2013/03/31 22:22:13 | |
Taipei, March 31 (CNA) Taiwan heightened its vigilance at its entry ports and alerted the medical professionals to be on the look out for unknown pneumonia patients after China reported two deaths from and one critical case of H7N9 avian influenza infection Sunday. Chou Jih-haw, deputy director general of Taiwan's Centers for Disease Control, said China's Centers for Disease Control informed his centers of the H7N9 bird flu cases Sunday evening, upon which he issued a notice to all medical institutions in Taiwan as well as to all airports and sea ports. Chou said the medical institutions have been advised to be on the alert against any cases of unknown pneumonia, clusters of pneumonia or medical workers stricken by unknown pneumonia. Hospitals and other health care facilities were told to strengthen control of infectious diseases. In the meantime, entry port workers were asked to watch the health conditions of travelers from China, Hong Kong and Macau, tighten checks on fever-looking in-bound visitors and question their travel history. Those found to be suffering from fever should be asked to leave their contact addresses and numbers, he added. Two men, aged 87 and 27, in Shanghai passed away on March 4 and 10 respectively. In Anhui, central China, a 35-year-old female patient came down with the virus, according to Chinese health authorities, who noted that these were the first reported cases of H7N9 human infection in the world. Chou said China's CDC on March 29 conducted tests and confirmed that all three cases were H7N9. He quoted China's CDC as saying that all three cases presented early respiratory infection symptoms of fever and cough, and later developed into severe pneumonia and had breathing difficulties. No link had been found between the three patients and no abnormality was detected among the 88 close contacts of three cases. There is no vaccine against the virus at the moment. The centers reminded the public to remain vigilant against avian influenza infection and to avoid direct contact with poultry and birds, as well as their droppings. If contacts have been m |
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Sunday, March 31, 2013
Taiwan on alert against H7N9 bird flu
Pig removal done
2013-03-31 09:02
SHANGHAI has mostly completed the work of fishing dead pigs from the Huangpu River, except for along the border between Shanghai and Zhejiang Province, city spokesman Xu Wei said yesterday. The city didn't release the number of carcasses found yesterday, if any. On Thursday, the total was 11,257. Xu said Shanghai plans to set up an emergency system to help ensure water safety. http://english.eastday.com/e/130331/u1a7292907.html
Shanghai people infected with the H7N9 bird flu cases close contacts were not unusual
According to the Shanghai health sector, active surveillance, diagnosis, and in accordance with the law to the public by the National Health and Family Planning Organization experts, Shanghai found two cases of human infection with the H7N9 avian influenza. Medical observation, so far, all close contacts of the cases were not found similar symptoms and morbidity. Shanghai this year, the flu, pneumonia is generally stable, and no significant increase compared with the same period in the last three years the incidence. The health sector has been further strengthened monitoring prevention and control of infectious diseases of the respiratory tract.
Recently, two patients in the city, Lee, Wu because of fever, cough and other symptoms to the hospital, was diagnosed with severe pneumonia after she died. The early onset of both influenza-like symptoms, a week after symptoms develop into pneumonia and was progressively increased, two patients had chronic underlying disease history. Lee before the onset of his two sons are also due to similar symptoms to the hospital for treatment, the eldest son was diagnosed with a lung infection, pneumonia, has been cured; youngest son was diagnosed with severe pneumonia after she died. They were not detected in the H7N9 avian influenza.
Hospital has public health to the City Center and the City of clinical disease prevention and control center for inspection Lee Wu from patients, the Municipal Public Health Clinical Center for Disease Prevention and Control Center in a timely manner to carry out the relevant laboratory screening, has ruled out infection seasonal flu, H1N1, people infected with the highly pathogenic avian influenza (H5N1) and SARS, novel coronavirus might further testing, found that patients may be infected can not be sub-type of influenza virus. Recognized after the detection of the China Disease Prevention and Control Center for Influenza A H7N9 avian flu virus.
Municipal Health Bureau has deployed medical and health institutions at all levels to strengthen the monitoring of influenza, unexplained pneumonia and other respiratory diseases, highly concerned about the unexplained pneumonia, and found similar cases, good case reports in a timely manner according to specifications, sample collection, laboratory testing and medical treatment and other work, and earnestly safeguard the public health.
