums or something another curry place, can't recall the name, was some locals converted house, so can't get much more authentic durbs that that, and then moyos by the beach, but thats just because its a cool place to have beers and expensive bunny chows.
 
Holy crap.... its "The Thing"

Yes :D Finally, the time for us to be wiped off this planet has come. I feel so ashamed of the fact that I'm a human being. The human race has to be the most barbaric race in the universe (I don't buy this multiverse crap, btw).
 
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