DISASTER Cases suggests that H7N9 Bird Flu is currently transmitting human to human sustainably.

China Connection

TB Fanatic
Yep, as I said above I think there will be big trouble here in China by October.


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Researchers Find Bird Flu Is Contagious Among Ferrets
http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/201...ers-find-bird-flu-is-contagious-among-ferrets
Richard Knox May 23, 2013

Scientists have completed the first assessments of how readily the H7N9 flu virus in China can pass among ferrets and pigs. The mammals provide the best inkling of how dangerous these bugs may become for humans.

The news is both bad and good. They've found the new bird virus is easily passed between ferrets sharing the same cage.

"This is a more infectious virus — it has a higher intrinsic transmissibility [among mammals] — than most of the avian viruses we've seen in the past," Dr. Richard Webby, a study co-author, tells Shots.

But the saving grace, so far, is that H7N9 doesn't travel very well through airborne secretions from sneezing and coughing. It requires direct, intimate contact for infection.

Researchers have found that pigs, which often serve as incubators of flu strains that go on to cause big outbreaks in people, can get infected with H7N9. But infected pigs don't pass it on very well, either through direct contact with other pigs or through airborne secretions.

This all fits with the picture that has emerged in China this spring, where H7N9 has so far sickened 131 people and killed 36.

At least three-quarters of those victims apparently got the virus from contact with poultry or markets selling live chickens. Only a few seem to have gotten it from family members. Apparently, no one has been infected by breathing the same air as an infected person.

The new data, published online by the journal Science, come from researchers in China and collaborators in North America. Webby is an influenza expert at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital in Memphis. Other labs have reportedly found the same thing.

But other recent data suggest H7N9 may be evolving into a virus with more ominous implications for public health.

Several Chinese scientists have found a few tiny mutations in two H7N9 viruses they retrieved from a woman who butchered poultry and from chickens in a neighboring stall in a live-poultry market in Nanjing — a city in the epicenter of the Chinese H7N9 outbreak.

Both of these mutations are in a protein called hemagglutinin, found on the surface of flu viruses.

"These findings suggest that the novel virus had been evolving and might, with a few amino acid mutations, adapt to humans," say the authors of a letter published Wednesday evening by the New England Journal of Medicine.

Webby says the H7N9 viruses analyzed so far have receptors that allow them to latch onto cells of both birds and humans. To transmit efficiently between humans, the virus has to lose its avian gene sequences. The Nanjing virus samples seem to be on the way to doing just that.

"On a scale from 1 to 10 — from an avian virus with no potential to infect humans to a fully human-adapted strain — we don't know exactly where this H7N9 is," Webby says. "But I think we can safely say from these data that it might be closer to 10 than the avian viruses we've seen infecting humans in the last decade."

In other words, he thinks H7N9 is close to becoming capable of causing a catastrophic flu pandemic.

Webby says the viruses that caused the 1918 and 1957 flu pandemics had precursors that acquired "humanized" traits "in a stepwise fashion" as H7N9 may be doing.

The latest data add urgency to efforts to squelch the virus's spread among Chinese poultry. Otherwise, H7N9 could become entrenched in poultry populations, as the H5N1 avian virus has.

If that happens, "the opportunities for the H7N9 virus to evolve to acquire human-to-human transmissibility, or to be introduced into pigs, would greatly increase," the authors of the Science paper write.

But how can the spread of the virus in China's live poultry markets be suppressed? Webby says there are ways short of shutting down these markets altogether. "It's not easily done, but it can be done," he says.

In Hong Kong, authorities defeated H5N1 poultry infections by segregating chickens and waterfowl, and by having "clean days" when no imports of new birds are allowed while markets are disinfected.

But the political will has to be mustered to undertake such changes across a wide swatch of China. And Webby worries that the pressure to undertake them will wane as the number of human cases of H7N9 goes down — whether as a result of temporary market closures, as Shanghai has done, or the advent of summertime temperatures less congenial to flu, or both.

