Saturday, 16 August 2008
Doctors skip blood tests, often misdiagnose West Nile virus Print E-mail
Ace Stryker - Daily Herald   

When Patty Long's husband came down with intense flu-like symptoms in late July, she was concerned it might be something worse.

The family lives in Lake Shore -- west of Spanish Fork, on the banks of Utah Lake -- where mosquitoes are a big summertime problem. Having heard some of the media coverage about West Nile virus, she did some Internet research. Her husband, who declined to be interviewed for this story and didn't want his name published, suffered from many of the symptoms she read about: fatigue, a high fever and terrible headaches. So they went to their family doctor for a diagnosis.

"The doctor said, 'Well, it looks like he's got all the symptoms of West Nile virus,' " Long said.

Long said her husband was prescribed a pair of drugs to treat the symptoms and sent home to wait it out. But a week later, he was no better.

"I called the state Health Department because I needed to know how long he was going to be sick," she said. "I was just bawling. I thought he was going to die."

A department representative asked Long if any blood work had been done to confirm her husband's diagnosis. She answered no, and was surprised to find that what authorities consider to be a crucial step in the process had been skipped.

"They said doctors can't diagnose without a blood test," she said.

The couple went back to their doctor and asked that the tests be run. Ten days later, they learned that he never had West Nile.

"He was diagnosed with Epstein-Barr virus, which is pretty much the same thing, but you don't die from it," Patty said.

Mr. Long has still not returned to work and continues to suffer the symptoms of the untreatable virus while his body fights it. But at least they're armed with the right information about what he's going through, his wife said.

When contacted, the doctor declined to talk to the Daily Herald for this article. Long said she doesn't hold any ill will toward him -- but she is afraid to bring the Health Department's comments up with him, because he's responsible for signing papers to allow her husband to work again.

"I don't blame him because all the doctors are doing it," she said. "I'd like to know how many people have been told they have West Nile."

The state Health Department said they don't keep numbers on misdiagnoses or ones unsupported by blood tests, but it's a problem they've been aware of for years.

"That happens all the time," said Jodee Summers, a state epidemiologist. "This has been going on since West Nile came into Utah. Some doctors will base things on symptoms and not do tests."

The Utah County Health Department said the same thing, and suggested some doctors may forgo testing because their patients' insurance won't pay for it.

"Like any medical test, they can be expensive -- and if people don't have insurance, then sometimes the doctor will go ahead and try to help the patient," said spokesman Lance Madigan. "Whether they're helping or not may be something of a question."

Anecdotally, Long said once she started sharing her family's story, she learned of no less than 30 similar experiences among friends and co-workers. One of those was her niece, Stacey Wright, who said she was diagnosed two years ago by a doctor at Intermountain Springville InstaCare.

"He said, 'Well, it sounds like you've got West Nile. We're not even testing for it anymore; there are so many people that have it,' " she said. "It was really strange. It was just contradictory to what we had heard on the news and what seemed to be happening everywhere."

That summer, Utah County led the state with 66 cases of the virus confirmed with blood work, according to the state's Bureau of Epidemiology. But when Wright suffered for two months without relief, she grew skeptical about her case.

"I ended up going to the doctor in the springtime," she said. "They found out that I was really anemic. The question I have now is: Did I ever really have it? Am I immune to it? Am I going to get it again?"

The doctor who diagnosed Wright has since relocated to Arizona and could not be reached for comment. Intermountain Healthcare spokeswoman Janet Frank said it is Intermountain's policy today to never diagnose West Nile without a blood test -- and often a spinal tap, if the virus's cognitive symptoms start to show in a victim.

Wright said she's been cautious about wearing mosquito repellent since then, but both she and Long fear that others who were carelessly diagnosed might consider themselves immune -- and in doing so, become more vulnerable to the deadly virus.

"People who have been told they have it are out on the lake, not really worrying about it," Long said. "I can't imagine how many people have been told that."

Others, believing they have the virus, might write off critical symptoms of other conditions as a product of West Nile, Wright said.

"Maybe there's something seriously wrong that they don't know about, and they say, 'Nah, it's West Nile,' " she said.

Jodee Summers of the state Health Department said while the problem exists, solving it is not a priority because it's nebulous and hard to target until after the fact.

"We try to do education for physicians and stuff like that. That's the best we can do, is try to educate people of what tests to draw and those kinds of things," she said. "That's the only way to tell for sure if there's West Nile."

There haven't been any reported human cases of West Nile virus in Utah County this year.


