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Thursday, November 29, 2012

Saudi Arabia-Free treatment for contagious diseases



Last Updated : Friday, November 30, 2012 12:32 AM

 
MADINAH — King Abdullah, Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques, has approved a proposal by Minister of Health Dr. Abdullah Al-Rabeeah to treat foreigners suffering from contagious diseases free of charge while ensuring their deportations are facilitated quickly.

Dr. Khaled Marghalani, Ministry of Health spokesman, said the Kingdom has always been committed to protecting citizens and foreigners from diseases.

He said the ministry would immediately implement the royal order.

Earlier, Al-Rabeeah submitted a proposal to King Abdullah that non-Saudis who suffer from contagious diseases should be treated free of charge like patients suffering from AIDS.  http://www.saudigazette.com.sa/index.cfm?method=home.regcon&contentid=20121130144468

WHO cites 7th coronavirus case, gives surveillance guidance



Nov 29, 2012 (CIDRAP News) 

– A third case in a family cluster of novel coronavirus infections has been confirmed, raising the global case count to seven, and the fourth illness in the family is now listed as a probable case, the World Health Organization (WHO) has announced.

In a statement dated yesterday, the WHO also indicated that only one death has been attributed to the novel virus so far, contradicting a Nov 23 announcement that reported two deaths among the first six cases.
The WHO also offered new surveillance recommendations for the novel virus. The agency called for testing of patients in any cluster of severe, unexplained respiratory infections, regardless of location or travel history, and testing of healthcare workers who suffer unexplained pneumonia after caring for patients with severe respiratory infections.

And in a related development, the Saudi Medical Journal reported that the person who had the third known novel coronavirus case is a 45-year-old gym teacher who visited a farm 3 days before he got sick and who survived his severe illness despite having preexisting health problems and only one kidney.
Update on cases
In reporting on cases 3 through 6 on Nov 23, the WHO said two of the confirmed patients belonged to the same family and household in Saudi Arabia and that two more members of the same family were sick, but their cases had not been confirmed. The latest statement said three of the confirmed case-patients and the person with the probable case all belong to the same family.
The statement did not specify whether the family members are thought to have passed the virus to one another or caught it from another source. "The source of the virus is unknown, as is the mode of transmission," the statement says.

The cases occurred in the Jeddha and Riyadh areas of Saudi Arabia, which are bout 850 kilometers apart, and in Doha, Qatar, the WHO noted.
The new announcement notes only one death from the novel coronavirus so far, a change from last week's statement noting two deaths among the first six cases. The WHO did not respond to a query about this point this afternoon.
The statement says all seven patients had an acute respiratory infection with signs and symptoms of pneumonia. Four patients had renal failure, and one of these died. "The remaining three patients had pneumonia that required intensive support, without renal failure, and recovered," it adds.
The WHO gave no update on the second case-patient, a Qatari man who was flown to London for treatment in September and has been hospitalized there since then.

Surveillance advice

The WHO's updated surveillance guidance follows up on comments the agency made last week about a need to broaden testing for the novel coronavirus. At that point the agency said the virus might be more widely distributed than just Saudi Arabia and Qatar, and suggested that health authorities consider testing patients with unexplained pneumonias even if they had no history of travel to the two countries.
The updated guidance recommends investigation for four categories of people:
  • Those with an unexplained acute respiratory infection, suspected pneumonia, and residence in or travel to the Arabian Peninsula or neighboring countries within 10 days before onset of illness
  • People with an acute respiratory illness who were in close contact with a confirmed or probable novel coronavirus case-patient within 10 days before getting sick
  • Any cluster of severe acute respiratory infections, regardless of location or travel history, and especially if patients need intensive care
  • Healthcare workers who care for patients with severe acute respiratory infections and fall ill with unexplained pneumonia, regardless of location or travel history
In addition, the WHO said countries that have the capacity may want to consider testing any patient who has unexplained, severe pneumonia. Also, the agency suggested the possibility of retrospective testing of stored respiratory specimens from patients who had unexplained pneumonia.

Details on third case

A team of Saudi and British authors provided details on the third novel coronavirus case, which was first announced by Saudi authorities Nov 4. The 45-year-old patient was hospitalized for 22 days and needed breathing support and hemodialysis before his eventual recovery, according to the report.
The article describes the patient as a heavy smoker who has type 2 diabetes, a history of ischemic heart disease, and only one functioning kidney.

Three days before his illness onset, the man visited a farm near his home and had brief contact with farm animals. The report does not mention any illness among the animals. The man had not traveled outside Riyadh before his illness, but he had been in contact with one of his children, who had a mild cold.