"There's a bit of a worry in my mind that the urgency to do something about this will drop," Webby says. "We really need to get on top of this virus and get it out of animal populations. Otherwise it's just not going to go away."
 

Doomer Doug

Deceased
Doomer Doug thinks the China flu is showing signs of slowing down due to the onset of warmer summer weather. Unfortunately, given the LARGE NUMBER of asymptomatic infected people running around China the pandemic is merely being delayed and not stopped. Doomer Doug has always thought the original infection in Shanghai was due to the thousands of dead pigs floating in the river used for the cities water supply. This latest report on how pigs can carry it confirms this I think.
By the way, China Connection aren't ferrets one of the animals/mammals used to compare to human responses? Pigs are the other animal used I think. yep, people are going to be lulled by the PR campaign all the while the disease just spreads and mutates quietly until the weather gets bad.
 

China Connection

TB Fanatic
Yep, ferrets are close to us for response.


Investigation Exposes Cruelty at Ferret Mill | PETA.org
www.peta.org/features/investigation-exposes-cruelty-at-ferret-mill.aspx‎
Ferrets and other small mammals are also bought on impulse and then left at animal shelters when people have grown tired of them. If you're willing to open ...
Animal Models for Influenza Virus Pathogenesis and Transmission
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov › Journal List › Viruses › v.2(8); Aug 2010
by NM Bouvier - 2010 - Cited by 22 - Related articles


These models furthermore allow the pre-clinical testing of antiviral drugs and vaccines .... The animal model must also represent humans, in terms of similarity of ... Some animal models, like ferrets and guinea pigs, are naturally susceptible to ...
The ferret as a model organism to study influenza A virus infection
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov › Journal List › Dis Model Mech › v.4(5); Sep 2011
by JA Belser - 2011 - Cited by 28 - Related articles


Influenza is a human pathogen that continues to pose a public health threat. ... Advantages of the ferret as a small animal model for influenza virus ... Successful virus transmission is detected by testing contact ferrets for the presence of virus in ...
[PDF]
Animal Models to Study Influenza Virus ... - Bentham Science
www.benthamscience.com/open/toantimj/articles/.../15TOANTIMJ.pdf‎


by T Haga - Cited by 6 - Related articles
Keywords: Influenza, animal model, ferret, mouse, cotton rat, non-human primate. 1. ANIMAL ..... described to be a good model for testing vaccines and drugs ...
 

China Connection

TB Fanatic
H7N9 bird flu found to spread through the air

Just as I thought it is a weak virus at this stage of the game. The next two years will be a hell.


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H7N9 bird flu found to spread through the air

http://www.scmp.com/news/hong-kong/a...ad-through-air

Jeanette Wang May 24, 2013

The H7N9 bird flu virus can be transmitted not only through close contact but by airborne exposure, a team at the University of Hong Kong found after extensive laboratory experiments.

Though the virus appears to have been brought under control recently, the researchers urged the Hong Kong authorities to maintain strict surveillance, which should include not only poultry but humans and pigs.

"We also found that the virus can infect pigs, which was not previously known," said Dr Maria Zhu Huachen, a research assistant professor at HKU's School of Public Health.

There have been 131 confirmed human infections, with 36 deaths, the World Health Organisation said. All but one of the cases was on the mainland. The virus appears to have been brought under control largely due to restrictions at bird markets and there have been no new confirmed cases since May 8.

But Zhu said that although there was no evidence of sustained human-to-human transmission, their study provided evidence that H7N9 was infectious and transmissible in mammals.

In the study, to be published today in the journal Science, ferrets were used to evaluate the infectivity of H7N9. It was found the virus could spread through the air, from one cage to another, albeit less efficiently.

Inoculated ferrets were infected before the appearance of most clinical symptoms. This means there may be more cases than have been detected or reported.

Dr Maria Zhu Huachen, HKU's School of Public Health
"People may be transmitting the virus before they even know that they've got it," Zhu said.