According to experts, according to who is in close contact with medical observation, is not suggesting that the virus has strong interpersonal communication skills. The experts suggest that the event of fever, cough and other symptoms of acute respiratory infections, especially high fever, breathing difficulties, you should seek immediate medical attention. Keep wash their hands, cover your nose and mouth when coughing or sneezing and other personal hygiene can be effective in preventing influenza and other respiratory diseases. Should also avoid contact and edible disease (dead) livestock.
The World Health Organization is "closely monitoring the situation"
The World Health Organization is "closely monitoring the situation" in China, regional agency spokesman Timothy O'Leary said in Manila.
"There is apparently no evidence of human-to-human transmission, and transmission of the virus appears to be inefficient, therefore the risk to public health would appear to be low," O'Leary said.
]http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-202_162-...ird-flu-fears/
"There is apparently no evidence of human-to-human transmission, and transmission of the virus appears to be inefficient, therefore the risk to public health would appear to be low," O'Leary said.
]http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-202_162-...ird-flu-fears/
Hong Kong experts: mainland necessary acquisition Huangpu River the dead pigs sample investigation of avian flu
Hong Kong infectious disease expert said, the the Mainland first time h7n9 avian flu human cases of infection, a high probability of virus variants monitor cases of human infection may also occur in the future.
Shanghai and Anhui reported human infection h7n9 bird flu cases, two deaths in patients in critical condition, media reports said it was the first time human infection h7n9 virus. Big infection in Hong Kong and Hong Kong, and Director of the Centre for Infectious Diseases, Ho Pak-leung said, the past human infection with avian influenza type Mainland, mainly belonging to h5 category.
Ho Pak-leung: "So this is transmitted to humans are special varieties of avian flu virus is likely to show the place has begun to appear the epidemiological transition. Because human transmission of the virus causing death, so this kinds of viruses with low pathogenic h7n9 previously found in the gene level, what is the difference, it will not be involved in some completely different genes, which have led to infect humans, such information is quite critical. "
Ho Pak-leung also said that, the h7n9 virus may be lurking in some birds, but not enough to make these birds incidence or death, cases of human infection may also occur in the future.
Ho Pak-leung: "assumes that the birds, for example, duck and goose categories already Pu exists for it there and then transmitted to the human risk, if people in contact with birds, health is not good, the presence of the virus in birds have a chance to spread to humans, so it can not be ruled out that there will be sporadic cases of infection. "
As to whether a large number of dead pigs in Shanghai Huangpu River, Ho Pak-leung said there is not enough evidence base comment whether the two, but because of one of these cases, the pork traders, the relevant mainland authorities to collect dead pig samples, testing of avian influenza virus. http://www.kaixian.tv/R1/n1598418c11.shtml
Two Die from H7N9 Bird Flu in Shanghai
2013-03-31 14:44:2
Three cases of human infection with H7N9 avian influenza have been detected recently in Shanghai and Anhui Province, and two of them have died, the other being in a critical condition, the National Health and Family Planning Commission said Sunday.
The victims include an 87-year-old male in Shanghai who got sick on Feb. 19 and died on March 4, a 27-year-old male in Shanghai who became ill on Feb. 27 and died on March 10, and a 35-year-old female in Chuzhou City of Anhui who became ill on March 9 and is now in a critical condition.
They all showed initial symptoms of fever and coughs which developed into severe pneumonia and difficult breathing in later stages, according to the report.
On Saturday, the three cases were confirmed to be human infection with H7N9 avian influenza by an expert team summoned by the health and family planning commission, based on clinical observation, laboratory tests and epidemiological surveys.
On Friday, the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Preservation separated the H7N9 bird flu virus from body samples of the patients.
So far, the commission said, it is unclear how the three got infected, and no mutual infections were discovered among them. Besides, no abnormalities were detected among 88 of their close contacts.
The subtype of H7N9 bird flu virus has not been contracted to human beings before. The virus shows no signs of being highly contagious among humans, according to the clinical observation on the cases' close contacts.
However, as only three cases of human infection of H7N9 have been found, relatively little research has been done on it. The expert team is working to study the toxicity and human-infection capacity of the virus, according to the commission.
