Mystery illness that causes ‘excessive body shaking’ affects about 300 people in Uganda
Published on Dec 16, 2024
By IANS
- NEW DELHI — About 300 people in Uganda have reportedly been affected by a
mystery illness that causes ‘excessive body shaking'.
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- The disease, named ‘Dinga Dinga’ by locals in the country's
Bundibugyo district, is majorly affecting women and girls, Ugandan newspaper
The Monitor reported.
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- The symptoms of the illness include fever and excessive body
shaking which makes walking a challenge.
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- The illness is currently being treated with antibiotics,
given by community health teams, and no fatalities have been reported so far,
Dr. Kiyita Christopher, the district health officer, was quoted as saying.
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- "There is no scientific evidence that herbal medicine
can treat this disease. We are using specific treatments, and patients usually
recover within a week. I urge locals to seek treatment from health facilities
within the district," he said.
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- The doctor noted that no instances had been recorded in nearby
areas outside of the Bundibugyo region.
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- He informed that samples have been submitted to the health
ministry for analysis. The country’s Health Ministry is yet to issue an
official statement about the disease.
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- The last such disease was recorded as the dancing plague of
1518, which occurred in Strasbourg, France. People would dance spontaneously,
often for days on end, seemingly against their own will and without the ability
to stop, and some reportedly died due to over-exhaustion.
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- Meanwhile, another African country is also seeing a
mysterious outbreak that has reportedly affected about 400 people.
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- The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) has been seeing a
mysterious outbreak causing fever, headache, cough, runny nose, and body aches.
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- According to the World Health Organization (WHO), 394 cases
and 30 deaths have been reported so far in the country's Panzi health zone.
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- The Xinhua news agency reported that respiratory pathogens
like influenza or Covid-19 are being investigated as a possible cause, along
with malaria, measles, and others.
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- Until laboratory test results are received, the cause
remains unclear, said the WHO, who joined the investigation of the undiagnosed
disease, early this month.