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Friday, March 15, 2013

Coronavirus: is this the next pandemic?




Last September a doctor in a Saudi hospital was fired for reporting a new, deadly strain of the coronavirus. Now, with half of all confirmed cases ending in death, the World Health Organisation has issued a global alert and scientists are preparing for the worst

Image
Professor Ali Mohamed Zaki, who diagnosed the first patient with a strain of the coronavirus in Saudi Arabia, stands in his office in Cairo. 
Photograph: David Degner/Getty Images

In mid-June last year, Ali Mohamed Zaki, a virologist at the Dr Soliman Fakeeh Hospital in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, took a call from a doctor who was worried about a patient. The 60-year-old man had been admitted to the hospital with severe viral pneumonia and the doctor wanted Zaki to identify the virus. Zaki obtained sputum from the patient and set to work. He ran the usual lab tests. One after another they came back negative.

Puzzled by the results, Zaki sent a sample to a leading virology lab at Erasmus Medical Centre in Rotterdam. While he waited for the Dutch team to examine the virus, Zaki tried one more test of his own. This time he got a positive result. It showed the infectious agent belonged to a family of pathogens called coronaviruses. The common cold is caused by a coronavirus. So is the far more deadly infection Sars. Zaki quickly emailed the Dutch lab to raise the alarm. Their tests confirmed his fears, but went further: this was a coronavirus no one had seen before.

To alert other scientists, Zaki posted a note on proMED, an internet reporting system designed to rapidly share details of infectious diseases and outbreaks with researchers and public health agencies. The move cost him dearly. A week later, Zaki was back in his native Egypt, his contract at the hospital severed, he says, under pressure from the Saudi Arabian Ministry of Health. "They didn't like that this appeared on proMED. They forced the hospital to terminate my contract," Zaki told the Guardian from Cairo. "I was obliged to leave my work because of this, but it was my duty. This is a serious virus."

Just how serious was clear by then. While Zaki had worked to identify the virus, the patient's health had declined. His pneumonia worsened; his breath got shorter. His kidneys and other organs began to falter and fail. Despite all the drugs and dialysis, and mechanical ventilation to help him breathe, the man was dead 11 days after he arrived at the hospital.

On its own, the Jeddah case was more intriguing than terrifying. Though much was made of the virus being related to the one that causes Sars, which spread to more than 30 countries and killed 800 people in 2003, the two are genetically very different. Sars was scary because it spread so easily and killed so often. It circulated in families, and tore through hospitals. The Jeddah patient was but a single case.

Or so it seemed. Since the virus came to light in September last year, the number of cases has risen to 15. More than half have died. The latest death was a 39-year-old man, reported by Saudi Arabia this week. The numbers are not yet alarming, but the steady appearance of fresh cases, and the fact that the infection has now spread from person to person, has sparked an intensive effort to understand the virus, and quietly prepare for the worst.

"We don't know whether this virus has the capability to trigger a full epidemic. We are completely in the dark about it," says Ron Fouchier, a molecular virologist at Erasmus Medical Centre whose lab identified Zaki's virus. "We think what we are seeing is just the tip of the iceberg, but we don't know how big the iceberg is, or where the iceberg is."

Across from the Houses of Parliament on the bank of the river Thames is St Thomas's Hospital, London. In September last year, doctors at the intensive care unit were struggling to diagnose a 49-year-old man from Doha, Qatar, who had arrived by air ambulance with a serious respiratory infection. He was being treated in strict isolation. The man had a virus, that much was clear, but the nature of the infection was a mystery. He had recently visited Saudi Arabia.

Stumped by the case, doctors at the hospital alerted the Health Protection Agency's Imported Fever Service which began its own investigation. Scientists ran tests on the Qatari man to exclude common infections. They then had a stroke of luck. The night they completed the first round of tests, two scientists on the HPA team logged on to proMED at home. There on the screen was a note published earlier that day from a Professor Zaki at a hospital in Saudi Arabia. It announced the discovery of a new and deadly coronavirus. The patient had almost identical symptoms to the Qatari man.

The next day, a Friday, the HPA ran fresh tests. The results were ominous. Tests for specific and well-known coronaviruses came up negative. But a general test for the coronavirus family was positive. That strongly suggested they were dealing with the same bug that had killed the man in Jeddah. The HPA's investigation switched up a gear. By late that Saturday, they had examined the virus's genetic make-up and compared it with results Fouchier's team had worked up on the Saudi virus. The viruses were 99.5% identical. The HPA immediately told the World Health Organisation, which issued a global alert on the Sunday night.

"Suddenly this became much more interesting," says Tony Mounts, head of pandemic monitoring and surveillance at the World Health Organisation. "We now had two cases occuring several months apart, of a virus in the same family as Sars, and both cases had bad pneumonias." The severity of the infection was only one concern though. Just weeks later, millions of pilgrims were due to arrive in Mecca for hajj. If the virus was lurking in the region, this was the perfect chance for it to spread. "You have three million people coming in from all over the world who could potentially carry a novel pathogen home with them," says Mounts. "It took on some urgency."

In the event, hajj came and went with no surge in cases. But more cropped up elsewhere in the region. A Doha man fell ill and was transferred to a specialist lung hospital in Essen, Germany. He recovered and was discharged a month later. Back in Saudi Arabia, the virus struck a household in Riyadh, where a man lived with his two sons. One of the younger men died. More worrying still was a cluster of cases in Jordan. In April 2012, 11 people, including eight healthcare workers, went down with a mystery respiratory illness. Posthumous tests on two who died were positive for the new virus. The others probably had the same infection, albeit more mildly, but follow-up tests were never done.