There are no vaccines against the H7N9 bird flu virus either at home or abroad. http://english.cri.cn/6909/2013/03/31/189s757006.htm
New strain of avian flu kills at least 2 in China
New strain of avian flu kills at least 2 in China
Published time: March 31, 2013 13:08
Reuters/Tyrone SiuTwo Shanghai men have died after being infected with H7N9 avian flu, and a third person is in critical condition, Chinese authorities reported Sunday, adding that this type of flu strain has “never been transmitted to humans before.”
The first victim was an 87-year-old man who fell ill on February 19 and died on March 4, followed by a 27-year-old man who contracted the disease on February 27 and passed away on March 10, according to an online statement by the National Health and Family Planning Commission.
The third case involves a 35-year-old woman from a nearby Chinese province of Anhui who became ill on March 9 and is now in critical condition.
The infected first experienced fever and coughing, which later turned into severe pneumonia and breathing problems, AFP reported.
There is no evidence confirming that the three contracted the disease from each other. The 88 people who were in closest contact with the infected did not contract the disease, according to the medical agency.
H7N9 bird flu is a sub-strain that had not been transmitted to humans before, the commission stated. The majority of human deaths from bird flu have been caused by the H5N1 strain. More than 360 have died from H5N1 globally from 2003 March 2013, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).
Currently, the infection route for the new avian flu remains unclear, the commission reported, adding that no vaccines are currently available.
The Chinese Center for Disease Control notified the WHO of the developments, specifying that the delay in announcing the result was caused by the amount of time it took to determine the source of the illness.
China has one of the worst records of bird flu, as it has the largest poultry population in the world, which is held in close proximity to humans, especially in rural areas. http://rt.com/news/new-avian-flu-deaths-118/
Health Authority Abu Dhabi tests for Sars-like virus that killed Emirati
Health Authority Abu Dhabi tests for Sars-like virus that killed Emirati
Mar 31, 2013
Heath Authority Abu Dhabi (Haad) released a statement this morning confirming it is coordinating with the Ministry of Health and Dubai Health Authority, as well as all other concerned authorities in the country, in monitoring the coronavirus.
The statement comes after an Emirati man died in a hospital in Munich, Germany, last week after contracting the novel coronavirus (NCoV) infection.
It is not known where he contracted the virus, although he had recently visited Saudi Arabia, where most cases have originated.
He is the 11th person to die out of 17 cases reported to the World Health Organisation (Who).
Haad said it has taken the necessary measures and precautions, as per the international standards and recommendations issued by Who.
Haad said it has taken the necessary measures and precautions, as per the international standards and recommendations issued by Who.
"The authority confirms that there are no confirmed cases in the emirate and that the necessary test is available in the emirate of Abu Dhabi at Sheikh Khalifa Medical City," the statement read.
"Furthermore, the authority released a circular to all healthcare providers in the emirate back in December 2012 on the necessary notification and reporting mechanism on any suspected coronavirus cases."
It is healthcare providers' responsibility to refer patients who may be suspected of having the coronavirus to do the test.
* This is an updated version of this story.
Read more: http://www.thenational.ae/news/uae-news/health/health-authority-abu-dhabi-tests-for-sars-like-virus-that-killed-emirati#ixzz2P7jOlkLl
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China reports first known deaths from rare bird flu strain
Sunday, March 31, 2013 8:04AM EDT
BEIJING -- Two Shanghai men have died from a lesser-known type of bird flu in the first known human deaths from the strain, and Chinese authorities said Sunday that it wasn't clear how they were infected, but that there was no evidence of human-to-human transmission.
A third person, a woman in the nearby province of Anhui, also contracted the H7N9 strain of bird flu and was in critical condition, China's National Health and Family Planning Commission said in a report on its website.
There was no sign that any of the three, who were infected over the past two months, had contracted the disease from each other, and no sign of infection in the 88 people who had closest contact with them, the medical agency said...
