Extremely rare tick-borne virus kills woman
The Bourbon virus has only affected 13 people globally.
A 58-year-old American woman recently died from a rare tick-borne virus. It has only affected 13 people worldwide, according to a report by the Daily Mail.
Tamela Wilson discovered two ticks on her body while she was at work. She immediately removed them and went about her day.
Not long after, the mother-of-one became violently ill with high fever and feelings of nausea and fatigue.
Doctors at the time treated her with antibiotics as they mistook her condition for a urinary tract infection, the report revealed.
Weeks later, her condition worsened and she had to be hospitalised. Blood tests showed Wilson had an untreatable condition called Bourbon virus, which first gained attention in 2014.
Wilson's doctors struggled to fight the disease as she developed pneumonia and hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis, which makes immune cells mutate. Her battle came to an end on June 23.
In the United States (US) only five people have been known to have the deadly virus. 68-year-old John Seested, who was the country's first case, died just two weeks after being bitten by a tick. Currently there is no treatment or vaccine.