A 9-year-old boy dies months after the diagnosis of a rare disease caused by mouse droppings



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A boy from New Mexico who was initially diagnosed with a rare disease died last week.

Fernando Hernandez, 9, died Oct. 26 after being removed from an extracorporeal membrane oxygenator, reported the Farmington Daily Times. The city is about 135 miles northwest of Albuquerque.


Hernandez had a cerebral hemorrhage.

"We really thought it would come out," said the boy's father, George Hernandez.

Fernant Hernandez was diagnosed with hantavirus in February. He first spent eight days at the San Juan Regional Medical Center in Farmington with flu-like symptoms.

He was undergoing treatment at the Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center in Ohio.

He is the second patient admitted to the San Juan Regional Medical Center this year who was diagnosed with hantavirus and who died later. Kiley Lane, 27, died in April.


The first tests on both patients revealed that the virus was positive, medical center spokeswoman Laura Werbner told the newspaper. She had previously stated that subsequent tests by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention had become negative.

In an article on GoFundMe, Fernando Hernandez's father said that his son had "hope and dream to get out of the hospital one day and regain his normal life, his school, his friends, his Unfortunately, fate has taken another path. "

George Hernandez said that his son had hantavirus.

The New Mexico Department of Health has not reported any cases of hantavirus this year, said spokesman David Morgan.

Hantavirus is a respiratory disease that affects humans and is transmitted by infected rodents, according to the CDC.

The CDC reports that the disease is rare and that cases have been reported throughout the United States, except in Alaska and Hawaii.

Humans contract the disease through rodents' urine and their excrement containing hantavirus and taken to the air. Humans can also contract the disease by being bitten by a mouse or rat.

The disease is not spread from person to person, reports the CDC.

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