From Deseret News archives:

2006 West Nile victim fighting her way back

Published: Thursday, July 24, 2008 12:11 a.m. MDT
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BOUNTIFUL — A Utah state health epidemiologist knows firsthand that the West Nile virus infection can create severe impairment. And that it only takes one time without mosquito repellent to turn what seems an unlikely risk into a hard-to-overcome reality.

Melissa Dimond, 34, nearly died after she was infected by a mosquito during a chance encounter with a neighbor in September 2006. She and her husband, Blake, married less than a year, had just returned from playing tennis when the neighbor introduced himself and they stopped to chat. She remembers thinking "almost flippantly" that she hoped she didn't get West Nile. She always put on repellent when outside between dusk and dawn. But this night, the newlyweds lingered in their driveway for 15 minutes or so.

Those minutes would change her life.

Almost two years have passed, but she still struggles with fatigue and blurred vision. The toes of her left foot curl, a condition called dystonia, so that it's sometimes excruciating to walk. She's also battled headaches and weakness, but she's made tremendous progress since she became ill.

She can swallow and eat again. She can smile and stick out her tongue. She's regaining control over her vocal range and is back in her church choir. And she remembers how to spit, so she's now able to brush her teeth properly.

Story continues below
The Dimonds told their story to media Wednesday, on the eve of a holiday that's bound to send people outside for evening barbecues and fun. Her hope is simple, she said: that people this Pioneer Day weekend and beyond will wear insect repellent and stay safe from mosquitoes that might carry the virus.

The virus has so far this year been found in several counties statewide, including Uintah, Salt Lake, Kane, Utah, Washington, Millard, Davis and Box Elder. Two human infections have been reported.

The risk of severe illness is small, since most people who are infected do not develop any, much less severe, symptoms like she did. But that risk is also real. She nearly died.

"Prevention," she says, "is such a simple thing."

She knew she'd been bitten. Two weeks later, she started having strange symptoms. She was "spacey" at work, she says. She's had type 1 diabetes since she was little; that day, she twice put her glucometer in the trash. Then her peripheral vision changed, with a cut-out area. She developed a rash and then a severe headache. When she asked a doctor if it could be West Nile, she was told it wasn't not the right season.

"I said, 'I think it is,"' she remembers.

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Image

Melissa Dimond, seen with her husband, Blake, suffered meningal encephalitis — the most severe form of West Nile virus. The Dimonds hope their story encourages others to keep themselves safe from mosquitoes.

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