The patient fell ill on Oct 9, was seriously ill by Oct 12, and was moved to an intensive care unit (ICU) the next day. He needed breathing assistance for several days, and he received dialysis treatments for renal failure from Oct 15 to 23. He was finally released from the hospital Nov 4.
The man tested negative for a wide range of viruses and bacterial pathogens. But respiratory specimens tested positive for the novel coronavirus upE gene in two labs, a Saudi Arabian health ministry lab in Jeddah and the UK Health Protection Agency lab in Birmingham. The virus was not found in the patient's stool, plasma, or serum specimens.

The authors sequenced small pieces of two of the coronavirus genes from this case and the first case, which involved a Saudi Arabian man who died in June. They found that the sequences were identical to one another and to the same gene fragments from the second novel coronavirus case (the Qatari patient in London).
The authors comment that exposure to farm animals was identified as a risk factor in the first novel coronavirus case, but add that such exposures appear to be "an insignificant risk factor for cases 2 and 3."

"However, all cases would have been exposed to recurring dust storms through an arid summer, and possibly aerosolized virus as well," they write. 
"Investigations of possible animal reservoirs are currently in progress."

The report also raises the possibility—which has been mentioned before—that a cluster of unexplained respiratory illnesses in a Jordanian hospital ICU in April of this year might have been related to the novel virus.
"Still to be identified is the agent responsible for 11 cases of severe respiratory disease at an ICU in Zarqa, Jordan," it says. "The report by the Jordanian Minister of Health on April 17, 2012, noted that 8 cases were members of the healthcare staff."

In a report in May, the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) said one nurse died in the Jordanian outbreak and that all the patients had high fever and lower respiratory symptoms. Jordanian health officials thought the outbreak was caused by a virus, but no lab results were available at the time.
British officials mentioned the Jordanian outbreak in an Oct 4 Eurosurveillancereport on the Qatari patient treated in London for a coronavirus infection, but they said only that more information was needed.
In response to a CIDRAP News query today, a WHO spokesperson said the agency had no new information on the Jordanian outbreak but was hoping to get something soon. 

http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/cidrap/content/other/sars/news/nov2912corona.html

Ten primates die of suspected monkey fever-5 Humans infected


Ten primates die of suspected monkey fever in Bandipur forest

Mysore/ Gundlupet: Nov 29, 2012 DH News Service
Five forest personnel contract infection, alert sounded
Officials have been put on high alert following the suspected outbreak of Kyasanur forest disease or monkey disease in Maddur range of the tiger reserve in Bandipur forest. 
Officials are awaiting laboratory reports to take steps to ensure that forest personnel do not contract the infection.

In the past week, eight Bonnet Macaques (monkeys) and two common langurs were found dead in areas near Alegowdanakatte anti-poaching camp, off the National Highway-212 which connects to Sulthan Bathery in Kerala.
Five members of the anti-poaching camp, Chikka Kariaiah, Pradeep, Srinivas, Rajappa and Linganna, have contracted the infection and they have been admitted to the government hospital in Gundlupet. 
The condition of Chikka Kariaiah and Pradeep is said to be serious.
A release from the director, Bandipur tiger reserve, Kumar Pushkar said that the 10 primates were dull and sluggishness before dying. 

Post mortem report

The first post-mortem was conducted on November 20 and the symptoms indicated Kyasanur forest disease. 

Veterinary officer Dr  D N Nagaraju told Deccan Herald that the blood samples and two carcasses have been sent for examination to the Institute of Animal Health and Veterinary Biologicals, Bangalore. 

A team of experts led by deputy director Dr Sandhya from Veterinary Diseases Laboratory, Shimoga, inspected the site on November 26 and collected samples of ticks (insects that feed on dead animals). 

Another set of samples will be sent to National Institute of  Virology, Pune. The reports are expected by the weekend. 

If the reports confirm monkey fever, forest personnel will be vaccinated. 
About the disease

Kyasanur forest disease is a viral disease, which was first reported in Kyasanur forest of Shimoga district in 1957. 

The disease is mainly confined to Sagar and Tirthahalli taluks of Shimoga district, and occasionally reported in Uttara Kannada, Dakshina Kannada, Chikmagalur and Udupi districts.

This is the first time that the symptoms of the disease have been reported in Chamarajanagar district. Monkey fever virus is spread through air or directly through the ticks and is highly contagious. 

There are a wide range of natural hosts such as monkeys, rats, shrews, reptiles and cattle, besides ticks. 