Ace Stryker can be reached at 344-2556 or This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

Article views: 3,602  
User Rating: / 9
PoorBest 
Discuss (5 posts)
Momberg Aug 15 2008 22:04:43
This thread discusses the Content article: Doctors skip blood tests, often misdiagnose West Nile virus

First they suspected meningitis, but I've been through several spinal taps before, and didn't want another one, especially since I doubted it as I was not at all sensitive to light.
Next best guess? West Nile Virus. C'mon! I called the Health Department, and was told there were no cases from Springville, and I had to have a blood test to know for sure.
What would a blood test get me?
1) An accurate diagnosis
2) The Health Department could claim one from Springville
3) A test my insurance wouldn't pay
I've been sick for a month now, but can't afford to figure out what it is...if it was meningitis, I wouldn't be here. If it is West Nile, it's not the bad strain, or I'd be dead, so I just keep living, headache, stiff neck, and very cranky. Pain sucks.
#387624
nslsc Aug 16 2008 00:04:24
in '06. They sent me home twice from the emergency roomo until my wife started screaming at them to admit me. Funny thing was that the doctor felt I should be admitted (even called me at home) but the hospital said it was just the flu. I was in the hospital for 4 days and they just gave me pain killers and cold packs for my 104.9 fever. It was a week later after I got homoe that the CDC called me to tell me I had west nile. Supprised the doctor as well.

I was so sick I even had riggers. Had they not finally admitted me I think I would have died.
#387637
dwmoskowitz Aug 16 2008 15:42:31
Failure to diagnose makes even less sense now that a reasonably reliable treatment exists.

GenoMed, a genomics-based Disease Management company, has had encouraging results treating West Nile virus encephalitis since 2003.

We’ve had 82% treatment success rate in people (23 of 28 improved), 75% in horses (6 of 8 survived), and 50% in birds (6 of 12 survived). Our first 8 human WNV patients were published in a peer-reviewed medical journal in 2004 (1). This is sufficient for our treatment to officially exist in both the medical and legal senses, regardless of what the CDC does (or doesn’t) say.

We’ve seen that the earlier the treatment is begun, the better the outcome, so public education is absolutely critical—literally, the difference between life and death.

Anybody who wants to download our WNV trial protocol can do so for free at any time by clicking on the "West Nile trial" link on our company’s homepage at www.genomed.com.

Dave Moskowitz MD
CEO & Chief Medical Officer
GenoMed, Inc. (Ticker symbol GMED on OTC Pink Sheets)
www.genomed.com
“The public health companyâ„¢â€ť

1. Moskowitz DW, Johnson FE. The central role of angiotensin I-converting enzyme in vertebrate pathophysiology. Curr Top Med Chem. 2004;4(13):1433-54. PMID: 15379656 (For PDF file, click on paper #6 at: http://www.genomed.com/index.cfm?action=investor&drill=publications)
#387672
alucard Aug 16 2008 17:46:54
It's scary that so many people (even I have known several) who have been diagnosed with a case of WNV and they were not tested by the doctor. My son was so sick, he was forced to stay home from work for over three months. He could hardly get out of bed, all he did was sleep. He too had the same symptoms as this guy...flu like symptoms but not during flu season... super high fever, severe headache, fatigue, no appetite... When you tell someone about it, it seems everyone knows someone who has been "diagnosed" this way. What's the matter with doctors today???? Because there is no cure or treatment for WNV, patients are told to just go home and wait it out. Sometimes the symptoms got so bad that we didn't know whether to take him to the ER or not. When we did take him to the ER, they said "well these things take time and there's nothing we can do, just take him home keep an eye on him and if you're concerened, contact your doctor on Monday" Now that he's better, I wonder if he really did even have WNV or something else, like this guy has. I would like to know how many other people are in the same situation. I wish this family well!
#387686
unaffiliated_person Aug 16 2008 18:37:16
Momberg wrote:
This thread discusses the Content article: Doctors skip blood tests, often misdiagnose West Nile virus

First they suspected meningitis, but I've been through several spinal taps before, and didn't want another one, especially since I doubted it as I was not at all sensitive to light.
Next best guess? West Nile Virus. C'mon! I called the Health Department, and was told there were no cases from Springville, and I had to have a blood test to know for sure.
What would a blood test get me?
1) An accurate diagnosis
2) The Health Department could claim one from Springville
3) A test my insurance wouldn't pay
I've been sick for a month now, but can't afford to figure out what it is...if it was meningitis, I wouldn't be here. If it is West Nile, it's not the bad strain, or I'd be dead, so I just keep living, headache, stiff neck, and very cranky. Pain sucks.


I assume you have no insurance. Have you thought to look at medicare/caid to see if you qualify so you can go to a normal doctor and not an overworked ER physician?
#387696


Discuss this article on the forums. (5 posts)
Generated in 0.15133 Seconds