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Dizziness and vomiting are reported to be the symptoms of the disease that has spread terror among the locals. More than 20 people suffering from the disease are currently undergoing treatment at the District Hospital in Siraha.
Blood samples have been sent to Kathmandu for examination and the disease may be identified only after receiving the report, Dr Karna said. Meanwhile, a medical team has been mobilized in the effected settlements so as to stop it from spreading further. - See more at: www.myrepublica.com...
During this week this is at least third incident of its type in Panj Aab District.
More that a dozen schoolgirls were taken to hospital on Tuesday and 41 on Saturday.
The symptoms of the disease is headache, diarrhea and distressing.
This disease was experience in Panj Aab District about four years before but Doctor Abuzar Ghaznawi who is the head of medial staff at the district hospital says that it vanished after some times.
Local residents say some of those who got infected by this disease four years ago were hospitalized for few hours but others were under treatment even for days and months.
The animals began dying from an unidentified cause around 10 May. The death toll soared within days to 27,000, at which point the Kazakh government requested help from the secretariat of the convention. A team of vets, led by Richard Kock of the Royal Veterinary College in Hatfield, UK, flew out on Friday.
"It's very dramatic and traumatic, with 100 per cent mortality," Kock told New Scientist from Betpak-Dala in central Kazakhstan. "I know of no example in history with this level of mortality, killing all the animals and all the calves." The animals die through severe diarrhoea and difficulty breathing.
and in the animal world:
link
The animals began dying from an unidentified cause around 10 May. The death toll soared within days to 27,000, at which point the Kazakh government requested help from the secretariat of the convention. A team of vets, led by Richard Kock of the Royal Veterinary College in Hatfield, UK, flew out on Friday.
"It's very dramatic and traumatic, with 100 per cent mortality," Kock told New Scientist from Betpak-Dala in central Kazakhstan. "I know of no example in history with this level of mortality, killing all the animals and all the calves." The animals die through severe diarrhoea and difficulty breathing.
Probably more but that was from a 5 min search - not sure to be honest how unusual these are or not and what the normal level of 'mysterious' disease outbreaks are.