Read more: http://www.ctvnews.ca/world/china-reports-first-known-deaths-from-rare-bird-flu-strain-1.1217846#ixzz2P7iYgag6
Starving, Dying Sea Lions Washing Up On Southland Beaches
http://news.yahoo.com/video/starving-dying-sea-lions-washing-064300290.html
Saturday, March 30, 2013
Coronavirus could end up going global
March 30, 2013 - 9:44am BY HELEN BRANSWELL THE CANADIAN PRESS
Trajectory depends on prevalence of patients called superspreaders
A coronavirus is shown in this colourized transmission electron micrograph. The World Health Organization says it has been notified of another coronavirus infection the 15th since the virus came to light last fall. The case was discovered in Saudi Arabia, which has reported the most cases of any country to date.(BETH FISCHER / US National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases)
TORONTO — People who think the new coronavirus couldn’t take off and cause a SARS-like crisis may have forgotten a phenomenon that was a game-changer during SARS — patients called superspreaders.
At present, this new coronavirus doesn’t seem to spread easily from person to person, a fact which some people use to argue it will not become the next SARS. Some limited human transmission has TORONTO — People who think the new coronavirus couldn’t take off and cause a SARS-like crisis may have forgotten a phenomenon that was a game-changer during SARS — patients called superspreaders.
At present, this new coronavirus doesn’t seem to spread easily from person to person, a fact which some people use to argue it will not become the next SARS. Some limited human transmission has occurred, but confirmed cases are few and sporadically seen.
However, several experts suggest that superspreaders, which turned SARS into a global outbreak, could do the same with this new virus. That term refers to people who buck the transmission trend with a given bacteria or virus, infecting many more people than is the norm.
Dutch virologist Ron Fouchier gives a succinct answer when asked if a superspreader could profoundly alter the pattern of spread with this emerging virus: “Yes.”
If the virus infected someone who turned out to be a superspreader, and that person sought care in a hospital that wasn’t taking precautions against novel coronavirus infections, this new disease could rapidly begin to resemble SARS.
“I think we would be in big trouble,” says Fouchier, who is with Erasmus Medical Centre in Rotterdam. “There were really only very few cases that caused the trouble during the SARS outbreak.”
So far there have been 16 confirmed infections with the new virus, 10 of which have been fatal. Cases have emerged from Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Jordan.
After the dust settled from the whirlwind 2003 event and infectious diseases teams traded their emergency response vests for their research coats, it became apparent that the SARS coronavirus hadn’t spread very well.
In fact, most people who contracted the virus either didn’t infect anyone else, or passed it on to a single person. With that kind of inefficient transmission, an outbreak would normally stall, lacking the momentum to keep itself going.
But during SARS, a select few people inexplicably ended up infecting a dozen, two dozen or more people, turning a disease that might otherwise never have been spotted into a four-month worldwide panic.
SARS went global thanks to a superspreader — a Chinese doctor who infected more than a dozen people at a Hong Kong hotel in late February. One of those people brought the virus to Canada.
In Singapore, one SARS patient infected 62 people. In Toronto, which had several superspreaders, one early case infected 44 others.
In fact, an elderly couple who contracted the virus on the night SARS made its first appearance in a Toronto hospital were both superspreaders.
The woman, who had taken her husband to hospital for a heart problem, brought him back a few days later when he began to suffer from the symptoms that would come to be recognized as SARS. Later, people who traced the spread of the virus through Toronto hospitals would see that she infected three admission clerks, a security guard, five visitors, three nurses and one housekeeper — all within a 21/2-hour span.
“She wasn’t that sick, actually. I don’t even know if she had a fever,” says Dr. Donald Low, the Toronto microbiologist who helped lead the city’s SARS response.
“But clearly she was excreting a lot of virus … which then ping-ponged into a massive number of cases throughout the city.”
It’s not clear why some people became superspreaders during SARS.
True, in some cases the amplified transmission seemed to relate more to the circumstances than actual patient. For instance, it became apparent that intubating a patient — putting him or her on a breathing machine — could be a superspreader event if health-care workers weren’t wearing respirators fitted over their noses and mouths and goggles to shield the mucus membranes around their eyes.
Still, there were some people who seemed to spew more virus than others. Why? Maybe it was due to their health status — perhaps they had another medical condition that amped up the amount of virus they emitted, muses Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Diseases Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota.
Osterholm thinks it could happen again. “Is there a potential here for a superspreader to be in our midst? I think absolutely. Yes.”
“It’s the virus and the host and the environment here all interacting. And any one of them could up the ante for widespread transmission. This is why it’s kind of a stay-tuned (situation),” Osterholm warns.
