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Outbreak history · Updated May 10, 2026

Four Corners 1993 — How a Mystery Disease in the US Southwest Became the Discovery of Sin Nombre Virus

In May 1993, healthy young Navajo Nation residents began dying of unexplained respiratory failure within hours. The investigation that followed identified an entirely new hantavirus, Sin Nombre virus, and changed how the world thinks about emerging infectious disease in the Americas. The full story.

Published: 10. Mai 20269 min read
HantaCount Editorial·Outbreak history desk
Medically reviewed byDr. M. Halikoğlu, MD· Infectious diseases physician (advisory)
Der vollständige Text dieses Artikels wird derzeit auf Englisch veröffentlicht. Wir arbeiten an der deutschen Übersetzung; Zusammenfassung und Titel finden Sie unten.

On 14 May 1993, a healthy 19-year-old Navajo runner named Merrill Bahe collapsed at the wheel of his car on Highway 666 in northwestern New Mexico. He had been on his way to his fiancée's funeral. Five days earlier, she had died of unexplained respiratory failure. Within 48 hours of his collapse, three more young Navajo residents had died with the same picture: brief flu-like illness, sudden cardiopulmonary collapse. Within four weeks, the Indian Health Service, New Mexico Department of Health, and a CDC team had identified the agent — an entirely new hantavirus that did not match any known reservoir or any known disease pattern. This is the story of how it happened, and why it still matters in 2026.

In one sentence

The 1993 Four Corners outbreak introduced Sin Nombre virus to medicine, established hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS) as a distinct disease entity, and became the model for every rapid outbreak investigation since — including the 2026 MV Hondius response.

The clinical mystery — May 1993

The clinical picture was the unsettling part. These were not frail elderly patients. They were teenagers, marathon runners, ranch hands in their twenties and thirties. The illness started looking like influenza — fever, muscle aches, fatigue — and within a few days progressed to a uniformly fatal respiratory collapse. By the end of June 1993, twenty-four cases had been identified and twelve patients were dead. Case fatality was running at 50%.

The Indian Health Service epidemiologist Bruce Tempest was the first to recognise this was not random. He started phoning state and regional surveillance contacts and within days had assembled a case cluster that crossed the Four Corners region — Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, and Utah. CDC was on the ground within a week.

What it wasn't

The investigation cycled fast through the obvious differential diagnoses:

  • Bubonic plague: Endemic in the region, rule-out priority. Fleas absent in case histories; cultures negative.
  • Pesticide poisoning: Investigated, no consistent exposure pattern.
  • Influenza, viral pneumonia, anthrax: All ruled out by early lab work.
  • Bioterrorism: Considered briefly given the severity. Quickly dismissed as the cluster mapped to rural living conditions, not a deliberate release.

The breakthrough — June 1993

The breakthrough came from CDC's Special Pathogens Branch in Atlanta. Stuart Nichol and his team applied a novel PCR approach with primers designed to detect any member of the hantavirus genus. They got a positive signal from an autopsy sample. This was a surprise — known hantaviruses (Hantaan, Seoul, Puumala, Dobrava) caused HFRS, a kidney syndrome in Eurasia, not pulmonary failure in the American Southwest. This was something new.

Within days, the rodent reservoir was identified through trapping in case-patient homes: the deer mouse, Peromyscus maniculatus. The virus was provisionally called Muerto Canyon virus, then Four Corners virus — both names rejected by community objections — and finally settled as Sin Nombre virus(literally "the virus with no name").

The drought-rodent-disease chain

The natural history piece came together over the following year. The US Southwest was emerging from a multi-year drought that had been broken by unusually heavy spring rains in 1993. The rains had triggered a piñon nut and grass-seed boom. Deer mouse populations had exploded — by some estimates ten-fold over the previous spring — and rodent pressure on rural homes had spiked accordingly. Hantavirus had likely been circulating in deer mice for centuries, but the conditions for human exposure had become much more favourable.

This climate-rodent-disease chain became the template for understanding subsequent hantavirus outbreaks worldwide, including the 2018-19 Epuyén ANDV cluster in Argentine Patagonia, and is relevant context for the 2026 MV Hondius cluster.

What changed because of 1993

  • HPS recognised as a distinct disease entity with a CDC case definition by 1994.
  • Universal-primer PCR for hantavirus detection became standard at reference laboratories worldwide.
  • Rodent-control guidance for cabins and rural homes was published in plain-English public-health pamphlets — the ancestor of the cleaning protocol every park ranger uses today.
  • The Indian Health Service - CDC partnership became the textbook model for tribal-federal outbreak response.
  • Andes virus surveillance in South America was reinforced — Argentina and Chile recognised they likely had their own version of the same disease, and within two years had documented and named it.

Why it still matters in 2026

The MV Hondius investigation is borrowing directly from the 1993 playbook: case-finding in geographically dispersed contacts, rapid PCR identification of a hantavirus species, rodent-source hypothesis testing, environmental decontamination. The big difference is that ANDV is the only hantavirus with documented person-to-person transmission, so the contact-tracing component of the response is more aggressive than anything 1993 needed.

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