bakedoatmeal 6 hours ago

Recently heard a physician who essentially manages every case of this disease in Alberta give a really fascinating talk. The hepatic cysts these worms produce are very difficult to distinguish from cancer on imaging and the infection itself is staged using a PNM system not too dissimilar from cancer's TNM staging.

vunderba 4 hours ago

Sometimes the cuter the animal - the worse it seems to get. If you're in the mood for a little body horror light reading - check out baylisascaris (aka raccoon roundworm).

The official recommendation by the CDC is exercising safe hygiene protocols, oh and also a "propane flame gun".

https://www.cdc.gov/baylisascaris/about/index.html

eth0up 6 hours ago

We'll be seeing increase in other parasites too. Strongyloides (angiostrongylus) is spreading and pretty well embedded in the food chain, with cuban tree frogs and snails as a primary carrier. Baylisascaris tends to stay with racoons, but squirrels and other critters get it too, as well as any predators that eat them. Both are every bit as bad as the fox tapeworms. Strongyloides may be functionally the worst though, because contamination of crops is much easier or probable.

All are very difficult to treat, sometimes impossible

labrador 8 hours ago

Are a lot of people around foxes?

  • stevenwoo 5 hours ago

    I live between San Jose and San Francisco and (sampling bias I mainly ride my bike during the day) I've seen foxes a couple of times in the suburbs (once about two miles outside Cupertino and once in Portola Valley where people like Larry Ellison have an estate) over twenty years, and probably a coyote at least once a month and a bobcat maybe twice a year and three mountain lions over the same time period, a fox is rare to see in the day but they are nocturnal so mostly not active during the day. The average person is more likely to encounter fox scat without knowing that's what it is.

  • asdefghyk 7 hours ago

    As they become urbanized ... it seems . Based on article content ...

    "...Like other previous studies, the Swiss analysis found a jump in infections starting around 2000. It's unclear what's causing this, but researchers have speculated that habitat expansion of primary host populations, an increased use of imaging in health care, and a more susceptible population may be possible explanations. In the current study, the increase in the number of cases was linked to a "substantial" increase in incidental findings of AE—that is, asymptomatic parasitic cysts were detected inadvertently during medical care. That points to increased imaging. But, in 2021, researchers in Canada reported AE as an emerging disease in Alberta, which they partly attributed to the growing urbanization of coyotes....."

  • morkalork 7 hours ago

    Yes. Not just foxes but coyotes, wild turkeys too have been been getting along well in suburban areas.

    • cantrecallmypwd 5 hours ago

      We had wild bats, crows, vultures, woodpeckers, jays, finches, hummingbirds, eagles, turkeys, peacocks, foxes, deer, and black bear. Also, recovering and "recovering" meth addicts from a halfway house wandering down to the pharmacy 6 blocks away.

  • cantrecallmypwd 5 hours ago

    Where I used to live in Paradise, foxes would eagerly come over to within 3m/10' and watch what I was working on outside.

    Just remember the failsafe approach to wildlife: assume they are carriers of communicable diseases like rabies, hantavirus, anthrax, plague, bird flu, EEEV, and rare and novel diseases unknown to most doctors or all scientific literature.

  • bitwize 7 hours ago

    Other canids, including dogs, may also serve as a primary host.

  • thinkingemote 2 hours ago

    Yes. many. In England, urban foxes are everywhere. They come out at night and will poop in gardens.