Rabbit fever strikes two N.C. hunters

By Marc Lallanilla, LiveScience

Two men have been stricken with tularemia, a potentially deadly disease commonly known as rabbit fever. Officials believe both men were infected while rabbit hunting in eastern North Carolina.

Rabbit fever is caused by the bacterium Francisella tularensis, according to the National Institutes of Health. Though the disease is rare, it can be fatal if left untreated. Symptoms of tularemia include fever, joint and muscle stiffness, skin ulcers, diarrhea, sweating and weight loss. People infected with rabbit fever can also develop pneumonia.

"It can make you very, very sick," Marilyn Haskell, epidemiologist with the North Carolina Division of Public Health, told the Wilson Times. The disease can be treated with antibiotics, and both men with the condition appear to be recovering.

There are several ways to contract tularemia, which is usually spread from rabbits, squirrels, raccoons, skunks or beavers: Most commonly, it is transmitted through a bite from an infected tick or mosquito, direct contact with an infected animal or from eating the improperly cooked meat of an animal with the disease.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has found that most rabbit fever infections occur in rural areas; about 126 cases are reported annually in the United States. Missouri, Arkansas, Oklahoma and Kansas are particularly hard hit, as are Massachusetts, South Dakota, California's Bay Area and the Willamette Valley region of Oregon and Washington.

The illness can also infect pets like dogs and cats, as well as other mammals.

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Sounds like a rare instance of poetic justice for these two - having their own health threatened as a result of murdering little bunnies. Shame on them!

  • 1 vote
Reply#1 - Mon Feb 25, 2013 6:22 PM EST

Hey James,are you for real. That's the second stupidest comment I've read today. Only because I read the other one first.

  • 3 votes
#1.1 - Sat Mar 2, 2013 9:50 AM EST
Reply

Well, well, well. The hunters became the hunted. Poetic justice. I love it.

I always thought it would be great to have deer jump out from behind a hunters own couch...take aim...and kill the hunter dead with a high powered rifle and scope---right in his own living room. That's what humans do to deer.

Sort of put a different spin on things.

  • 1 vote
Reply#2 - Tue Mar 5, 2013 7:37 PM EST

Gold fever might be better but then somtimes people who get it shoot each other. Sounds like these people might be needing something to eat not just shooting innocent bunnies and squirrels for sport. We migth look down on it but then we risk mad cow disease ourselves perhaps, from cattle driven mad in feedlots.

    Reply#3 - Thu Mar 7, 2013 5:39 PM EST
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