Deadly ‘black boil’ disease kills 17 and leaves 40 ill in Uganda as medics reveal symptoms and WHO warns it is spreading

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A deadly ‘black boil’ disease that has killed at least 17 and left 40 others seriously ill has been confirmed by medics.
 

Health officials have revealed the disease to be the deadly warfare bug anthrax, with an outbreak affecting the Kyotera district of Uganda, Africa.

The disease is believed to have killed at least 17 and affected around 40 other individuals, leaving those affected with symptoms like rashes and swollen limbs before potentially succumbing to the illness if no treatment is given.
 

The possibility that the outbreak was anthrax was initially dismissed by the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC), but tests by local authorities revealed the presence of the bacterial infection which is commonly found in cattle, sheep and goats.

The infection begins as a raised, sometimes itchy, bump resembling an insect bite. But within a day or two, the bump develops into an open but usually painless sore with a black centre.
 

Dr Edward Muwanga, the district health officer, confirmed the outbreak’s true nature: “The disease has been confirmed as anthrax. So we now know what we’re dealing with.
 

“People began falling ill in October, likely from consuming carcasses of dead cows, as 25 cattle have succumbed to the disease in this region.”
 

Local reports suggest a death toll of up to 17 individuals, reports the Sun.

Pontiano Kalebu, from the Uganda Virus Research Institute (UVRI), also corroborated the identification of the mysterious disease as anthrax.

He said: “Yes, tests were carried out here and anthrax was confirmed from the samples.”

The World Health Organisation has also said it is spreading.

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