Last month, British health officials reported the first infection in a UK resident. The man, Abid Hussain, who is in intensive care in Manchester, fell ill on a trip to the Middle East. He flew to Pakistan to visit family, but stopped in Mecca on the way home to pray for his son, Khalid, who was being treated for brain cancer. Soon after Abid arrived home, his son, who was on drugs to suppress his immune system, picked up the virus and died days later at Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham. Abid's sister caught the virus too, but quickly recovered.

Khalid leaves a wife, Azima, and twin boys, who will be three tomorrow. "They keep asking, 'Where's daddy? When is dad coming home?', but they're too young to know what's going on," Azima told the Guardian. The cluster of infections in the family has convinced scientists that the virus can spread from person to person, albeit rarely.

As the counter clicked up on fresh cases of infection, scientists focused on some crucial questions. How easily does the virus spread? Where did it come from? How are people infected? As of now, the answers are a string of don't knows.

There are no signs that the virus spreads easily from person to person. The HPA followed up 60-odd people, including doctors and nurses, who came into contact with the patient at St Thomas's Hospital. They traced more than 100 others who had contact with the British family. None tested positive for the virus.

So far, so reassuring. But the virus will mutate and may adapt to spread more easily, scientists warn. "That is what we are worried about," says Eric Snijder, head of molecular virology at Leiden University. "If that happened you might get a pandemic variant that spreads easily, and that would be a major problem."

No one knows where the virus came from, but scientists have an idea. When researchers ran the genetic sequence through a library of known coronaviruses, it closely matched a strain that resides in pipistrelle bats. If the connection with bats sounds familiar, there is good reason. The Sars virus was also tracked to bats, though it spread to humans via infected civet cats. The suspicion over the latest virus prompted the Saudi Arabian government to call in the Columbia University team to survey bats in the surrounds of Bisha city, home to the first patient identified with the virus by Zaki. The team has yet to publish its findings, but whatever they are, they will not complete the picture. The first animal found to harbour the virus might not be the one that spreads it to people.

Many scientists suspect an intermediary beast is carrying the new bug from bats to people. Testimonies from those infected are few and far between: some patients are still in intensive care, others are dead. But hints may be emerging. The Doha man treated in Germany owned a goat farm and told doctors that some of his goats had been sick before he fell ill. That wasn't all. The animals' keeper also picked up a respiratory infection that was serious enough to land him in hospital. The story points to goats as a culprit until the other testimonies are considered: several patients reported no contact with animals.

The new virus may be lurking in companion or farm animals in Saudi Arabia and perhaps Jordan and Qatar, but these countries are major importers of animals too. "I could easily imagine a situation where this virus is hiding out in bats in Sudan or Pakistan, their domestic livestock get infected, and are transported into these countries," says Mounts.

No one expects an answer soon. For all the concern in public health agencies, almost nothing is being done on the ground to work out what animal, or animals, are spreading the virus to people. That, says Fouchier, is not good enough. He wants Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and neighbouring countries to test goats, sheep, camels, horses, and other animals for the virus. Since the expedition to survey bats in Bisha, efforts to screen animals for the virus have faltered. Asked what was being done in affected countries to trace the infection in animals, Juan Lubroth, the chief veterinary officer at the WHO said: "To my knowledge, there is no activity. We are very much in the dark."

People in the region should be screened too, says Fouchier. He wants to see random tests at human blood banks to see how prevalent the virus is in the population. These tests, and those on animals, are simple and would nail two major questions: where is the virus hiding out, and how common is it?

"We think the virus is circulating either among humans in a particular region of the world, or among animals, probably domestic animals, from which there is crossover into humans. Discriminating between those two possibilities is crucial, but very little is being done to find out," says Fouchier.

Some of the countries concerned have bigger problems on their plates, but there is good reason to do the work. Sars was circulating below the radar of governments long before it began killing in the hundreds. The new virus has been picked up quickly, largely thanks to better surveillance brought in after Sars. A precautionary approach now could save scores of lives later.

In the early days of the Sars outbreak, foot-dragging and a lack of openness by affected countries made containing the virus much tougher. The situation with the new coronavirus is similar, and has spurred European scientists to make early prepartions for an outbreak rather than nipping the virus in the bud. "We are now really taking an alternative path where Europe will prepare for the worst," says Fouchier. "We are going to have to do more now, not in terms of prevention, but in terms of intervention once this virus enters Europe more frequently."

As a precaution, a European group called Silver, to which Fouchier belongs, has begun to screen hundreds of drugs approved by the US Food and Drug Administration that might work against the virus. The rationale is simple: if more cases turn up, in Birmingham, Munich or Paris, then doctors at least have a drug they can reach for – a first line of defence. If the worst came to pass, and a pandemic threatened, the drugs may buy time to make a vaccine.

"We are down to seven or eight drugs that do something against the coronavirus, but we now need to repeat the process to be sure that activity means something," Snijder told the Guardian. Sooner or later, any promising drugs must be tested in animals, but here lies another problem. So far, there is no "animal model" in which to test the drugs.

Zaki now works at Ain Shams university in Cairo. In the weeks ahead, he plans to check blood samples from patients at one of the city's hospitals to see if any infections have gone unnoticed or unreported. He stands by his decision to announce the strain to the world, despite the objections of Saudi health officials. "I wasn't sure at the time what was going on," he said. "I didn't know what I had in my hands."


