Two cases of pneumonic plague - more
deadly than bubonic plague - have been reported in Madagascar, a health official
has told the BBC.
It comes after it was confirmed that there was a deadly outbreak of the
bubonic plague in a village in the north-west of the island.
Pneumonic plague can be inhaled and transmitted between humans without
involvement of animals or fleas.
It is the most virulent and least common form of plague.
It can kill within 24 hours.
'Most deaths'
Bubonic plague hit a village near Madagascar's north-western town of
Mandritsara last week.
At least 20 people were reported to have died.
The plague is spread because of poor hygiene
The Pasteur Institute of Madagascar confirmed on Tuesday that tests taken
from some bodies in the village, near the north-western town of Mandritsara,
last week showed that they had died of the plague.
However, it did not say how many people had died.
Pneumonic plague is caused by the same bacteria that occur in bubonic plague
- the Black Death that killed an estimated 25 million people in Europe during
the Middle Ages.
But while bubonic plague is usually transmitted by flea bites and can be
treated with antibiotics, pneumonic plague is easier to contract and if
untreated, has a very high case-fatality ratio, experts say.
Madagascar's health ministry director-general Dr Herlyne Ramihantaniarivo
confirmed to the BBC that two cases of the plague had been reported.
Last year, Madagascar had 60 deaths from bubonic plague, the world's highest
recorded number.
The International Committee of the Red Cross warned in October that
Madagascar was at risk of a plague epidemic.
The BBC's Tim Healy in the capital, Antananarivo, says health officials have
now gone to the remote area to investigate.
Prisoners on the island are usually most affected by bubonic plague, which is
spread because of unhygienic conditions, he says.
The prevalence of rats in Madagascar's prisons means the plague can spread
easily.
The Pasteur Institute said there were concerns that the disease could spread
to towns and cities where living standards have declined since a coup in 2009
and the ensuing political crisis.
On 20 December a second round is being held of presidential elections aimed
at ending the political deadlock.
Madagascar's prisons are overcrowded and dirty, the
ICRC says
bbc,co.uk
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