Jackie Thornton's Zika rash appeared about ten days after he became infected. It itched like measles, he said. |
When Jackie Thornton volunteered at his church to go on a summer mission trip to the island of Dominica in the eastern Caribbean, the last thing on his mind was Zika virus. Jackie is the owner of Alvin Pest Control in Alvin, TX, and long-time PMP. "I was more worried about bed bugs," he admitted.
But when he arrived on Dominica (pronounced doe men NEE kah), someone mentioned that Zika and Chikungunya cases had been reported on the island.
Life in Dominica is a world away from a Texas suburban town like Alvin. Nighttime temperatures this time of year typically hover around 85 degrees F. Not so hot that air conditioning is a necessity, and besides few could afford such luxury. The home where Jackie and his team slept was typical for the area. Keeping cool at night depended on a nice breeze coming through one of the unscreened windows.
Knowing that Zika was around, and being an Associate Certified Entomologist, Jackie got interested in what was flying in his window. Each night he would catch a few mosquitoes that looked more like house mosquitoes than the yellow fever mosquito, believed to be the primary Zika carrier. Maybe things wouldn't be that bad after all.
But he got worried again about Zika about a week after arriving. "I developed a low grade headache that seemed to be behind my eyes," he said. "It was worse when I woke up and lessened as the day progressed." Eventually four others on his team also got sick, but not enough to keep any of them from working their shifts at vacation Bible school and helping repair homes damaged by Hurricane Erica.
After returning to Texas on July 24 the headaches persisted. Two days later he woke up with joint pain in his hands, elbows, knees and feet, he said. The next day, about a week and a half after the first headaches started, he went to the doctor for his joint pain. On the way to the clinic, an itchy rash broke out "head to toe". It was like having measles, he said.
Red itchy eyes was the only classic symptom of Zika that Jackie didn't have. But he says he saw plenty of folks with red eyes while he was there.
Today, two and a half weeks after the first headache, he still itches, but the headache and joint pain is not as bad. In typical PMP trouper fashion Jackie said he never felt like he had to be bedridden, but that it's been an "uncomfortable nuisance". Indeed Jackie worked at his pest control company all last week, albeit while wearing long sleeves and lots of insect repellent to reduce the chance of starting his own Alvin, TX epidemic (an important community health precaution for any returning traveler, sick or not).
He now says, with a little bit of irony, "I may be the first U.S. PMP to come down with Zika."
To see a map showing cities at highest risk for Zika this summer, click http://www.cbsnews.com/news/zika-virus-mosquitoes-us-cities-most-at-risk/
To learn more about "Zika precautions for Women", see http://citybugs.tamu.edu/files/2016/06/Ento-053-Zika-Precautions-for-Women.pdf and "What Texans Need to Know About Zika" see http://citybugs.tamu.edu/files/2016/06/ENTO-052-What-Texans-Need-to-Know-about-Zika.pdf
Mike, it is interesting that Jackie was searching at night for the mosquito culprit, given that Aedes aegypti is typically a day biting mosquito. Maybe during his outreach, he visited homes that had infected mosquitoes. Please inform the community again that they need to protect themselves during the early morning, day, and early evening from these "salt & pepper" mosquitoes. I sincerely hope that Jackie is getting better, and most important, he is not being bitten by mosquitoes until he is better!
ReplyDeleteYou are right, ZIKA carrying mosquitoes are active primarily during the day, but also in the evening and morning. So one cannot say he is safe with windows open at night. At the time Jackie was bitten, some people thought that ZIKA might also be carried by Culex mosquitoes. This seems to have been discounted by recent research looking for evidence of this disease in the night flying Culex mosquitoes.
ReplyDeleteSee https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/09/160922104408.htm