Additional reporting by Mark Smith
http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2013/ ... -treatment

Nanning Railway Bureau strict precautions against the novel coronavirus was introduced to China from abroad


2013-03-15 18:27

A novel coronavirus epidemic Renmin Nanning March 15 for international, Nanning Railway Bureau to strengthen health security check to prevent offshore novel coronavirus route through the railway was introduced to China and Vietnam international passenger trains and Pingxiang Railway station ports.
According to AQSIQ, as of November 30, 2012, the global total of confirmed human cases of novel coronavirus infection in 9 cases, 5 deaths, the fatality rate was 55.6%, grim ports novel coronavirus epidemic prevention and control work.
Good novel coronavirus epidemic prevention and control work, Nanning Railway Bureau to Nanning to Hanoi (Gia Lam) T8701/T8702 international passenger train from Nanning to Dong Dang of T5/T6 international intermodal trains and Pingxiang railway station ports equipped with emergency Medical the inspections box and medicines, to strengthen the health improvement of railway facilities and disinfection efforts, and strive to create health, clean, safe travel environment. The council also strengthened health inquiry and observation from the outbreak of the key personnel of the countries, while collecting the prevention of a new coronavirus, control, treatment-related information and data, issued to international travelers, to guide visitors to understand the relevant master the new coronavirus epidemic prevention knowledge, enhance the prevention and control capabilities of travelers. The council and the local epidemic prevention agencies to establish a communication mechanism, smooth channels of information to ensure that an outbreak is detected in a timely manner linkage. In addition, the council also study and training to strengthen epidemic prevention, medical services personnel to continuously improve the the related personnel epidemic check, prevention and control, and emergency response capabilities ensure timely disposal outbreaks. Currently, international trains and Pingxiang railway crossings were not found in the novel coronavirus epidemic.
It is understood that the coronavirus is a group of virus that can cause respiratory infection of humans and animals. The new coronavirus is the first time found that the earliest confirmed cases were infected in the Middle East, the main clinical manifestations were fever, cough, shortness of breath and difficulty breathing and other symptoms of severe acute respiratory infections.   http://www.kaixian.tv/R1/n1362966c9.shtml

Number of pigs plucked from Shanghai river rises to 7,545; local officials ensure water safety


BEIJING - The number of dead pigs found in a Shanghai river that provides drinking water to the Chinese financial hub has risen to 7,545, after local authorities retrieved 944 more pigs Thursday.
The Shanghai municipal government has repeatedly assured the city's 23 million residents that tap water remains safe. Shanghai locals, however, remain worried about water contamination from the swollen and rotting carcasses in the river.
The dead pigs are believed to be from hog farms in the upstream Jiaxing area in neighboring Zhejiang province. A surge in pig dumping has followed police campaigns against the sale of pork products made from diseased pigs.
Chinese state media say one Jiaxing hog farmer has admitted to pig dumping and is under investigation.  http://www.startribune.com/world/198404591.html

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Rajabarite bird flu


Rajabarite bird flu
Killing infected chickens and eggs

As Rajbari | Date: 1 -03 - at 013






«Previous News Next News»
Alipura Union headquarters in the village of Rajbari kamaladiya nine of bird flu on Sunday night in one of the 4 have been killing chickens and 414 eggs.
District officials HARIPADA pranisampada believe in some poultry farms died Friday kamaladiya by the village. Then on Saturday morning as a dead hen Rajbari pranisampada office sample test is primarily Avian influenza (bird flu) caught.
By the loss claimed, in his nearly three lakh have been damaged. http://www.prothom-alo.com/detail/date/2013-03-12/news/335800

Cambodia-no new cases H5N1 in more than two weeks

14/3, the Cambodian authorities announced that basically succeeded in controlling the outbreak of avian influenza, when no more new cases of suspected or death due to H5N1 in more than two weeks. At a meeting between the Cambodian authorities with international partners in Phnom Penh, he Nhim Vanda, First Vice Chairman National Disaster Committee of Cambodia, said the results of the weakness is due to the timely response of the authorities through promotional activities to raise awareness of people about the danger of the epidemic. Cambodian government appreciate the support and active collaboration, effectiveness of the Government of Japan, the European Union, the United Nations agencies in supporting Cambodia's bird flu control. Yet the Cambodian government acknowledges the risk of avian influenza outbreaks back can occur at any time, due to farming practices and slaughter hygiene in households, especially in rural areas. In the first two months of this year, Cambodia recorded nine cases of H5N1 avian influenza virus, of which eight cases were fatal, became the country suffered the greatest losses because H5N1 this year. Among the five cases of deaths occurred in the provinces bordering Vietnam is Kompong Cham, Takeo and Kampot. Earlier this month, Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen issued a directive urgent request of the Ministry of Public Security, the Ministry of Agriculture and Health urgent action to prevent bird flu spread spread, after the number of cases of H5N1 avian influenza virus in this country rise concern. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), since the bird flu appeared in 2003, the world has more than 365 deaths. Particularly in Cambodia has recorded 30 cases of H5N1 virus infection, in which only three cases of survival. The most recent cases was a 35-year-old man, died a week after eating infected duck.Avian influenza in humans comes from close contact with infected poultry, but the epidemiological learning are concerned ability H5N1 virus infection can turn into a person-to-person and cause the risk of a pandemic. /.   http://www.vietnamplus.vn/Home/Campuchia-kiem-soat-thanh-cong-dich-cum-gia-cam/20133/187570.vnplus

Strain of Dengue Fever Virus Pinpointed in Florida


Strain of Dengue Fever Virus Pinpointed in Florida

Some 2009-2010 cases originated in Key West mosquitoes, not from travelers, CDC says

