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Rare meningitis cases at 26 in 5 states, 4 deaths

Dr. David Reagan, chief medical officer for the Tennessee Department of Health and Dr. Marion Kayiner, tell local and national media about an outbreak of fungal meningitis infections in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/The Tennessean, Shelley …

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FDA: Avoid drugs from company tied to meningitis

The type of meningitis is not contagious

Updated: Thursday, 04 Oct 2012, 3:18 PM EDT
Published : Thursday, 04 Oct 2012, 2:23 PM EDT

NEW YORK (AP) — The government is warning doctors and hospitals not to use any product from the specialty pharmacy that made the steroid suspected in a meningitis outbreak.

An official with the Food and Drug Administration said tests found contamination in a sealed vial of the steroid at the New England Compounding Center in Massachusetts. Tests are under way to determine if it is the same fungus blamed in the outbreak.

Federal officials on Thursday also updated the number of cases in the outbreak. Five people have died and 30 people in six states are ill. All received steroid shots for back pain.

The pharmacy issued a recall last week and has shut down operations. The steroid was sent to 75 facilities in 23 states.


*This is an update to previous AP coverage below.*

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — A fifth person has died in a growing outbreak of a rare form of meningitis that has sickened more than two dozen people in five states.

Dr. Robert Latham, chief of medicine at Saint Thomas Hospital in Nashville, said Thursday a patient died there late Wednesday or early Thursday, bringing the number of deaths in Tennessee to three.

Deaths have also been reported in Virginia and Maryland. All received steroid injections used mostly for back pain that have been traced back to a specialty pharmacy in Massachusetts. The pharmacy issued a recall last week and has shut down operations.

The type of meningitis is not contagious and health officials believe that more new cases are almost certain to appear in the coming days.

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