Dubai Telegraph - Rare bone-eroding disease ruining lives in Kenya's poorest county

EUR -
AED 4.165802
AFN 79.394179
ALL 98.348835
AMD 436.028978
ANG 2.02984
AOA 1040.612752
ARS 1288.692658
AUD 1.757157
AWG 2.042963
AZN 1.92961
BAM 1.962187
BBD 2.287446
BDT 137.98917
BGN 1.956192
BHD 0.427588
BIF 3329.420371
BMD 1.134192
BND 1.463545
BOB 7.828656
BRL 6.49302
BSD 1.132888
BTN 97.362927
BWP 15.288428
BYN 3.707468
BYR 22230.161566
BZD 2.275557
CAD 1.567266
CDF 3249.460011
CHF 0.937359
CLF 0.02787
CLP 1069.486551
CNY 8.171056
CNH 8.146475
COP 4736.839121
CRC 575.774207
CUC 1.134192
CUP 30.056086
CVE 110.625097
CZK 24.897839
DJF 201.568294
DKK 7.459286
DOP 66.867661
DZD 150.231679
EGP 56.597878
ERN 17.012879
ETB 153.498825
FJD 2.563217
FKP 0.844853
GBP 0.84081
GEL 3.107338
GGP 0.844853
GHS 13.197669
GIP 0.844853
GMD 81.662028
GNF 9813.945447
GTQ 8.696307
GYD 237.016289
HKD 8.881766
HNL 29.488738
HRK 7.535687
HTG 148.242545
HUF 403.114333
IDR 18427.556327
ILS 4.082756
IMP 0.844853
INR 96.811562
IQD 1484.131006
IRR 47777.834437
ISK 144.733995
JEP 0.844853
JMD 180.026004
JOD 0.80416
JPY 162.530264
KES 146.594579
KGS 99.184929
KHR 4534.861419
KMF 492.830944
KPW 1020.727171
KRW 1551.739048
KWD 0.347902
KYD 0.944052
KZT 573.787741
LAK 24487.385219
LBP 101508.96005
LKR 339.133917
LRD 226.572524
LSL 20.425487
LTL 3.348974
LVL 0.686061
LYD 6.189146
MAD 10.46677
MDL 19.673038
MGA 5091.461026
MKD 61.523477
MMK 2381.362695
MNT 4054.528052
MOP 9.131924
MRU 44.850995
MUR 51.843426
MVR 17.534709
MWK 1964.350875
MXN 21.852827
MYR 4.799927
MZN 72.48613
NAD 20.425487
NGN 1803.489697
NIO 41.685691
NOK 11.48785
NPR 155.777639
NZD 1.907792
OMR 0.436647
PAB 1.132873
PEN 4.166663
PGK 4.644117
PHP 62.721385
PKR 319.474323
PLN 4.255282
PYG 9035.411235
QAR 4.140779
RON 5.052706
RSD 117.60281
RUB 89.994156
RWF 1622.84677
SAR 4.254214
SBD 9.471373
SCR 16.12453
SDG 681.077949
SEK 10.830331
SGD 1.458685
SHP 0.891297
SLE 25.768783
SLL 23783.437638
SOS 647.398791
SRD 41.56842
STD 23475.48275
SVC 9.912265
SYP 14745.852777
SZL 20.422477
THB 36.978058
TJS 11.538204
TMT 3.975343
TND 3.389132
TOP 2.656385
TRY 44.264936
TTD 7.700065
TWD 34.02292
TZS 3059.494973
UAH 47.024771
UGX 4136.464637
USD 1.134192
UYU 47.123392
UZS 14657.71243
VES 107.574162
VND 29436.817004
VUV 137.425272
WST 3.138996
XAF 658.090452
XAG 0.034177
XAU 0.000341
XCD 3.06521
XDR 0.816849
XOF 658.099184
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.573294
ZAR 20.282857
ZMK 10209.085946
ZMW 30.900265
ZWL 365.209334
  • RBGPF