THURSDAY, March 14 (HealthDay News) -- Some people who fell prey to a 2009-2010 outbreak of dengue fever in Florida carried a particular viral strain that they did not bring into the country from a recent trip abroad, according to a fresh genetic analysis conducted by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
To date, most cases of dengue fever on American soil have typically involved travelers who "import" the painful mosquito-borne disease after having been bitten elsewhere. But though the disease cannot move from person to person, mosquitoes are able to pick up dengue from infected patients and, in turn, spread the disease among a local populace.
The CDC's viral fingerprinting of Key West, Fla., dengue patients therefore raises the specter that a disease more commonly found in parts of Africa, the Caribbean, South America and Asia might be gaining traction among North American mosquito populations.
"Florida has the mosquitoes that transmit dengue and the climate to sustain these mosquitoes all year around," cautioned study lead author Jorge Munoz-Jordan. "So, there is potential for the dengue virus to be transmitted locally, and cause dengue outbreaks like the ones we saw in Key West in 2009 and 2010," he said.
"Every year more countries add another one of the dengue virus subtypes to their lists of locally transmitted viruses, and this could be the case with Florida," said Munoz-Jordan, chief of CDC's molecular diagnostics activity in the dengue branch of the division of vector-borne disease.
He and his colleagues report their findings in the April issue of CDC's Emerging Infectious Diseases.
Dengue fever is the most widespread mosquito-borne viral disease in the world, now found in roughly 100 countries, the study authors noted.
That said, until the 2009-2010 southern Florida outbreak, the United States had remained basically dengue-free for more than half a century.
Ultimately, 93 patients in the Key West area alone were diagnosed with the disease during the outbreak, which seemingly ended in 2010, with no new cases reported in 2011.
But the lack of later cases does not give experts much comfort. The reason: 75 percent of infected patients show no symptoms, and the large "house mosquito" population in the region remains a disease-transmitting disaster waiting to happen.
To try and get a handle on just how serious that risk might be, the CDC team looked at blood samples from 16 of Florida's 67 counties, collected from dengue patients by the Florida Department of Health.
Rigorous genetic testing revealed what researchers feared: the identification of a local Key West strain among dengue patients who had not recently traveled outside the United States.
The team was able to trace the new Key West strain back to its original imported source: a Central American viral strain initially brought into Florida by patients infected in that region. But they stressed that as the local mosquito population acquired the virus from this first round of patients, it developed into a distinct strain of its own. In turn, the new strain was passed on to local residents who had not recently visited Central America.
The upshot: In some cases the dengue fever "smoking gun" was the local Florida mosquito population, rather than mosquitoes from other regions.
"(But) the Key West virus strain did not resemble those found elsewhere in Florida," said Carina Blackmore, chief of the Florida Department of Health's bureau of environmental public health medicine in Tallahassee. This, she said, implies that while patients in the Key West region had indeed contracted dengue from local mosquito carriers, patients in other parts of the state got sick through more typical means: travel abroad.
In terms of what to do about locally driven disease risk, Dr. Marc Siegel, a clinical associate professor of medicine in the department of medicine at NYU Langone Medical Center in New York City, said that the question is how best to deal with a Florida landscape that is a "notorious breeding center" for mosquitoes.
"Mosquitoes don't really ride on planes," he noted. "The issue here is that the mosquito population is growing in the swamp areas there. This is all about these breeding grounds, which help the disease get a footing in the local area," Siegel said.
"But then the question is, how do you handle an environment that gives rise to this kind of disease spread?" added Siegel, who is the author of numerous books on infectious diseases and contagions. "It's a difficult problem that will require going step by step. Spraying is one route, but it's not always the answer. It may, in fact, become an issue of getting rid of the breeding areas themselves altogether."  http://www.webmd.com/news/20130314/homegrown-strain-of--dengue-fever-virus-pinpointed-in-florida

Bird flu catastrophe, 6,000 chickens culled in Bihar

March 14, 2013 
. The Purnia town and its surroundings is being operated. Purnia District Magistrate Manish Kumar Verma said Thursday that more than 6,500 chickens died so far under operation while the eggs have been destroyed in 2000. He said that for a month in the affected area within one kilometer of any poultry entry has been banned. During this time, no one could keep the cock and eating chicken. Notably, the district headquarters of Ward 15 a government poultry farm in the last week over 300 poultry - chickens died. Then their blood samples were sent to investigate. Bird flu confirmed after investigation. affected area radius of one kilometer from the chicken - has been ordered culling. It has seven members who formed 15 teams. chicken and the egg - to prevent the Czech Post has 16 locations. District headquarters, which opened 24 hours in a control room is monitoring the situation.

http://hindi.in.com/latest-news/money-and-life/Bird-Flu-Hits-Poornia-District-Of-Bihar-1738052.html

