This is the VOA Special English Development Report.Buruli
ulcer is a bacterial disease that eats away muscle tissue. People can become
disabled. They may even need to have an arm or leg removed. Buruli ulcer
disease can be easily treated with antibiotics. Yet people often do not get
medical help until the damage already has been done.
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A child in Ivory Coast recovering from a Buruli ulcer infection |
Doctor Alexander Tiendrebeogo from the World Health
Organization says the disease causes no pain at first. The condition usually
begins as a swelling on the skin. Then large ulcers form. These breaks destroy
skin and soft tissue, sometimes all the way down to the bone. Buruli ulcer is a disease found in tropical climates.
It belongs to the same family of bacteria as those that cause tuberculosis and
Hansen's disease, also known as leprosy.
Cases
have been reported in Africa, the Americas, Asia and the western Pacific. At
least thirty nations have had cases of Buruli ulcer disease. But experts say this
condition has not gotten as much attention as it should.
It
was just discussed during an international health conference held in Benin.
Benin, Ghana and Ivory Coast have thousands of current cases of Buruli ulcer
disease. Health officials believe other countries in West Africa have
unreported cases.
Scientists are not
sure how Buruli ulcer disease spreads or even how it develops in nature. They
suspect it may involve mosquitoes or other organisms that live in water.
A British doctor reported the first
cases of what was probably Buruli ulcer in eighteen ninety-seven in Uganda. Sir
Albert Cook of the Church Missionary Society described the condition in
patients at his Mengo Hospital in Kampala.
In
nineteen forty-eight, Peter MacCallum and other scientists in Australia reported
six cases near Melbourne. They also identified the bacterium that causes Buruli
ulcer. The first complete genetic map was published in two thousand seven. That
genome may lead to better treatment and control of the disease.
Public
health officials hope that a treatment can be developed that does not require
injections. If people could take the medicine by mouth, they would not need to
travel to health clinics.
In the nineteen sixties there were many cases in an
area then called Buruli County in Uganda. That explains the name Buruli ulcer,
the most commonly used name for the disease.
And
that's the VOA Special English Development Report. It was written by Jerilyn Watson.