Humans acquire the infection from bites of infected ticks, which sucks blood. 
However, there is no evidence of man to man transmission.   http://www.deccanherald.com/content/295098/ten-primates-die-suspected-monkey.html

Cases of New Coronavirus Increase to 7, Probably 8, WHO Reports



By Simeon Bennett on November 29, 2012
The number of people infected with the new coronavirus in the Middle East rose to seven, with another probable case, as the World Health Organization recommended other countries increase monitoring for the bug.
All eight cases have been reported in Saudi Arabia in the areas around Jeddah and Riyadh, and in Doha, Qatar, the Geneva- based WHO said in an update on its website.
The source of the virus and the means of transmission is unclear, though genetic evidence suggests it’s most closely related to a coronavirus found in bats, the WHO said. All eight cases are male, though the significance of that isn’t known, the United Nations agency said.
“The newly reported cases demonstrate that the virus has persisted over a period of at least five months and is geographically distributed over a wider area than was evidenced by the first two cases,” the WHO said. “Given that the exact extent of the distribution is unknown, WHO is taking the precaution of recommending an expansion of surveillance to monitor for the appearance of the virus in other countries.”   http://www.businessweek.com/news/2012-11-29/cases-of-new-coronavirus-increase-to-7-probably-8-who-reports

Singapore MOH’s Notice- no cases of coronavirus in Singapore

 The Ministry of Health Singapore would like to clarify that there are no cases of novel coronavirus in Singapore, as erroneously reported in the Press Release titled " Five New Cases of SARS-like Virus Bring Total to Seven, Prompting Calls for Immediate Trials of New Synthetic Replikin Vaccine SARS2012"  (distributed by PR Newslink and eReleases).  Please refer to the MOH website for official updates on the current situation.
Last updated on 29 Nov 2012


http://www.moh.gov.sg/content/moh_web/home/pressRoom/highlights/2012/moh_s_notice.html

http://www.moh.gov.sg/content/moh_web/home.html

Egypt-Emergence of 3 new sites for bird flu

Thursday, November 29, 2012 - 15:24

The Directorate of Veterinary Medicine Menoufia Thursday afternoon, the discovery بؤرتين new bird flu house in the village of Zinedine Center Quesna. samples were taken from birds for analysis through campaigns organized by the Directorate villages and centers the province, and samples were the result positive disease, and is currently being executed health and buried roads, with clearing houses, and take a sample of her contacts to exercise a, to make sure illness or not.  http://www1.youm7.com/News.asp?NewsID=861830&SecID=296&IssueID=0

The Pingyang farm days died the thousands peacock experts said has nothing to do with the avian flu


2012-11-29 11:10


Zhejiang Online News November 29
  Farms within a day, 20 Blue Peacock collective death. The Pingyang tripod is peacock farms responsible for Ni Ye Liang the most unwilling to see the scene, have frequently staged.From November 2, a large number of blue peacock farms after another death.
  Peacock elbow twist the back of the neck to death
  Pingyang tripod is peacock farms in the county Kunyang Town Creek pit chomchon, covering about 6 acres. In 2008, the farm was approved by the City, the forestry sector Peacock domestication and breeding, the business scope approved by the business sector the Blue Peacock wholesale, retail.
  Ni Ye Liang said, he founded a joint venture with two shareholders farms, from the introduction of more than 300 Blue Peacock. After five years of breeding, this year has ushered in the fifth generation of peacocks, a total of two or three thousand peacock. Before the accident, at a zoo linked to them, to buy 58 Blue Peacock.
  When Ni Ye Liang et al. Intends to expand the scale of farming, the unexpected suddenly upon: November 2, peacock a large number of deaths. "Dying every day dozens to hundreds." Ni Ye Liang yesterday inventory found that farms are now only about 1000 left Peacock. In addition to the first-generation and fifth-generation peacock, the other generations peacock almost military destruction.
  Operating farms in the past five years, Ni Ye Liang never encountered a similar situation.Ni, Ye Liang said, these peacocks are already vaccinated, and disinfection and other measures taken in the breeding process.
  Ni, leaves bright introduce death of peacocks have the same characteristics: the beginning mental Weidun, loss of appetite, the fluffy feathers diarrhea; late elbow twisted neck and other symptoms. "We found, these Blue Peacock general convulsions after 10 minutes will die." Ni Ye Liang had used some veterinary drugs to prevent and treat, but does not take effect.
  The experts diagnosed with mixed infection
  A large number of the farms peacock death, attracted the attention of the Municipal Forestry Bureau, the Municipal Animal Husbandry and Veterinary Bureau and other departments. On November 20, several experts came to the farm the cause of death of a large number of peacocks consultation. Pathological anatomy and laboratory testing, the cause of death basically ruled out the possibility of infection with highly pathogenic avian influenza H5, the preliminary diagnosis of mixed infection of Salmonella and paramyxovirus and secondary E. coli infection.
  City Animal Husbandry and Veterinary Bureau recommends that farms take appropriate countermeasures based on the diagnostic results: fully isolated from sick peacock; strengthen breeding farms and disinfection of entrances and exits and the surrounding environment; audience peacock emergency vaccination of new vaccines; peacocks drinking water, add spectinomycin hormone treatment; died peacock do deep burial harmless treatment.
  Diagnostic results obtained, the farm still appear peacock large number of deaths. In this regard, the Municipal Animal Husbandry and Veterinary Bureau, a veterinarian, this may be because the farm did not implement the proposed measures "spectinomycin in the drinking water treatment". Spectinomycin is a veterinary drug control of Salmonella, E. coli most important.  http://news.xinmin.cn/domestic/rollnews/2012/11/29/17392252.html