Low too thinks it’s a possibility.
“These RNA viruses, you just can’t predict what they’re going to do,” he says. (Coronaviruses are RNA viruses, which mutate rapidly.) “So the longer they stay in the human population, the more likely it is they’re going to do something that’s not good.”
Hong Kong prepares for new coronavirus
By Keith Bradsher
New York Times
HONG KONG —
A decade after severe acute respiratory syndrome swept through Hong Kong and then around the world, the city is among the first to become worried about the emergence and spread of another, genetically related virus in the Middle East.
Medical researchers emphasize that they do not know if the new virus, which has killed 11 of the 17 people infected, will develop the same ability as SARS to spread from person to person. The World Health Organization is taking a cautious stance, stopping short of urging any special measures.
But Hong Kong is already taking preventive measures. Without a single confirmed human case of the new virus in East Asia so far, the government of the autonomous Chinese territory has begun alerting and training employees at hospitals, clinics and the airport to identify possible cases. Wide-ranging medical research is already under way.
Senior government officials held an extensive exercise last week to simulate the oversight of the quarantine and treatment of patients and their associates if a single person infected with the new virus arrived at the Hong Kong airport and began spreading it. The Health Department announced that it would “stay vigilant and continue to work closely with the WHO and other overseas health authorities to monitor the latest development of this novel infectious disease.”
The Hong Kong government’s measures reflect a continued preoccupation with public health — some say an obsession — that came about after nearly 1,800 people in Hong Kong became extremely ill with SARS in a few weeks during spring 2003, with 299 of them dying.
“At the moment, I think Hong Kong is likely to be the one with the strongest border control against this new virus for obvious historical reasons,” said Dr. Yuen Kwok-yung, chairman of the infectious diseases section of the microbiology department at Hong Kong University.
Some health experts in the West have been wary of drawing too much attention to the new virus, which is a coronavirus like SARS. They point out that as researchers have begun looking harder for coronaviruses after the SARS outbreak, they have found more of them.
Much of the research has been done in Hong Kong, which became a leading center for disease research as a British colony before the handover to China in 1997. The World Health Organization has long sent samples from all over Asia to Hong Kong University for testing, and Yuen and his colleagues at the university played a central role in identifying the SARS virus in 2003.
Hong Kong University researchers are now expressing growing concern about the new coronavirus that has emerged in the Middle East, known as novel coronavirus. Dr. Malik Peiris, a co-discoverer of SARS who is the director of the center for influenza research at Hong Kong University, warned that while SARS faded away after a year, with 8,445 cases and 790 deaths worldwide, two other coronaviruses had jumped from animals to people in the past two centuries and become endemic.
One of the concerns about the novel coronavirus is that it seems deadlier, having killed more than half of the people with confirmed cases. A study published last week in The Journal of Infectious Diseases by Yuen and 12 colleagues in Hong Kong and mainland China found that the new virus also infects a wider range of human tissue types than the SARS virus and kills them more quickly.
One big question is whether far more people are being infected without detection, in which case the disease may kill a lower percentage of victims but also be more transmissible. Yuen said that when 2,400 people were screened recently in Saudi Arabia for antibodies to the virus, none had them.
That suggests that the virus is periodically infecting people from an unknown animal host, but has not developed the ability to pass easily from person to person, he said.
The H5N1 avian influenza virus has been periodically jumping from birds to people and causing sporadic deaths for 16 years without developing sustained transmissibility among people. On the other hand, the SARS virus appears to have developed transmissibility after only a few months of sporadic infections of people in southern China in late 2002.
For the new virus, “we may be at the 2002 situation at this time, and that would be very, very bad,” Yuen said.
"New virus could be deadlier than SARS"
Scientists warn of a new virus that could be deadlier than SARS. This week demanded the virus, from the Middle East, eleventh fatality.
Unlike SARS, the virus according to researchers multiple organ damage and very quickly lead to death.Microbiologist Yuen Kwok-yung explained to the South China Morning Post that the virus can cause a deadly pandemic as it would further mutate. "The SARS coronavirus infects not many human cell lines, but this new virus does so much faster and can be fatal."..
