A young man from California died of the same virus linked to rodents who killed Gene Hackman in February with health officials discovering rats falls in his workplace after his premature death, according to a report.
Rodrigo Bercerra, 26, had fallen a serious ill and were prescribed antibiotics the night before they found him convulsing his gigantic lakes at home, where he perished from the pulmonary syndrome of Hantavirus, a strange design -farcte -remate to Redets.
Becerra, who was only three days after his birthday when he died, worked as a timbre in Mammoth Mountain Inn, where since then rodent droppings have been found behind the reception of the establishment.
“A very small amount of rodent droppings were found in the Bell area and went to the reception, very close to the main entrance in Mammoth Mountain Inn (MMI),” said David Andrews, director of health and safety of the Mammoth Mountain area, to The Outlet.
“The amounts of traces found were not worrisome for health officials … We do not have a reason for the group about exposure to the workplace in MMI for our employees or guests.”
The departure reported that there was no evidence of Rodens or Drops in their home financed by the employer.
Betsy Arakawa, the classic pianist married to Hackman, died in February of Hantavirus in the couple’s new house, pushing the rare disease to national attention.
Hantavirus is caught by contact with feces, urine or saliva of infected mice, more frequently by burial of sized air spoils. Patients can develop flu -similar symptoms that progress quickly to breathe hardly.
Mariela Becerra said her brother was sick for two weeks before the paramedics found him breathlessly and without a pulse, and added that he suffered from the latest stage of the elusive disease, despite the report of the forensic that indicated herology, “the loan, his death.
The hospital, which Becerra visited the night before he died, also ruled out the virus and gave it.
“They did not think that nothing was bad enough to admit that he or maintain it during the night, but so that he dies the next morning he is frustrating,” Mariela Becerra told The Outlet.
“They ruled it out. If you only create the doctor awareness that only because the patients are my do not remember to be exhibited for mice, that does not mean that it is impossible.”
A second individual who died of Hantavirus this year also visited the same hospital and were prescribed antibiotics before he died three days later, according to the report of the coroner obeyed by Sfgate.
The public health of Mono County confirmed earlier this month that three people died from the weird virus, and tests were found in their workplaces.
“Keep in mind that the researchers found evidence of the presence of mice in the workplace of each of these three people,” said a HEATH agency spokesman for The Outlet.
“But in no case found a serious infestation, a situation that would represent an obvious risk to health.”
Hantavirus kills approximately one third of those infected, which is 20 to 50 people each year in the United States, according to the centers for disease control and prevention.
About 865 cases of the disease in the United States between 1993 and 2022, In accordance with the CDC.