Interim surveillance recommendations for human infection with novel coronavirus



(28 November 2012)
Based on additional information reported since the original surveillance recommendations, WHO is
updating its previously  published guidance. WHO will continue to update these recommendations as more information becomes available.
Update
As of 28 November 2012, seven confirmed and one probable case of novel coronavirus infection 
in humans are known to have occurred. These cases range in time from June through November 2012 and 
occurred in the areas around Jeddah and Riyadh of Saudi Arabia (which are about 850 km apart), and in 
Doha, Qatar. Infection with the virus appears to have been acquired locally in each of these situations. All 
of the patients were male but the significance of this is unknown. 

The clinical picture in all cases was an acute respiratory infection presenting with signs and
symptoms of pneumonia. Four patients developed acute renal failure; one of these died. The remaining
three patients had pneumonia that required intensive support, without renal failure, and recovered. Three
confirmed cases and the one probable case all belong to the same family and were living in the same
household.
The source of the virus is unknown, as is the mode of transmission. Available genetic sequence 
data indicate that the virus is most closely related to a coronavirus found in bats; however, this does not 
conclusively support bats as a reservoir for the virus. Early investigations do not support direct exposure 
to bats as a mode of transmission. 
The newly reported cases demonstrate that the virus has persisted over a period of at least 5 
months and is geographically distributed over a wider area than was evidenced by the first two cases. 
Given that the exact extent of the distribution is unknown, WHO is taking the precaution of 
recommending an expansion of surveillance to monitor for the appearance of the virus in other countries.

The following should be carefully investigated and tested for novel coronavirus:
1. Patients under investigation
A person with an acute respiratory infection, which may include history of fever or measured 
fever (≥ 38°C , 100.4°F) and cough
AND 
Suspicion of pulmonary parenchymal disease (e.g. pneumonia or Acute Respiratory Distress 
Syndrome (ARDS)), based on clinical or radiological evidence of consolidation. 
ANDResidence in or history of travel to the Arabian Peninsula or neighboring countries within 10 
days before onset of illness. 
AND
Not already explained by any other infection or aetiology
1
, including all clinically indicated tests
for community-acquired pneumonia according to local management guidelines. It is not necessary
to wait for all test results for other pathogens before testing for novel coronavirus.
2. Ill contacts
Individuals with acute respiratory illness of any degree of severity who, within 10 days before 
onset of illness, were in close physical contact
2
with a confirmed or probable case of novel
coronavirus infection, while the case was ill.
Any person who has had close contact with a probable or confirmed case while the probable or 
confirmed case was ill should be carefully monitored for the appearance of respiratory symptoms. 
If symptoms develop with the first 10 days after contact, the individual should be considered a 
“patient under investigation”, regardless of the severity of illness, and investigated accordingly.

3. Clusters
Any cluster
3
of severe acute respiratory infection (SARI)

4
, particularly clusters of patients
requiring intensive care, without regard to place of residence or a history of travel
AND
Not already explained by any other infection or aetiology, including all clinically indicated tests 
for community-acquired pneumonia according to local management guidelines.

4. Health care workers:
Health care workers who care for patients with severe acute respiratory infections, particularly 
patients requiring intensive care,   http://www.who.int/csr/disease/coronavirus_infections/InterimRevisedSurveillanceRecommendations_nCoVinfection_20121128.pdf

WHO Confirms Third Fatal Novel Beta Coronavirus Case



Recombinomics Commentary 15:30
November 29, 2012
The clinical picture in all cases was an acute respiratory infection presenting with signs and symptoms of pneumonia. Four patients developed acute renal failure; one of these died. The remaining three patients had pneumonia that required intensive support, without renal failure, and recovered. Three confirmed cases and the one probable case all belong to the same family and were living in the same household.

The above comments are from the WHO November 28 guidelines on surveillance testing for the novel betacoronavirus first reported in September.  The update increases the number of confirmed cases to seven and cites four cases with renal failure.  The first two cases had renal failure and media reports indicated the two fatal cases (70 year old father and his son) also had renal failure.  Therefore the 7th confirmed case would be the father (70M) and the WHO comments above should read that one of the cases survived (the 49M from Qatar), instead of stating that only one died.

The November 23 WHO update cited two deaths in the Riyadh cluster, which were in addition to the Jeddah case (60M) who died in June.