Additional tests using pigs, a major host of influenza viruses, showed that they could also get infected with H7N9. Zhu warned that H7N9 may combine with pig viruses to generate new variants.

On a more positive note, it was found that the virus is relatively mild.

"Most of the fatal H7N9 cases had underlying medical conditions, so there are probably some other factors that contribute to this kind of fatality," Zhu said.

To avoid H7N9 becoming endemic in poultry populations, which would create a greater opportunity for human transmission, the researchers suggested a rethink on how live poultry markets are managed.

Zhu believed the Hong Kong government had "done a very good job" in this area and should continue to do so. The government implemented a surveillance programme on local and imported poultry in 1998. It includes monitoring the live poultry supply chain, pet shops, parks and the wild bird environment.

She said the government had collaborated with HKU on intensive surveillance of both birds and pigs. Zhu added that people who regularly had close contact with live poultry or pigs should take precautions, have routine body checks and report their case immediately if they feel unwell.
 

Mysty

Veteran Member
So it looks like the gov is buying enough syringes to vaccinate everyone in the usa twice prepping for the possible spread of this thing. They have also begun planning a nationwide vaccination program using the adjuvent that has caused narcolepsy in kids. I cant post the links atm, but im sure someone will soon.
 

China Connection

TB Fanatic
Oh, gee Caregiver it is both. If a virus starts weak like the Spanish flu did then it spreads and spreads. Then it gets stronger and kills quickly. There will be plenty of healthy young people dying with this next year as this makes your body attack itself.
 

China Connection

TB Fanatic
H7N9 bird flu spreads much like ordinary flu
http://vitals.nbcnews.com/_news/2013...e-ordinary-flu
Maggie Fox

The H7N9 bird flu can spread from one mammal to another – meaning it could also spread person to person, an international team of researchers reported Thursday.

Researchers haven’t been exactly sure how H7N9 is spreading. They know it can infect people – it’s infected more than 130 people and killed more than 30 of them – but they have suspected most of the victims had some sort of contact with infected poultry.

The research team, led by Yi Guan of the University of Hong Kong, tried infecting ferrets – the animals closest to humans when it comes to catching flu.

The animals could infect one another by direct contact in cages. And one ferret kept in a separate cage was infected as well, they report in this week’s issue of the journal Science.

“Under appropriate conditions human-to-human transmission of the H7N9 virus may be possible,” they wrote.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, says he is not too worried by the findings. “We already know you can infect mammals,” said Fauci, who was not involved in the research.

“That is what influenza does. We know that. You are talking about a handful of ferrets. You can’t make major extrapolations.”

Officials are keeping a close eye on H7N9 because it has the potential to cause a human pandemic. So far, it doesn’t seem to infect people easily and people who are infected do not seem to spread it to others much, if at all. But influenza viruses change quickly and unpredictably and if one starts passing easily from one person to another, it could spread.

The experiment also showed that the ferrets could pass the infection before they started showing symptoms. Human flu does this too – that’s why it spreads so quickly and easily every year, because people are out and about, touching others, before they know they are sick.

“If this virus acquires the ability to efficiently transmit from human-to-human, extensive spread of this virus may be inevitable, as quarantine measures will lag behind its spread,” the researchers wrote in Science.

“Assuming that poultry is the source of the H7N9 virus, continued prevalence of this virus could lead to it becoming endemic in poultry as has occurred with the Asian highly pathogenic H5N1 and H9N2 virus lineages," they added. Endemic viruses are established and cause constant outbreaks.

"If so, the opportunities for the H7N9 virus to evolve to acquire human-to-human transmissibility, or to be introduced to pigs, would greatly increase. To prevent this happening, it may be advisable to reconsider the management of live poultry markets, especially in the urban areas.”

New H7N9 infections appear to have trailed off in China. World Health Organization officials say it might be because officials are closing poultry markets and cleaning them. Or it could be because it’s spring and influenza tends to die down in the spring.

