ANTELOPE VALLEY – NASA’s Dryden Flight Research Center is known for aircraft and science research, but a recent center-funded study is examining an air-borne disease found in the Mojave Desert.
Microscopic spores found in the soil of the arid regions of California and Arizona can lead to a serious fungal infection called Valley Fever, also known as coccidioidomycosis.
Reported Valley Fever cases in the Antelope Valley increased 545 percent when comparing 2000 – 2003 (49 cases) to 2008 – 2011 (316 cases), according to Ramon E. Guevara, Ph.D., epidemiologist with the County of Los Angeles Department of Public Health.
The disease is contracted after tiny spores are inhaled into the lungs from disturbed soil. There is no vaccine for this non-transmittable disease. Although it can be debilitating, it is rarely fatal.
A large number of those who live in the arid Southwest may become infected when exposed to the spores, but do not notice symptoms. Others develop symptoms similar to the flu that can last for months. In extreme cases, the infection can spread from the lungs to other parts of the body.
Especially vulnerable are visitors or new residents of an area where Valley Fever is prevalent, such as the Antelope Valley area of the Mojave Desert. NASA Dryden, located on Edwards Air Force Base in that region, hosts hundreds of temporary contract employees or guest scientists who come to the center to conduct research using Dryden’s aircraft.
“What makes the Antelope Valley significant is that it has the largest potential for population growth in Los Angeles County. In the Antelope Valley from 1996 to 2005, the correlation between the number of Valley Fever cases and the number of newly constructed privately owned buildings is 0.95, which is very strong as the perfect correlation is 1.00,” Guevara added.
All NASA centers have identified strategies for dealing with potential negative effects of climate change and formed the Climate Adaptation Science Investigator (CASI) working group. This group is tasked with identifying climate-change risks – such as drought, flooding, hurricanes, wildfires – at each center and developing strategies intended to minimize the impact to NASA missions. Dryden’s representatives are meteorologist Ed Teets and occupational health scientist Miriam Rodon-Naveira, who holds a doctorate in microbiology.
Teets and Rodon-Naveira continue research this year into the spread of Valley Fever by funding a scientist to gather soil samples in the region. Thomas Mace, retired NASA scientist and CASI member, procured original funding in 2012.
“NASA is enabling this research, hoping to provide the scientific community with data to better understand how climate increases or decreases outbreaks of Valley Fever,” said Rodon-Naveira. “That information can then be translated and provided to public health communities so they can use the data to make more informed decisions concerning Valley Fever.”
Antje Lauer, who has a Ph.D. in biology and is an assistant professor at California State University in Bakersfield, recently gathered soil samples from a variety of locations at Edwards Air Force Base with the goal of learning if one area held more Valley Fever spores than another. For example, is there an increase in the number of spores at the edge of a dry lake where moisture may have at times been greater than on the sloping hillside? A looming question is whether the current drought is increasing the number of Valley Fever cases when the dry soil is disturbed and releases the spores that are carried by desert winds.
“Antje Lauer’s work is very important to public health as she and her team lead the research in characterizing the soil where the Coccidioides immitis fungus grows,” commented Guevara. “Such information can contribute to strategies such as construction worker protection and population education.”
The Dryden CASI working group members brought together Lauer, Vic Etyemezian, who approaches his work with a doctorate in civil and environmental engineering, and George Nikolich of the Desert Research Institute (DRI) in Las Vegas, as the type of research the groups were conducting was complimentary.
As part of a NASA Research Opportunities in Space and Earth Sciences (ROSES) grant studying climate change at Dryden, Etyemezian is researching how soil behaves at different wind speeds. The pair collected dust samples using a small portable wind tunnel creating a situation similar to what occurs in the desert when the dust blows. They also studied the plants in the area of dust sampling because soil in that area may react differently from that sampled away from vegetation.
Additional DRI research funded under NASA’s Impacts of Climate Variability and Change on NASA Centers and Facilities Program grant includes development of regional climate projections for the Antelope Valley and characterization of the hydrology of the local watershed for the possibility of extreme storm events and flooding at Dryden. The latter included deploying meteorological sensors on and around Rogers Dry Lake.
Valley Fever also caught the attention of Public Broadcasting Services’ News Hour producers who interviewed the researchers while they collected soil samples on the edge of Rosamond Dry Lake at Edwards in mid-May.
NASA Dryden is enabling the California State University – Bakersfield and the Desert Research Institute studies to gain more information about where this particular organism lives. The ability to determine the type of soil, wind levels and moisture content required to reproduce and spread Valley Fever spores may lead to a healthier population in the arid Southwest.
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Ernest says
We move to Palmdale in 1994. I have read every report about Valley Fever that has been published in the News Paper. All reports speak of valley fever cases from 2000 and beyond.My wife contracted Valley Fever in September 1997 at which time she was two months pregnant with our child. She was told that she had other illnesses and treated for other illnesses until a infectious disease doctor found that she had Valley fever and transferred her to U.S.C medical because no other hospitals knew how to treat this. Last year there was and article in the paper about a 15 year old child in the antelope valley that was treated illness after illness and sent to three hospitals until she was sent to Children Hospital to late where she was found to have Valley Fever and died. My wife is in pain every day and has been on Medication that does not really help for 16 years. I know of people that died of Valley Fever and they were infected before the year of 2000. This is not new and has been going on way before 2000. We have the records that date back to 1997.
Eric says
They need to go 170 east towards the solar fields and take samples there!
Proud AV Resident says
I am so excited about this! Have been worried about this.