Renal failure in four of eight cases, as well as the death of 3 of the 4 cases with renal failure is remarkably similar to clinical presentation and outcomes for the most severe SARS CoV cases from 2003 The intensive support for the other three confirmed cases also matches results for the SARS CoV outbreak, where almost 10% of lab confirmed cases died, and the deaths were concentrated in middle aged to older patients, which had ages similar to the four cases with renal failure. 

Although the WHO has not released the ages for the cases without renal failure, all appear to be middle aged adults.


Release of ages and disease onset dates for the seven confirmed and one probable case would be useful.  
http://www.recombinomics.com/News/11291202/Betacoronavirus_WHO_3.html

Caucasus-bird flu killed more than 600 birds


Can return to the Kuban bird flu

At the edge of Rosselkhoznadzor believe that the mass death of birds in Temryuk district and Anapa could be due to bird flu. It is now known about the death of more than 600 birds.
 
 
The representative of the Ministry told RIA Novosti that the preliminary diagnosis of dead birds - bird flu, is now awaiting the final results.
According to the November 28, in the region killed more than 600 birds of various species.Among them - swans, pelicans, ducks and coots.
On Wednesday, the press service of the North Caucasus EkoVahty reported that the Black Sea coast of the coast and estuaries of the Taman Peninsula, and Anapa dotted with dead birds.
More of dead birds seen on the banks of Kiziltash, Bugaz estuaries, naked on the spit, and the area between the village and hamlets Veselovka Annunciation.
Just yesterday, the country's chief sanitary doctor Gennady Onishchenko said that the world fears the spread of bird flu. Only after the registration of the strain recorded 608 cases of dangerous virus H5N1, more than half of them - deadly. In Russia, the highlight of this strain has not happened. http://www.dg-yug.ru/a/2012/11/29/Na_Kuban_vozvrashhaetsja_pt

Esophageal Suspected Bird Flu, Poultry in Sanden Dozens of Sudden Death

Thursday, November 29, 2012 18:24 PM


BANTUL - Dozens of birds ducks in the District of Sanden and Jetis known died suddenly since last two months.Allegedly, the mass death of birds due to virus attack Avian Influenza (AI).
According to the Head of Animal Health Department of Agriculture and Forestry (Dispertahut) Bantul, Agus Riyadmadi, so far it only received reports from a number of farmers in the village of Srigading, Sanden, and Village Trimulyo, Jetis.
"Data while, there were about 50 ducks that died suddenly. Symptoms are almost the same, lame duck walk, giddy, and finally seizures. It is similar to the symptoms of H5N1 (bird flu). However, this is not the bird flu, "said Agus, Thursday (29/11).
Agus explained, the virus that causes the death of dozens of ducks this time more virulent than H5N1. Therefore, the H5N1 virus is not known to cause death in ducks. To ascertain the cause of death, Center for Veterinary Wates Yogyakarta has taken samples about two months ago.
It takes about two to three months for the Center for Veterinary publish the results of the study. Kasi Animal Health Services Dispertahut Bantul, Subeno added, duck deaths with symptoms of paralysis and seizures can also be due to environmental factors.  http://www.solopos.com/2012/11/29/diduga-terserang-flu-burung-puluhan-unggas-di-sanden-mati-mendadak-352306

