​HIV Positive Men Warned Of “Meningitis” Outbreak​​

By: | 09/28/2012 04:47 PM ET

HIV positive men are being warned of meningitis after a recent outbreak in New York City.

HIV

An outbreak of meningitis among HIV-positive men is being investigated by New York City health officials. One man has died while another remains in critical condition. The disease is a bacterial infection of the brain’s membranous lining.

“Men experiencing high fever, headache, stiff neck and rash are advised to immediately contact their health care providers,” the health department said in a statement Thursday, adding that all four men who have contracted the disease are gay or have had sex with men.

Early symptoms of the disease include fever, headache, vomiting, stiff neck and a rash within 10 days of the infection. And if left untreated, the disease can cause severe brain damage and even death, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“It’s a form of bacterial meningitis that has a subtle onset and can progress very, very quickly,” said Dr. William Schaffner, president of the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases and chairman of preventive medicine at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. “The typical story is the college student that doesn’t feel so well. He goes to bed because he thinks he has the flu, and the next morning his friends find him comatose.”

The New York cases were spread across the city’s boroughs, according to the health department. All of the men have been in their 30s or early 40s, and have had HIV, a virus that attacks the immune system making infections more likely and more severe.

“People living with HIV are at a greater risk than the general population of acquiring invasive meningococcal disease and if infected, dying from infection,” the health department said.
It’s unclear whether the men had been receiving treatment for HIV.

A vaccine recommended for all teens and some adults helps guard against most types of bacterial meningitis. And if detected early, the infection can be cured with antibiotics, according to Schaffner.