Recombination Creates Human Beta2c Coronavirus Sub-clades
Recombinomics Commentary 19:30
March 29, 2013
The first three sequences defined a consensus sequence which had an identity of more than 99.9% with the two England sequences (21 differences + 6 base deletion and 26 differences, respectively). In contrast, the EMC/2012 sequence had an identity of less than 99.8% due to 70 polymorphisms which were concentrated in the orf 1ab gene. The Jordan-N3 sequence matched most of the orf 1ab polymorphisms, but had many additional unique polymorphisms. The 79 polymorphism in Jordan-N3 included 39 that matched EMC/12, two that matched England1, and 38 that were unique.
The distribution of the 70 Jordan-N3 polymorphisms was far from random. Between positions 3134 and 10982 (all of which are in orf 1ab) 24/26 Jordan-N3 polymorphisms match EMC/2012. In contrast, none of the 17 polymorphisms between positions 20208 and 26457 match EMC/2012 (one matches England1). This clustering signals evolution via homologous recombination. This same clustering was seen for EMC/12, where 24/27 of the polymorphisms between 3134 and 10982 match Jordan-N3 while 18/20 polymorphisms between 13678 and 266223 are unique.
The matches in orf 1ab are markedly different that the polymorphisms in the S gene. EMC/12 has only two polymorphisms, both of which areunique and synonymous. Jordan-N3 has 7 polymorphisms in the S gene and all are unique (and 4 are non-synonymous).
The matches between EMC/2012 and Jordan-N3 define a separate sub-clade that may be circulating in western KSA, and reports of mild nCoV in Jeddah raise concerns that this sub-clade may be linked to a large number of nCoV infections. In contrast, England1 and England2 may signal a separate clade circulating in eastern KSA. Partial sequences from the first case (45M) in Riyadh are identical to the consensus sequence and therefore not informative. This is also true for one of the partial sequences from the Essen case (the second Qatari patient, 45M, who was treated in Essen, Germany). The second partial sequence includes a polymorphism that matches the consensus for a position (29714) that has a shared change in EMC/2012 and Jordan-N3 (T29714A).
Thus, recombination has generated two distinct nCoV sub-clades, which may be circulating in geographically distinct regions in KSA. Release of full sequences from the Riyadh and Essen cases would help define these sub-clades, as would sequences from the mild cases in Jeddah.
Media Myth On Beta2c Coronavirus Transmission In HCWs
Recombinomics Commentary 22:45
March 29, 2013
In Canada during the 2003 SARS outbreak, the virus was so readily transmitted that extra hospital staff were stationed outside SARS patients' rooms to make sure health care workers didn't enter without full protective gear.
"That has not happened with these patients yet," he said. "It indicates that this is not a virus that is readily transmitted person-to-person."
The above comments on an ABC News report on the two most recent nCoV deaths (the index case, 60M, from the UK cluster and the first confirmed case, 73M, from the UAE) are a step beyond media myth. The first two known nCoV cases were Jordan health care workers (HCWs) who died on April 19 and April 26, 2012. Although lab confirmation was made retroactively (November, 2012), the confirmation was well in advance of the above interview, and claims that nCoV hasn’t spread to health care workers are demonstrably false.
The Jordan outbreak was centered in an ICU. Local media reports described it as a SARS-like outbreak, and the similarities with SARS clusters involving HCWs in 2003 were clear.
Jordan initially sent out samples to labs in France and Egypt to identify the etiological agents, which failed because testing was limited to known human agents. However, after the novel coronavirus was identified in a fatal case hospitalized in Jeddah, and a Qatari who was transported to the UK by air ambulance, samples from Jordan were re-tested by NAMRU-3 (US Naval medical facility in Egypt), who confirmed nCoV in the two fatal cases, who were HCWs.
Although WHO failed to explain why nCoV was not confirmed in the surviving cluster members, an epidemiological team interview patients and family members and concluded that the symptomatic members of the cluster likely nCoV infected and were classified as probable case.
Confirmation of nCoV in milder cases has been problematic and a surviving member of a Riyadh cluster was also classified as a probable case after he tested negative. Three other family members tested positive, including the father (70M) and son (38M) who died. However, WHO also noted that family contacts of the HCWS who were also symptomatic were also classified as probable cases whose infection was due to human to human transmission.
