Alan McNarie: Lab’s Rat Lungworm Research Finally Gave This Man A Diagnosis
Promising work at the University of Hawaii Hilo is drastically underfunded while $1 million is spent on public education about the disease.
Kana Covington had a worm in his left eye. He had to go all the way to Phoenix to find an eye surgeon willing to remove it, because doctors in Hawaii wouldn鈥檛 recognize the test that detected it. Now, thanks to a budget dispute at the Hawaii Legislature, the test that got him diagnosed may never reach the general public.
Covington, who lives on the Big Island. is a victim of .
The Big Island resident believes his nightmare began about two years ago with what he thought then was a 鈥渞eally strange flu鈥 that involved body aches but no stomach or respiratory problems. Then he began noticing flashes of light and 鈥渇loaters鈥 in his eye.
He saw three different doctors in Hawaii; they prescribed eye drops, antibiotics and steroids and ran a battery of tests for everything from tuberculosis to HIV. All came back negative.
Covington heard from friends about a program run by聽 and the University of Hawaii Hilo鈥檚 Rat Lungworm Working Group involving an experimental blood test for rat lungworm. He volunteered for the test group 鈥 and the test came back positive.
But the retina specialist he was seeing in Honolulu dismissed the test results.
鈥淚 got the feeling that he didn鈥檛 have any answers at all,鈥 recalls Covington.
Relatives helped connect him with a specialist in Phoenix who was willing to consider the rat lung disease diagnosis. Since then, Covington has had three eye surgeries 鈥 including one that extracted a worm, confirming the diagnosis.
He the prospects for regaining vision in the eye are 鈥渋ffy.鈥
Covington is far from alone among rat lungworm victims who鈥檝e had trouble convincing their doctors. Symptoms vary wildly, from barely noticeable to headaches so excruciating that one woman called the pain worse than childbirth.
Money For Public Eduation
The disease is caused by聽a tiny parasitic roundworm that聽normally lives out its life cycle in rats and in mollusks such as slugs or snails. Instead of metamorphosing like insect larvae, rat lungworm larvae just change into other forms of larvae and change hosts, moving (normally) from rats to slugs, then back to rats.
So far as scientists know, the larvae can infect humans only during the stage when they leave their mollusk hosts. At that point, if ingested in contaminated produce, they can burrow from the human digestive tract up through liver and lungs to the brain.
Currently, the only official way to confirm the disease is through a painful spinal tap that physicians may be reluctant to approve.
Because of Covington鈥檚 experimental blood test and his out-of-state surgery, his case is still not listed among the 18 officially diagnosed cases of rat lungworm in Hawaii this year. And the blood test study that gave him that initial diagnosis, as well as the rest of the Rat Lungworm Working Group鈥檚 projects, may soon cease to exist. Jarvi鈥檚 lab currently has a remaining budget of about $11,000.
Related
Last year Sen. Kai Kahele of Hilo introduced , to fund the lab, which has operated so far on a shoestring budget of small grants, donations and Jarvi鈥檚 professorial salary.
鈥淭he bill went through House and Senate without a 鈥榥o鈥 vote,鈥 says Sen. Russell Ruderman of Puna. But apparently Kahele ran afoul of the Ways and Means Committee鈥檚 then-chair, Sen. Jill Tokuda, who refused to fund the bill.
Instead, WAM gave a million dollars to the Department of Health, which will be working with the Department of Agriculture over the next two years 鈥渢o educate people about prevention and to raise the safety and quality-control standards followed by our farmers, retailers and food establishments so that we can continue to buy local, while taking basic precautionary measures to safeguard consumers,鈥 Gov. David Ige announced in an online news conference.
That approach, however, may have two weaknesses. First, the agencies鈥 mandate contains a conflict of interest: they鈥檙e tasked not just with preventing the disease, but with convincing consumers to 鈥渃ontinue to buy local,鈥 as the governor put it.
That鈥檚 a problem, especially on the Big Island, where most of the diagnosed cases have occurred (though this year has also seen cases on Maui and Oahu). A Facebook query brought dozens of responses from residents who said they鈥檇 stopped buying local greens or eating salads at local restaurants because of the disease.
The second problem: so many gaps in knowledge about the disease exist that some of the 鈥渆ducation鈥 has outstripped the science.
One Department of Agriculture , for instance, assures listeners that rat lungworm is 鈥渆asily prevented simply by washing your produce thoroughly and making sure you don鈥檛 consume slugs and snails.鈥 The video accompanying the narration shows a pair of hands rubbing leaves of lettuce together under running water. Near the end, the logo 鈥淐lean, Healthy and Locally Grown鈥 appears in bold letters across the bottom of the screen.
鈥淭he DOH literature so far still says to wash them in water,鈥 Jarvi said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no evidence that water kills the larvae. They live quite well in water for weeks.鈥
One of her lab鈥檚 projects has been identifying safe vegetable washes that would kill the larvae; until that study is finished, she says, the public won鈥檛 know how to safely clean fresh veggies.
The official literature still claims that the disease is foodborne. But Jarvi has heard from several victims in the Big Island鈥檚 Puna District, where the majority of the confirmed rat lungworm cases occurred, who believe that they got ill not from accidentally eating slugs, but from drinking catchment water.
The Hazards Of Catchment Tanks
County water is not available in most of the district鈥檚 subdivisions. Instead, they rely on catchment tanks 鈥 usually repurposed above-ground swimming pools or livestock tanks with cloth covers.
鈥淲e鈥檝e seen very well-maintained catchment tanks and if you remove the cover, you鈥檒l find dozens of slugs in there,鈥 Jarvi says.
Many Puna residents drink catchment water that鈥檚 been run through filtration systems. Jarvi鈥檚 group has gotten a $35,000 Karassic Family Foundation grant to test those filters. They鈥檝e found that the larvae pass easily through 20-micron filters, which many homes have. They鈥檝e just begun testing 5-micron filters. Those, and 1-micron filters, should be fine enough to keep the parasites out — 鈥漷heoretically.鈥
鈥淭hese larvae can bore, and we don鈥檛 know that the larvae can鈥檛 go around the filter,鈥 Jarvi says. 鈥淲e just don鈥檛 know.鈥
She thinks a larger study is needed to determine how catchment systems overall can be designed to better prevent rat lungworm. But that study would cost about $600,000.
Completing the 鈥渄iagnostics expansion study鈥濃攚hich is developing the blood test that that diagnosed Kana Covington 鈥 would take another $150,000 to $200,000. To finish the vegetable wash study, Jarvi believes, would require another $60,000 or so. Another crucial study 鈥攁聽 鈥渂io-assay鈥 to determine whether rat lungworm larvae are actually dead, and not simply paralyzed or dormant from a treatment 鈥 would require yet another $15,000.
Two Puna members of the County Council, Jennifer Ruggles and Eileen O鈥橦ara, are working to come up with the $15,000 in county money for the “bio-assay,” at least. And on Friday, members of the Ways and Means Committee 鈥 now chaired by Sen. Donovan Dela Cruz 鈥 toured the lab.
Bill 272 could still be revived in the next legislative session.
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About the Author
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Alan D. McNarie has been covering the Big Island's people and issues for various publications for over a quarter century. He's published two novels: "Yeshua" and "The Soul Keys." He lives in Volcano. Email Alan at amcnarie@civilbeat.org