Medical: Flu spreads more readily by breathing than sneezing


Posted: 03/13/2013 
Last Updated: 1 day ago
You never want to sit next to that guy during flu season.
You know, the sniveling, sneezing, hacking sort who occupies the next cubicle or the neighboring seat on the plane. It's just a matter of time before he -- or she -- infects you with whatever crud's going around.
Except, a new study suggests, it's not the tissue-groping, say-it-don't-spray-it types that are most likely to get you. All a sickly person really has to do is breathe around you.
Researchers at the University of Maryland tested the exhaled breath of 38 flu patients and checked both large droplets and fine airborne particles for flu virus. It turned out that the fine airborne particles -- released by normal breathing -- contained nearly nine times more virus than larger droplet particles released when a person coughs and sneezes. The study was published March 7 in the journal PLOS Pathogens.
The team -- led by Dr. Donald Milton, director of the Maryland Institute of Applied Environmental Health -- used a machine dubbed "The Gesundheit II" to collect samples from each volunteer for 30 minutes. Some people sitting at the machine released undetectable levels of virus; others put out over 100,000 viruses during the test.
The researchers also tested some of the patients while they wore paper surgical masks, recommended by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as a way to prevent someone with the flu from spreading the virus. In the study, the masks reduced the amount of virus shed by 3.4 times overall.
Fortunately, although flu is still around across most of the nation, the number of cases has declined each week since the seasonal outbreak peaked in December.
It's also good to know that if you must share a space with someone who has the flu, you're better off if the room is somewhat humid.
Researchers at the CDC's National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health reported in late February that the viral load in a dry room was more than five times greater than the amounts found in a room with greater humidity.in a dry room. Their report appeared in the journal PLOS One.
An hour after virus particles were released in a room with a relative humidity of 23 percent or less (typical in many spaces during a winter heating season) up to 77 percent were still infectious. But when the humidity was increased to 43 percent, only about 14 percent of the virus particles were capable of infecting. Most of the inactivation occurred within 15 minutes of the virus being released in the more humid room.
Experts say the optimal humidity range is between 30 and 50 percent to avoid health problems with breathing and nosebleeds during the winter.
On a larger scale, air humidity and temperature seem to largely account for how flu spreads in different climates. A third study in PLOS Pathogens, led by researchers at the National Institutes of Health, used models to measure the flu-outbreak patterns at various sites around the globe.
They showed that, in temperate regions, flu was more common about a month after a spell of particularly dry air. In areas with relatively high temperatures and humidity -- like the tropics and subtropics -- flu peaks in the most humid and rainy months.
While it's fairly certain that cold temperatures and low humidity keep people indoors amid easily spread viruses in wintry places, the seasonal flux of flu in the tropics is not so well understood.
The NIH researchers note that one theory for tropical flu is that people spend more time indoors together during the rainy season and that this increases transmission, even with higher humidity. But so far, there is little actual data to show this happens, said Cecile Viboud, who headed the study. http://www.theindychannel.com/lifestyle/health/medical-flu-spreads-more-readily-by-breathing-than-sneezing

INDIA-'Hospitals ready to tackle bird flu cases'

 ByAmmi Kumari, TNN | Mar 15, 2013, 03.08 AM IST
RANCHI: The city hospitals said there was no bird flu scare and asked people not to panic after reports of birds dying mysteriously in Khunti district surfaced recently.

While allaying fears, hospital authorities said they were well prepared to handle an emergency situation.

Tulsi Mahto, director, Rajendra Institute of Medical Sciences (RIMS), appealed to people not to react to rumours of bird flu in the city. "People will be provided treatment (if there is an outbreak) and we are making all arrangements here at RIMS. We have an isolation ward for such patients here as those suffering from bird flu need to be isolated from others and have to be treated separately with proper care. Even those who suspect should come to the hospital and get themselves checked," said Mahto.

D K Singh, a city-based surgeon, said major responsibility of bird flu lies with the veterinary department. It is the veterinary department which will have to keep a check on the birds and send a high alert if such a thing is being reported. "We can provide the medicines which are needed for the treatment of patients and if the situation turns worse, we will refer the patients to RIMS which is not very far from the sadar hospital," said Singh.

Till date, no such case has been reported in the state. Meanwhile, the health department has issued guidelines to all the civil surgeons in the districts to gear up to tackle any suspected case of bird flu is reported and to have full stock of medicines if needed.

On being asked about any alert being issued in the wake of the bird flu scare

after the sudden death of several birds in Khunti, veterinary director, A K Bandhopadyay said "We are following the guidelines of the government of India," he said.  
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/ranchi/Hospitals-ready-to-tackle-bird-flu-cases/articleshow/18980122.cms

6,000 birds culled in Bihar after bird flu threat



PATNA, dhns, march 14, 2013
The Bihar government has asked the officials of the Animal Husbandry Department (AHD) to take all preventive measures and keep a close tab on chickens in those areas where bird flu H5N1 type virus had been detected.

In the last few days, around 6,000 chickens have been culled and hundreds of eggs destroyed in the Seemanchal area comprising Purnia, Katihar and Kishanganj.
The civil surgeon in Patna too has asked all medical officers of the primary health centres and veterinarians to keep a close watch on poultry farms in their area and report to him if any bird flu case is detected.

Experts argue that although the incidents of the H5N1 virus strain spreading from one bird to another are common, the infection can rarely spread to human beings. “But the transition of H5N1 virus strain from bird to human being cannot be ruled out completely. And if that happens, the person can succumb to avian flu,” said an expert medical practitioner.

Meanwhile, the zoo officials at the Sanjay Gandhi Biological Park in Patna have intensified the sanitation work on the premises. 

“As of now, there is no immediate threat to the zoo animals and birds as they are not in direct contact with outside animals and visitors. ,” said the director of the zoo, Abhay Kumar.   http://www.deccanherald.com/content/318979/6000-birds-culled-bihar-bird.html

INDIA-Swine flu virus is changing: National Institute of Virology



http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/ahmedabad/Swine-flu-virus-is-changing-National-Institute-of-Virology/articleshow/18980453.cms