Moreover, NAMRU-3 has released a full sequence from samples collected from the nurse (45F) who was hospitalized (April 9) and died (April 19), and that sequence was most closely related to the case who died in Jeddah. The clustered shared polymorphisms indicated that thetwo districts subclades arose via recombination. The two more recent sequences (from the Qatari nation hospitalized in the UK and the UK index case) formed a second subclade.
The presence of two human subclades, which are not closely related to any animal coronavirus, in cases with no animal contact, signal sustained nCoV transmission, WHO denials notwithstanding. http://www.recombinomics.com/News/03291302/nCoV_HCW_H2H_MM.html
NCoV: the new virus worries WHO
en years after the SARS threat of a new epidemic which has already claimed 11 victims in the Middle East: the virus NCoV would be able to pass from animals to humans and from human to human. The pathogen attacks multiple organs and quickly kills the cells. At the moment is not very contagious, but if they are afraid of the possible mutation. Prepared the first counter.
Ten years have passed since the Sars has thrown into panic health authorities around the world and now faces the possibility of an epidemic even more dangerous than that generated by the atypical pneumonia.
This would be a coronavirus can easily infect different species, his name is NCoV and has already resulted in eleven deaths in the Middle East. The news was reported by the South China Morning Post, citing as source data from the University of Hong Kong.
The concern stems from the more aggressive of NCoV able to attack various organs and quickly destroy infected cells: the mortality caused by the virus is in fact very high and equal to56% of cases and SARS killed only 11% of those infected.
Researchers in Hong Kong revealed that the virus was first observed in bats, but do not know which is the country from which you started this threat. Has already resulted in casualties in the Arabian Peninsula and acts by attacking the liver, kidneys, intestines and the lower respiratory tract.
The pathogen is able to pass from animals to humans and can transmit the infection from man to man as evidenced by the fact that there have been two cases in one family.
Just the fact that involving the lower respiratory tract, and not the high, makes this little infectious virus, but scientists fear that NCoV may have a mutation and become capable of attacking the upper airway becoming in this way is extremely dangerous.
At present, the WHO estimates that there are already 17 infected.
The level of care is very high, the Italian National Institute of Health has already prepared reagents to perform promptly any diagnosis.
Fortunately, from the experience of SARS, which procured after 812 victims have originated in China, many things have changed.
The level of care is very high, the Italian National Institute of Health has already prepared reagents to perform promptly any diagnosis.
Fortunately, from the experience of SARS, which procured after 812 victims have originated in China, many things have changed.
With the introduction of strict regulation, in contrast to what happened then, the World Health Organization is contacted immediately when an outbreak begins, thus making possible an immediate task force to address the health threat . http://scienze.befan.it/ncov-il-nuovo-virus-che-preoccupa-loms/
The new coronavirus decade after comeback
2013-03-29 19:19:28
Ten years ago, the severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) swept Hong Kong, and then spread to the world. "Infectious Diseases" published a recent study found that a new coronavirus SARS virus can infect human tissue types, quickly caused the death of these organizations. Sectors in Hong Kong to take preventive measures to protect against the new virus strikes.
Medical experts stressed that they do not know whether this new virus can produce the same as with the SARS virus, the ability to spread between people.The World Health Organization (WHO), this cautious attitude.
According to the New York Times reported, the World Health Organization announced in the 26th and, so far, 17 people have been infected by this new virus called coronavirus 11 people were killed, including a British man, he went to Saudi Arabia and Pakistan Travel sick.
The World Health Organization requires member governments to report all new cases, but has not been urged to take any special measures. The organization said, "WHO does not recommend a special screening at ports of entry for this event is not recommended to take any travel or trade restrictions."
Although there has so far been in East Asia has not one is diagnosed infected people, Hong Kong has started to take preventive measures. The Hong Kong government has begun to notice and training hospitals, clinics and staff at the airport, to identify possible cases. Expand the range of medical research.
Senior officials of the SAR Government in a large-scale exercise was held on the 27th, simulation if an infected person to arrive at the airport, the spread of this new virus in Hong Kong, the government will be how to manage for the isolation and treatment of patients and staff. Hong Kong Department of Health said, to remain vigilant and continue to cooperate closely with the WHO and other health agencies overseas, to monitor the latest developments of new infectious diseases.