    66.2000

    66.2

    +100%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0400

    11.27

    -0.35%

  • BP

    0.0600

    28.94

    +0.21%

  • GSK

    0.3800

    38.92

    +0.98%

  • RELX

    -0.1200

    54.98

    -0.22%

  • RIO

    -0.8600

    61.12

    -1.41%

  • CMSC

    -0.0900

    21.96

    -0.41%

  • AZN

    0.2700

    69.95

    +0.39%

  • SCS

    0.1400

    10.15

    +1.38%

  • NGG

    0.0600

    73.63

    +0.08%

  • BTI

    0.1400

    44.6

    +0.31%

  • VOD

    0.1200

    10.54

    +1.14%

  • CMSD

    -0.0600

    21.73

    -0.28%

  • BCC

    0.0000

    87.33

    0%

  • JRI

    -0.0800

    12.64

    -0.63%

  • BCE

    0.0000

    21.47

    0%

Rare bone-eroding disease ruining lives in Kenya's poorest county
Rare bone-eroding disease ruining lives in Kenya's poorest county / Photo: Luis TATO - AFP

Rare bone-eroding disease ruining lives in Kenya's poorest county

Joyce Lokonyi sits on an upturned bucket, fingers weaving palm fronds as the wind pulls her dress to expose the stump of her amputated foot, lost to a little-known disease ravaging Kenya's poorest county.

Text size:

Mycetoma is a fungal or bacterial infection that enters the body through any open wound, often as tiny as a thorn prick.

Starting as tiny bumps under the skin, it gradually leads to the erosion of tissue, muscles and bone.

The fungal variety is endemic across the so-called "mycetoma belt" -- including Somalia, Sudan, Yemen and northern Kenya -- with funding and research desperately lacking.

Once the disease has reached the bone the only option is amputation.

"I was able to slightly walk, although the disease had eaten all my toes," Lokonyi, 28, told AFP.

She was shunned by the local community, she said.

"They used to say that when you go to someone's home, you will leave traces of the disease where you stand."

She was unable to afford medication despite her husband selling off his goats, and amputation became the only option.

"I accepted because I saw that it was going to kill me," she said, a pair of battered crutches lying on the sand beside her two-year-old daughter.

But she has struggled with the aftermath.

"I have become a good-for-nothing, I can't work, I can't burn charcoal, I can't do anything," she said.

- Neglected -

In Kenya's poorest county, Turkana, around 70 percent of the population lives beneath the poverty line, with healthcare limited and hard to reach.

Mycetoma disproportionately affects rural communities of farmers and herders, according to the Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (DNDi), a global NGO.

It was only recognised as a neglected disease by the World Health Organization in 2016. Ignorance and misdiagnosis remain widespread.

"Doctors are not aware of the disease," Borna Nyaoke-Anoke, DNDi's head of mycetoma research, told AFP.

"If you're used to donkeys, you don't start seeing zebras everywhere."

The scale of the problem is difficult to estimate, but Ekiru Kidalio, director of Lodwar Hospital in Turkana, said they "rarely go a week without finding a case".

He added that the local population, 80 percent of which is illiterate, often turns to traditional medicine.

By the time they come to hospital "the condition is already advanced such that it's not easy to reverse".

Medication is also expensive -- treatment takes up to a year and costs as much as $2,000 -- and comes with dizzying side effects.

Diagnosis and treatment are not free under Kenya's overwhelmed health system, leaving patients at the mercy of foreign donors or seeking sums that are unimaginable for subsistence farmers.

- 'Think about the worst' -

In Lodwar Hospital, lab technician John Ekai bends over his microscope and examines a suspected mycetoma sample.

"Mycetoma is a very neglected disease, no-one is giving it attention," he told AFP.

He has become the go-to man for suspected patients, handling his charges with a mischievous sense of humour that puts them at ease.

Ekai has treated more than 100 mycetoma patients in the past year, but has seen only five recoveries, with many simply vanishing back into Turkana's arid plains.

He worries for those who have disappeared: "The mycetoma will grow and grow and maybe... lead to amputation."

During AFP's visit, he examined young mother Jennifer Ekal, 19, who had lived with the disease since she was 11.

"I was in school but I decided to leave because of my foot," she said, showing her swollen and painful extremity, hidden beneath a red-and-white dishcloth.

Four doses of medication a day appeared to be helping, she said.

But as she gathered up her daughter, three-year-old Bianca, she admitted she was worried about the future.

"I do not want to think about the worst."

T.Jamil--DT