UK officials detail novel coronavirus cluster findings



Mar 14, 2013 (CIDRAP News) – Investigation findings on a family cluster of novel coronavirus (NCoV) infections in Britain indicate some SARS-like qualities but a wider disease spectrum and other differences, according to a report today in Eurosurveillance.
Though earlier clusters were reported among hospital staff in Jordan and a family in Saudi Arabia, Britain's three-patient cluster is the first to be fully documented and published.
An investigation team with the UK Health Protection Agency (HPA) wrote that the index patient is a 60-year-old man who got sick shortly before returning to the United Kingdom after visiting Pakistan and Saudi Arabia. As of Mar 1 the man is still hospitalized and on extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). Earlier tests found that he was co-infected with 2009 H1N1 influenza.
HPA officials said the man traveled in Pakistan for 5 weeks, then made a pilgrimage to Mecca and Medina during his 8-day stay in Saudi Arabia. He had no history of contact with animals or to people with severe respiratory infection in the 10 days before he got sick.
Other cases include a 38-year-old male household contact of the man who died from a severe NCoV infection on Feb 17 and a 30-year-old female family member who lived in a different household and became ill with a mild form of the illness after visiting the index patient three times in the hospital. Neither of those patients had a recent travel history, and the HPA said they were likely infected in the United Kingdom.
Today's report said the man who died had an underlying malignant condition and had been receiving treatment that likely resulted in immunosuppression. Tests found type 2 parainfluenza virus as well as NCoV in his nose and throat swabs. The woman recovered from her illness after 9 days, and tests also detected type 2 parainfluenza virus in her sputum sample, according to HPA investigators.
Extensive contact tracing of all three patients so far has revealed no other cases, though several had other respiratory viruses. Investigators identified 103 close contacts of the index case, including 19 who sat near him on airline flights. Eighteen contacts were identified for the man who died, and 25 of the woman's close contacts were evaluated.
Paired serum samples are being obtained from all patients' household and healthcare contacts, regardless of symptoms, to test for evidence of NCoV infection, according to the report.
Findings from all three patients suggest evidence of person-to-person transmission, but spread appears to be limited, consistent with the other two reported clusters.
The HPA highlighted the co-infection in all three patients, noting that the findings raise questions about how other infections might impact disease severity and its spread. The other illnesses may have delayed the NCoV diagnosis, and the cases show how important it is to consider NCoV in atypical cases, such as the index patient's poor response to antiviral drugs before his NCoV infection was detected.
Ever since the first NCoV cases emerged and scientists characterized the virus, health officials have emphasized that the disease isn't like SARS (severe acute respiratory illness, which caused more than 8,000 cases and about 900 deaths globally a decade ago). The HPA scientists, however, said in the report that some aspects of NCoV patterns resemble SARS: severe respiratory illness and incubation period.
The presence of a milder case, though, suggests a wider disease spectrum that will become more clear once the results of serological tests are known, they wrote.
Analysis of the three cases has allowed officials to make preliminary estimates of the disease's incubation period (1 to 9 days) and serial intervals (13 to 14 days). The HPA said that although the information is extremely limited, the upper incubation range is more similar to SARS than seasonal coronavirus infection.
"It is therefore not possible to ascertain with certainty whether the index case acquired his infection in Saudi Arabia or in Pakistan, although previous nCoV cases have been linked to the Middle East," they wrote.
The group said their findings emphasize the importance of vigilance for and rapid investigation of severe respiratory infections in residents of and travelers to the Middle East, and more work is needed to determine if NCoV is circulating elsewhere.

WHO working on guidance updates

In other NCoV developments, the World Health Organization (WHO) said today in an update that it is reassessing its guidance in light of new information, but also repeated that the virus doesn't spread easily. "Case definitions, surveillance recommendations, and other guidance are undergoing continuous reassessment in light of new information and reports of new cases," the agency said.
Three fatal cases have been reported in Saudi Arabia since late February, including one this week. In all, 15 confirmed NCoV cases with 9 deaths have been confirmed since the virus was identified last September.
In other comments, the agency said that in testing patients for the virus, lower respiratory specimens should have priority, since they are more likely to yield accurate results. The WHO also has published guidance on clinical management of NCoV cases.
News editor Robert Roos contributed to this story.
HPA UK Novel Coronavirus Investigation Team.Evidence of person-to-person transmission within a family cluster of novel coronavirus infections, United Kingdom, February 2012. Eurosurveillance 2013 Mar 14;18(11):[Full text]