Head of the Department of Microbiology, School of Medicine of the University of Hong Kong, Yuen Kwok-yung (Yuen Kwok-yung), said, "At the moment, for obvious historical reasons, I think that the Hong Kong government to adopt the most stringent border controls against this new virus may become."
Yuen Kwok-yung their Hong Kong colleagues, discovered in 2003, played a key role in the SARS virus and its genetic similarity be traced back to an infection of the virus in wild bat research.
Now, researchers at the University of Hong Kong in the Middle East, said more and more worried about this new virus. This virus, like SARS is a coronavirus.The virus is named novel coronavirus EMC.
One of the discoverers of the SARS virus, the director of the Research Center of the University of Hong Kong influenza, Peiris (Malik Peiris) 26, warned, SARS virus in the world infected with 8445 people, of which 790 people were killed, although the virus disappeared a year later, but In the past two centuries, the other two coronavirus from animals spread transferred to spread in the human body has become endemic infectious diseases. Everyone is very worried about this new virus, because it seems to be more deadly, has caused the death of more than half of the patients in the confirmed cases.
The new virus can infect cells from a variety of animals, including monkeys, rabbits and pigs. This makes the new virus more opportunities to evolve greater infectious.
For 16 years, the H5N1 avian influenza virus occasionally spread from birds to humans and leads to death, but it has not evolved the ability to spread between people continued sporadic. However, SARS virus after some sporadic infection in southern China in late 2002, only months seems to have evolved the ability to spread from person to person.
Yuen Kwok-yung said, As for this new virus, "we face may be the case in 2002, that would be very, very bad, but it might be a situation similar to the H5N1."
Man tests negative for coronavirus
March 30, 2013
A 55-year-old man in United Christian Hospital has tested negative for novel coronavirus associated with severe respiratory disease, the Department of Health said today.
The man, with chronic illness, travelled with his wife to Italy from March 18 to 26. He fell ill on March 28 and was admitted to hospital for isolation and treatment yesterday.
He is stable. His wife has no symptoms.
The department stressed that no human infection with this virus has been identified so far in Hong Kong.
The man, with chronic illness, travelled with his wife to Italy from March 18 to 26. He fell ill on March 28 and was admitted to hospital for isolation and treatment yesterday.
He is stable. His wife has no symptoms.
The department stressed that no human infection with this virus has been identified so far in Hong Kong.
Friday, March 29, 2013
Treyfish continues to closely monitor the situation
‘More dangerous than SARS’: Scientists warn of deadly new coronavirus
Novel coronavirus lab studies hint at wide tissue susceptibility
Health: epidemiological situation in Qatar reassuring
http://www.alarab.qa/details.php?issueId=1934&artid=236498
CDC Issues Travel Notice Because Of Novel Coronavirus In The Middle East And United Kingdom
In light of the latest report of novel coronaviris (nCoV) from the World Health Organization and the Robert Koch Institute in Germany yesterday, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) issued an updated travel notice for people traveling abroad, specifically mentioning the United Kingdom and the Arabian Peninsula,according to the CDC notice March 27.
http://www.theglobaldispatch.com/cdc-issues-travel-notice-because-of-novel-coronavirus-in-the-middle-east-and-united-kingdom-93768/
://www.dubaichronicle.com/2013/03/29/how-dangerous-is-the-new-coronavirus/
Govt vows to keep transparency on info of SARS-like virus
(03-27 15:39) http://www.thestandard.com.hk/breaking_news_detail.asp?id=34046&icid=a&d_str=
, DHA monitoring coronavirus situation
http://www.khaleejtimes.com/nation/inside.asp?xfile=/data/nationgeneral/2013/March/nationgeneral_March548.xml§ion=nationgeneral
You should see a healthcare provider if you develop a fever and symptoms of lower respiratory illness, such as cough or shortness of breath, within 10 days after traveling from countries in or near the Arabian Peninsula*
http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/notices/in-the-news/coronavirus-saudi-arabia-qatar.htm
WHO continues to closely monitor the situation
http://www.who.int/csr/don/2013_03_26/en/index.html
NO MESSAGES FOR U.S. CITIZENS
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