Outbreak Specialists Track Down Recent Coronavirus



Health officials are trying to figure out if the virus is moving from person to person
Maria Zambon was having déjà vu. Earlier this fall, she found out about a new coronavirus that had come seemingly from nowhere to kill a Saudi man in Jeddah in June and seriously sicken another.  The survivor had been flown from Qatar to a London hospital. His lungs were overwhelmed with infection, his kidneys failing. Virologists at Erasmus Medical Center, in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, were already working on an isolate from the Saudi man to decode the virus's genetic sequence. They named the virus HCoV-EMC, short for human coronavirus and the institution's initials.
The situation reminded Zambon, director of reference microbiology for Britain's Health Protection Agency, of the SARS outbreak of 2003, which spread from China to as far as Toronto and killed 916 people. Fortunately, the recent coronavirus appears to be emerging more slowly than SARS did (also a coronavirus). To date, only six cases have been reported—four in Saudi Arabia and two in Qatar. Two of the infections have been fatal. The gnawing concern, however, is that the virus will start spreading from person to person, fanning out more broadly to infect people around the globe.
A recently discovered cluster of illnesses in Saudi Arabia has raised concerns that the virus may be able to move from person to person. Four men who lived in the same household in Riyadh became sick with similar symptoms within a short period of time. Two of the men tested positive for the virus. The two others—one of whom died—are currently classified as probable cases. Their infection status may remain ambiguous. 
With the source of the infection unknown and the incubation period unclear, authorities may never get a definitive answer about whether these family members were all infected from a common source, or whether one of them got sick and infected the others, says Anthony Mounts, the World Health Organization's technical expert for the outbreak.  "It sure raises your concern. But it's not definitive." If the virus spread from person to person in that Riyadh household, it has apparently since sputtered and died out.
Still, the discovery of additional cases, some in a cluster, has prompted WHO to cast a wider net in its search for other cases. The Geneva-based global health agency had initially warned countries to be on the lookout for cases of severe and unexplained respiratory illness in people who had visited or were residents of Saudi Arabia and Qatar. Now it is convinced that whatever the source of the virus is, it is probably not unique to those countries. By getting health authorities around the world to look harder for possible cases, it hopes to answer another question that people like Mounts and Zambon have been asking themselves: Is this virus actually new, or has it just newly come into view? If it is the former, then worries about what the virus might do will remain high.  But if it has been infecting people for years but was only spotted because two severe cases brought it to light, then the virus may seem like less of a threat.
"There's always a question of 'Well, actually, has it been around forever and a day and we just missed it because we haven't tested?'" Zambon notes. It is commonly accepted that medical science has not identified all the bugs that make people sick. In fact, before the SARS outbreak, only two viruses in the coronavirus family were known to infect people. In the years after SARS became the third, the human coronaviruses NL63 and HKU1 were added to that list.
Finding the answer means testing more patients with similar symptoms to see if they too are infected with the EMC virus. Some countries—Britain among them—have been testing sick pilgrims returning from this year's Hajj, the world's largest annual pilgrimage that brings roughly three million Muslims to  Mecca every year. So far there have been no reports of additional cases among the returning Hajjis. And as time passes, concerns about the pilgrimage as a disease-amplification opportunity are starting to wane. "The government of Saudi Arabia does quite extensive surveillance during the Hajj and was particularly vigilant during this season. They have reassured us that nothing unusual happened," Mounts says. http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=outbreak-specialists-track-down-recent-coronavirus

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Russia may ban the import of breeding cattle from the EU

Yesterday it was reported that in the near future Rosselkhoznadzor can ban the importation of breeding cattle from the EU. According to agency spokesman Alexei Alexeyenko, the reason is that the EU does not provide all the information on some important issues, in particular on the epizootic situation regarding the two viruses - bluetongue and Schmallenberg. Previously, the EU asked the WTO to a number of complaints allegedly protect,,
http://www.newizv.ru/economics/2012-11-29/173765-rossija-mozhet-zapretit-vvoz-plemennogo-skota-iz-es.html

Testing the WHO may raise to 3 the number of deaths from new coronavirus



In total, there have been reported four new cases, three in Saudi Arabia and one in Qatar

November 28, 2012 | 16h 28
GENEVA - The World Health Organization (WHO) expects the lab results to confirm a new death in Saudi Arabia caused by coronavirus detected in last September, which would bring to three the number of infected dead.
"We are waiting to be confirmed two new cases, one of which resulted in fatal. Though at first the person who recovered have tested negative for coronavirus, the result is not reliable and we are waiting for a second proof," said on Wednesday Efe the WHO spokesman Gregory Hartl.
The two people supposedly infected are relatives of two other residents of Saudi Arabia, one of them deceased, whose infections were laboratory confirmed and announced last week by the UN health agency.
In total, the WHO said on Friday four new cases, three in Saudi Arabia and one in Qatar, bringing to six the number of infected yet by the new coronavirus, which manifests itself in patients as a respiratory syndrome and renal .
The first case of this new type of coronavirus was detected and confirmed by the Erasmus University Medical Center in the Netherlands earlier this year in a man of 60 years in Saudi Arabia, who died after being hospitalized.
The second case was that of a Qatari who before becoming ill traveled to Saudi Arabia and who recovered in a British hospital.
In both cases the patients suffered renal failure, something that surprised doctors because not normally relates to a pulmonary syndrome, reason began to investigate.
Fadela Chaib, WHO spokeswoman, explained that the two deaths reported so far "are not related."The new virus was detected in early September and was classified as a coronavirus, a family to which also belong to seasonal influenza and severe acute respiratory syndrome known as SARS.
A month later, the WHO said that "there was no evidence of virus transmission from human to human."
This organization, along with the governments of Saudi Arabia and Qatar, continues working to better understand the coronavirus and its source, and urged other countries to keep alert.
Until new information available about the disease, the WHO asked who consider that the virus may be present in other countries in which the two different cases were detected.
In this regard, WHO urged health authorities to conduct tests in patients presenting with pneumonia symptoms not common even when not have traveled or have not been in contact with Qataris and Saudis.
He also proposed to investigate any strain of SARS or the presence of any of these syndromes in healthcare professionals "appear regardless of where," and maintained its decision not to recommend no restrictions on travel.  http://www.estadao.com.br/noticias/vidae,testes-da-oms-podem-elevar-para-3-o-n-de-mortes-por-novo-coronavirus,966454,0.htm