WHO INTERIM GUIDANCE DOCUMENT



Clinical management of severe acute respiratory infections 

when novel coronavirus is suspected: What to do and what not to do

Introduction 2
Section 1. Early recognition and management 3
Section 2. Management of severe respiratory distress, hypoxemia and ARDS 6
Section 3. Management of septic shock 8
Section 4. Prevention of complications 9
References 10
Acknowledgements
The emergence of novel coronavirus in 2012 (see http://www.who.int/csr/disease/coronavirus_infections/en/index.
html for the latest updates) has presented challenges for clinical management. 
Pneumonia has been the most common clinical presentation; five patients developed Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS). Renal failure, pericarditis and disseminated intravascular coagulation 
(DIC) have also occurred. 
Our knowledge of the clinical features of coronavirus infection is limited and no virus-specific prevention or treatment (e.g. vaccine or antiviral drugs) is available. Thus, this interim guidance document 
aims to help clinicians with supportive management of patients who have acute respiratory failure and 
septic shock as a consequence of severe infection. Because other complications have been seen (renal 
failure, pericarditis, DIC, as above) clinicians should monitor for the development of these and other 
complications of severe infection and treat them according to local management guidelines. 
As all confirmed cases reported to date have occurred in adults, this document focuses on the care of 
adolescents and adults. Paediatric considerations will be added later. 
This document will be updated as more information becomes available and after the revised Surviving 
Sepsis Campaign Guidelines are published later this year (1).
This document is for clinicians taking care of critically ill patients with severe acute respiratory infection (SARI). It will be helpful if you work in an Intensive Care Unit (ICU) that has limited resources – 
i.e. limited access to mechanical ventilation, invasive hemodynamic monitoring and arterial blood gas 
analyzers – or if you have limited access to specialty training. It is not meant to replace clinical training 
or specialist consultation but rather to strengthen your current clinical management of SARI and link 
you to the most up-to-date guidance. 
This document is organized into four sections, which correspond to clinical management steps. Section1
focuses on the early recognition and management of patients with SARI and includes early initiation of 
supportive and infection prevention and control measures, and therapeutics. Section 2 focuses on management of patients who deteriorate and develop severe respiratory distress and ARDS. Section 3 focuses 
on the management of patients who deteriorate and develop septic shock. Section 4 focuses on ongoing 
care of the critically ill patient and best practices to prevent complications. 
Three symbols are used: j
Do: the intervention is known to be beneficial.
h Don’t: the intervention is known to be harmful.
fBe careful when considering this intervention. 
The recommendations in this document are derived mainly from evidence-based guidelines that WHO 
has published, including the WHO Integrated Management of Adolescent and Adult Illness (IMAI) District Clinician Manual (2). Where WHO guidance is not available, we have used widely accepted global 
consensus statements, such as guidelines of the Surviving Sepsis Campaign, and the results of recently 
published randomized controlled trials. The recommendations have also been reviewed by a WHO 
global network of clinicians (see Acknowledgements for names and affiliations). 
Links are given here to additional sources and evidence. If you have further questions, contact us by 
e-mail to outbreak@who.int with ‘Novel coronavirus clinical question’ in the subject line. 
This interim guidance document will expire in 12 months from the date of publication...

Update the risk assessment of the RKI to disease cases by the novel coronavirus (HCoV-EMC)


Logo Robert Koch Institute (Home)
On the background of a possible human-to-human transmission
A first cluster was reported in a cluster in a family in Saudi Arabia in 2012. In this family, two males were infected, in which a very narrow, unprotected contact with the care of the patient was considered as a transmission as possible.
In February 2013 last three disease cases had been confirmed with the novel coronavirus from the UK. This affected a patient who had visited before his illness in Saudi Arabia, and two family members of the index patient. One of the family members died, the other was diagnosed with milder respiratory symptoms and recovered quickly.
Risk assessment
There is still no evidence of continuous human-to-human transmission. In Germany, there has been only one imported case of disease, while no secondary infections. The risk of contact persons becoming infected is low overall and the general population is extremely low.
In the care of probable cases in the hospital shall continue, mainly because of the severe course of the previously known diseases, strict hygiene measures carried out according to the recommendations for diseases caused by the SARS virus. For patients receiving further clarification also specifically avoid contact with sick persons with history of travel with respect to the Arabian Peninsula, are in demand.
The Robert Koch Institute has possibly further differential diagnostic laboratory tests (see case definition of the RKI of 12 December 2012). The specific diagnosis of novel coronavirus has been established at the Robert Koch Institute and the Institute of Virology at the University of Bonn (see also notes the RKI for laboratory diagnostics).
For more information
Table of confirmed cases of infection with the new coronavirus (HCoV-EMC) (PDF, 100KB, file is not accessible)
Recommendations of the Robert Koch Institute for Hygiene and infection control in patients with heavy acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) (PDF, 49KB, file is not accessible)
Case definition of the RKI to severe respiratory disease associated with a novel coronavirus (12/12/2012) (PDF, 118KB, file is not accessible)
Notes for the laboratory diagnosis of suspected severe acute respiratory syndrome due to infection with a new human beta 2c EMC/2012 coronavirus (HCoV-EMC)
As of 13/03/2013 http://www.rki.de/DE/Content/InfAZ/C/Corona/Risikoeinschaetzung.html

Jordan-Womans death and her unborn child as a result of swine flu


Thursday, March 14, 2013
Woman died Jordanian and her unborn child, today, as a result of swine flu.said hospital director Princess Basma in Irbid Akram Al-Khasawneh said "Ms. fetus died Thursday due to swine flu." he said in remarks told the official news "Petra" that "Mrs. (27 years ) was introduced to the intensive care after being transferred from another hospital in a difficult situation and on a respirator. " He said he "was isolated the patient and provide the necessary attention to it," but she died. This was the fourth event of the death in Jordan because of HIV infection "H 1 to 1" known as swine flu this year. led swine flu to the death of 25 people in Jordan over the past years. In 2009, an outbreak of the virus, "H 1 to 1" in the form of an epidemic in the whole world from Mexico and back, at the time, 17 000 deaths  http://www.nna-leb.gov.lb/ar/show-news/24037/%D9%88%D9%81%D8%A7%D8%A9-%D8%A7%D8%B1%D8%AF%D9%86%D9%8A%D8%A9-%D9%88%D8%AC%D9%86%D9%8A%D9%86%D9%87%D8%A7-%D9%86%D8%AA%D9%8A%D8%AC%D8%A9-%D8%A7%D8%B5%D8%A7%D8%A8%D8%AA%D9%87%D8%A7-%D8%A8%D8%A7%D9%86%D9%81%D9%84%D9%88%D9%86%D8%B2%D8%A7-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%AE%D9%86%D8%A7%D8%B2%D9%8A%D8%B1

Eurosurveillance, Volume 18, Issue 11, 14 March 2013



Rapid communications
EVIDENCE OF PERSON-TO-PERSON TRANSMISSION WITHIN A FAMILY CLUSTER OF NOVEL CORONAVIRUS INFECTIONS, UNITED KINGDOM, FEBRUARY 2013
  1. The members of the team are listed at the end of the article

Citation style for this article: The Health Protection Agency (HPA) UK Novel Coronavirus Investigation team. Evidence of person-to-person transmission within a family cluster of novel coronavirus infections, United Kingdom, February 2013 . Euro Surveill. 2013;18(11):pii=20427. Available online: http://www.eurosurveillance.org/ViewArticle.aspx?ArticleId=20427
Date of submission: 05 March 2013

In February 2013, novel coronavirus (nCoV) infection was diagnosed in an adult male in the United Kingdom with severe respiratory illness, who had travelled to Pakistan and Saudi Arabia 10 days before symptom onset. Contact tracing identified two secondary cases among family members without recent travel: one developed severe respiratory illness and died, the other an influenza-like illness. No other severe cases were identified or nCoV detected in respiratory samples among 135 contacts followed for 10 days.