Beware Brunei Coronavirus


Thursday, November 29, 2012 | 00:06 pm
 Brunei Darussalam -Brunei Health Ministry advised its citizens to visit Saudi Arabia and Qatar to promptly went to the nearest hospital or health center. That was done to determine whether there is a corona virus infecting them.The call was made after the incident was reported coronavirus infecting six people and killed two people in Saudi Arabia and Qatar, recently,
Nevertheless, the World Health Organization, have issued a ban on travel to both countries affected coronavirus.  ???
Diseases caused by coronavirus can cause symptoms such as runny nose, high fever (38 degrees Celsius or greater), cough and wheezing, according to rilisWHO yesterday.
People are also asked to be careful and check their health for the sake of mencegahan infection by wearing a mask or cover your mouth and nose using a tissue when sneezing or coughing.
Washing hands with water and soap are also advised WHO after defecation, before eating or serve snacks and avoid rubbing the eyes, nose and mouth. Avoid contact with people who are generally well advised colds.
Ministry of Health Brunei continuously monitor the situation, the newspaper The Brunei TimesWednesday (28/11). In collaboration with other agencies, the Ministry of Health Brunei will increase alertness according to the latest WHO update guidelines.
On 21 November the Ministry of Health Qatar and Saudi Arabia found three cases of coronavirus again, the one found in Qatar and two in Saudi Arabia. Indonesian pilgrims who had come home Saudi Arabia would have to be aware of this virus.  http://web.inilah.com/read/detail/1931988/brunei-waspadai-coronavirus

SARS-Like Virus Resurfaces And Infects A Family In Saudi Arabia



An artistic model of a coronavirus infecting a cell. The family of viruses can cause mild infections, like the common cold, and severe pneumonia-like infections, such as SARS.
Peter Kohama/MCT/Landov
After a two-month hiatus, the mysterious coronavirus that killed one man and hospitalized another is back on the scene. This time it has infected members of the same family.
The new cases raise the known total to six, including two deaths.
Scientist are trying to figure out if the involvement of a family says something new about the virus.
"There is a possibility that it represents person-to-person transmission, but it's also possible that the family members were exposed to a common animal source of the virus, too," Dr. Larry Anderson, an infectious disease specialist at Emory University, tells Shots. "What we know for sure is that there's an ongoing reservoir or source of the virus that humans are still, periodically encountering."
The new coronavirus first appeared in June, when a Saudi Arabian man died from severe respiratory problems and eventually kidney failure. A few months later a Qatari man came down with similar symptoms but recovered after several months in intensive care.
Scientists quickly sequenced the virus and realized it had never been seen before. It's most closely related to a bat coronavirus and a first cousin with the SARS virus, which infected nearly 8,000 people in 2003.
Even if the new coronavirus has spread between family members, Anderson says, "it doesn't mean the virus poses a global risk similar to SARS." Other viruses, he says, such as H5N1 bird flu and Nipah virus, have transmitted between people for years, but their infectiousness is so low that outbreaks have been rare and small.
The family that caught the coronavirus lives together in Saudi Arabia's capital of Riyadh, Dr. Ziad Memish from the Saudi Ministry of Health told Shots in an email. "They have not traveled abroad or within the country prior to the start of illness," he wrote.
Four family members have become ill, but only two have tested positive for the virus so far. One of them died, and the other recovered. "We expect the test results for the remaining family members any time now," Memish wrote.
He also said that doctors in Saudi Arabia are now screening for the virus in every patient who is admitted to a hospital with severe pneumonia. "I think that's why we are picking up new cases," he wrote. "The flow of samples is continuous, and we test all samples for the novel corona in our regional reference lab in Jeddah."
So far, all six cases have their origins in Saudi Arabia or Qatar. But the World Health Organization says it's time to widen the net and start looking for the virus elsewhere. WHO now recommends countries around the world start testing for the coronavirus when patients have unexplained pneumonias.
"It's impossible to know at this point because of the limited amount of testing just how widespread this problem is," a WHO told The Canadian Press. "But it just seems inappropriate to continue to focus on two countries in the region when there's really not much that would lead you to suppose that those were the only two countries affected."  http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2012/11/26/165924257/sars-like-virus-resurfaces-and-infects-a-family-in-saudi-arabia?

Canada- Travel Health Notice- Coronavirus



A novel (new) coronavirus has been identified in a small number of cases of persons who went to or came from Saudi Arabia or Qatar. Coronaviruses are the cause of the common cold but can also be the cause of more severe illnesses including Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS). At this time, there is still more to learn about this new virus. What is known is that this virus is different from any other that has been found to date in humans and animals. Symptoms may include fever, coughing and difficulty breathing.
The World Health Organization continues to work with relevant ministries of health and other international partners to support investigations to gain a better understanding of the disease and its risks... 
 http://www.phac-aspc.gc.ca/tmp-pmv/thn-csv/n-coronavirus-eng.php

In Brief: SARS-like virus in the Middle East

DUBAI, 28 November 2012 (IRIN) - The World Health Organization (WHO) has issued a global alert after six cases of a virus resembling the deadly Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) were discovered in Saudi Arabia and Qatar. 

Two of the six cases confirmed by laboratories have been fatal, leading to fears of an outbreak similar to the original SARS virus in 2002-03, which killed around 10 percent of the 8,000 humans infected. 

“From our understanding of the virus so far, and given the enhanced surveillance that is in place, we expect to see more cases reported and confirmed,” WHO spokesman, Glen Thomas, told IRIN. “We also expect to see more cases from countries other than the two that have confirmed cases so far.” WHO scientists are trying to find out the cause of the infections, and ascertain whether the virus is moving from human to human. 

study published by scientists from the Erasmus Medical Centre in Rotterdam last week found similarities between the new SARS-like virus and a virus found in bats in Saudi Arabia.  
http://www.irinnews.org/Report/96916/In-Brief-SARS-like-virus-in-the-Middle-East

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

ECDC In Denial of Novel Beta Coronavirus Human Transmission



Recombinomics Commentary 22:30
November 27, 2012
ECDC updated risk assessment concludes that in the absence of evidence of sustained person-to-person transmission outside of household settings, the current facts still point towards a hypothesis of a zoonotic or environmental source with occasional transmission to exposed humans.

The above comments from the abstract of the European Center for Disease Control risk assessment for the novel betacornavirus November 26 report is yet another example of a focus on an animal origin of a disease transmitting in humans.  It contains that all too familial of “no evidence of” for a disease that is new, novel, and has had extremely limited testing.

WHO has recommended more frequent and widespread testing due in part to a familial cluster that included two confirmed and two probable cases.  Two of the family members died after renal failure and the two surviving members had similar symptoms seen in other confirmed cases.  The ECDC did imply that some additional testing may be warranted, but noted that the number of undiagnosed pneumonia cases in the European Union was large, and widespread testing would be burdensome.

The discussion of the cluster was limited.  The probable case who tested negative was not mentioned, which was also true of the renal failure in the father (70M) and the multi-organ failure in his son.  Renal failure was also reported for the first two confirmed cases from Saudi Arabia and Qatar.  Both of the earlier confirmed cases had traveled to Mecca prior to disease onset.

The ECDC report implied that the recent cases were due to November infections, while media reports indicated all were in October or earlier.  The ECDC report made no mention of the role of the Hajj in the spread of the virus (the first two confirmed cases travelled to Mecca prior to symptoms in Jeddah and Doha), and instead maintained its hypothesis of a zoonotic infection, which has no scientific basis.  Full sequences from the first two cases are public, and the novel betacornavirus has not been reported in any animal host, in spite of aggressive testing after the SARS CoV outbreak in 2003.

The ECDC report is yet another example for an agency that is in state of denial with regard to human transmission of a novel human pathogen.
Media Link  http://www.recombinomics.com/News/11271201/Betacoronavirus_ECDC_Denial.html

AFCD staff diagnosed psittacosis and another eight people suspected infection


   2012-11-28 
 Nov. 28 - The Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department's Animal Management Centre in Sheung Shui outbreak of psittacosis, five employees earlier onset, three of them confirmed, and another eight employees of upper respiratory tract symptoms. 
Animal Management Centre in Sheung Shui has been temporarily closed, and strengthen the cleaning and disinfection. Ko Wing-man, the Food and Health Bureau, stressed psittaci not human-to-human transmission, the current situation is under control; also refers to some experts, human-to-human transmission is very low.
 Management Center last month to receive sixteen spots Amazon parrots, including three deaths, authorities to be humanely destroyed another ten. Five center staff subsequently appear different respiratory symptoms, including cough, chills, sore throat, and there are still four people hospitalized. CHP said, has confirmed that three patients positive for Chlamydia psittaci.
  In addition, the Health Protection center contact 59 the AFCD staff working in the Animal Management Centre in Sheung Shui, that among eight people present symptoms of upper respiratory tract infection. CHP's arrangements for the eight people with the Hospital Authority to provide medical evaluation and laboratory investigation to rule out that they are infected with psittacosis.
  The Centre for Health Protection and Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department is investigating whether the outbreak of psittacosis, the HKU infection and the Director of the Centre for Infectious Diseases, Ho Pak-leung said, other birds such as pigeons, sparrows, ducks psittaci bacterial infection.
http://news.takungpao.com.hk/hkol/topnews/2012-11/1292260.html