On 8 February 2013, the Health Protection Agency (HPA) in London, United Kingdom (UK), confirmed infection with novel coronavirus (nCoV) in a patient in an intensive care unit, who had travelled to both Pakistan and Saudi Arabia in the 10 days before the onset of symptoms [1]. This patient (hereafter referred to as Case 1) was the 10th confirmed case reported internationally of a severe acute respiratory illness caused by nCoV. Two secondary cases of nCoV were subsequently detected. We describe the public health investigation of this cluster and the clinical and virological follow-up of their close contacts.
The nCoV was first described in September 2012 in a Saudi Arabian national who died in June 2012 [2,3]. The UK detected its first case of nCoV infection in a male foreign national transferred from Qatar to London in September 2012 [4]. By February 2013, a total of two clusters had been described globally: one cluster (n=2) among staff in a hospital in Jordan and a family cluster (n=3) in Saudi Arabia [5]. No clear evidence of person-to-person transmission was documented in either cluster [6].
Index case exposure history and laboratory investigations
The index case was a middle-aged UK resident, who had travelled to Pakistan for five weeks. He then travelled directly to Saudi Arabia on 20 January where he remained until his return to the UK on 28 January 2013. During his stay in Saudi Arabia, he spent time in Mecca and Medina on pilgrimage. On 24 January, while in Saudi Arabia, he developed fever and upper respiratory tract symptoms (Figure 1). No direct contact with animals or with persons with severe respiratory illness was reported in the ...
http://www.eurosurveillance.org/ViewArticle.aspx?ArticleId=20427

How deadly new coronavirus infects human cells


New research identifies a protein on the cell surface called dipeptidyl peptidase 4 (DPP4), a key receptor for disease

News
Scientists have discovered how the deadly new coronavirus , which until last year was not detected in humans, infects human cells and causes serious and potentially fatal lung damage, reportedReuters , citing a publication in the journal " Nature . " In one of the first detailed studies of the virus identified in the Middle East in September last year and so far infected 15 people worldwide, killing nine of them, Dutch experts have identified a protein on the cell surface, which he uses to enter and infect human cells. discovery published in the journal "Nature" comes at a time when the World Health Organization confirmed the 15th case of virus called NcoV, patient in Saudi Arabia, died on 2 March NcoV new coronavirus is the same family as the causes of colds and showed for the first time in Asia in the 2003 SARS (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome). Posted February survey found that NcoV virus is well adapted to infect humans and is amenable to treatment with interferon - drugs that stimulate the immune system recalls the agency.specialists in the study of the medical center "Erasmus" in the Netherlands have set themselves to find answer to the question how the virus enters the cell, which uses receptors where the body most often found these receptors. 

"Once identified receptor and knowing its distribution in the body, we can get more information about the pathogenesis of the virus - how it infects humans, and its possible transfer," explains Bart Haagmans the research team. Experts have identified a protein on the cell surface called dipeptidyl peptidase 4 (DPP4), a key receptor for the disease.They also found that cells containing DPP4 receptors are distributed in the lower respiratory tract, but not above. This explains why the virus affects the lungs, not the nose and throat as influenza viruses.discovery will help in the search for new ways to develop drugs and vaccines that block receptors DPP4 and prevent infection. Several drugs that block these receptors are already on the market, licensed for diabetes. The authors of this study have used them to try in the laboratory to stop the virus, but have found that they do not actagainst him. specialists are working with new molecules that can block the receptors and DPP4 underlie vaccine .  http://www.vesti.bg/index.phtml?tid=40&oid=5605011

The two respiratory severe men and women confirmed that not for a new virus



[20:23] 2013/03/14

 an informed CHP today received the Princess Margaret Hospital and Pamela Youde Nethersole Hospital reported a total of two novel coronavirus, the cause of serious respiratory disease suspected cases.


The first case was a 63-year-old man, itself is in good health, fever, cough, sore throat, runny nose, headache and muscle pain, to the Princess Margaret Hospital seeking treatment since March 11, is currently being treated in isolation in stable condition.


Initial investigations revealed that the patient had to Tunisia on March 1 to 8, and stay for about two hours after the turning point in Qatar Airport on March 8, to return to Hong Kong on March 9.


His lung X-ray is normal, and today the preliminary test results show that the negative reaction of the patient's respiratory sample of the new coronavirus caused severe respiratory disease, were positive for seasonal influenza A (H3).


Two cases for a 23-year-old woman, good health, fever, cough, runny nose and sore throat, today to Pamela Youde Nethersole Eastern Nethersole Hospital for treatment since March 10, is now open for the isolation treatment, in stable condition.


Initial investigations revealed that the patient had traveled to Turkey on February 27 to March 12, Abu Dhabi and Dubai, and Hong Kong on March 12.


Her lung X-ray examination is normal today preliminary test results show that the patient's respiratory samples of the new coronavirus caused severe respiratory disease were negative.