Marc-Alain Widdowson of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says the virus doesn’t make poultry sick, so it could spread quietly and easily.

“One thing that we are particularly worried about is there is a tremendous amount of poultry that goes from China into Vietnam,” said Widdowson, who visited China with a CDC team to investigate the outbreak.

“One of the things we are looking at is ramping up surveillance in bird markers and in the population.”

People who buy an infected chicken won’t know, because H7N9 doesn’t make the birds sick they way H5N1 does, Widdowson says. “It worries me substantially,” he said.

“There’s absolutely no doubt it has got some very concerning mutations which suggest it may be adapting to human receptors. These make it closer to what we are all fearing, which is a virus that can spread sustainably humans to human and cause severe disease.
 

China Connection

TB Fanatic
H7N9 bird flu can pass between mammals, researchers find

By Eryn Brown
May 23, 2013, 2:53 p.m.
http://www.latimes.com/news/science/...,1212299.story

Scientists are gaining a better understanding of the H7N9 bird flu that has sickened more than 130 people -- and killed more than 30 -- in China and Taiwan since February.

The latest research into the virus, which before this year had never been detected in humans, was published Thursday (subscription required for full text) in the online edition of the journal Science.

Working with ferrets, an animal that is often studied to gain insight into flu transmissibility in people, scientists in China, Canada and the U.S. found that H7N9 could spread from one ferret to another -- suggesting that it could also pass between humans. "Under appropriate conditions human-to-human transmission of the H7N9 virus may be possible," the co-authors wrote.

But H7N9 only spread efficiently when the ferrets were placed in the same cage and came into direct contact. The virus did not transmit easily between animals in adjacent cages, who couldn't touch but could breathe in the droplets from each others' sneezes and coughs.

"We think for a virus to take off in humans, it has to be efficient at both" forms of transmission, said Richard Webby, a virologist at St. Jude Children's Hospital in Memphis, Tenn. and a coauthor of the paper. But, he added, the H7N9 virus is likely to mutate over time, and could become more transmissible in humans as time goes by.

Webby said that the team's data reflected the epidemiology on the ground: So far, public health officials believe most cases have occurred in people who have had close contact with poultry, and do not think H7N9 spreads easily between humans. But even though the findings "may seem a little 'duh,' " Webby said, they help scientists answer some of the more subtle questions surrounding H7N9 transmissibility in people.

When people get sick with H7N9, health workers don't know how much of their susceptibility is influenced by underlying heath conditions, cross-reactive immunity, or other external factors. By performing an experiment in ferrets, Webby said, researchers can control for such variables and get a more clear picture of the virus' transmissibility.

The team also performed their experiment in pigs, in an effort to see what role the animals might play in harboring the virus in the wild. H7N9 did not transmit efficiently in the pigs, suggesting that they "probably are not big players in the epidemiology of the disease at the moment," Webby said.

According to the World Health Organization's latest update on human infections with H7N9, there were no new lab-confirmed cases of H7N9 in humans between May 8 and May 17. Webby said that cases of the illness did seem to be "tailing off," perhaps because live poultry markets have been shut down in the region, or perhaps because it's almost summer.

In the future, the coauthors of the Science paper wrote, as markets reopen, authorities in areas where the virus has taken hold may want to adjust the way they manage poultry markets to prevent further spread of the virus.

A letter published Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine also focused on on the importance of poultry markets in the spread of H7N9 among humans. That journal also published new H7N9 research this week, which updated reports of the clinical characteristics of 111 cases of the illness.H7N9 bird flu can pass between mammals, researchers find

By Eryn Brown
May 23, 2013, 2:53 p.m.
http://www.latimes.com/news/science/...,1212299.story

Scientists are gaining a better understanding of the H7N9 bird flu that has sickened more than 130 people -- and killed more than 30 -- in China and Taiwan since February.

The latest research into the virus, which before this year had never been detected in humans, was published Thursday (subscription required for full text) in the online edition of the journal Science.

Working with ferrets, an animal that is often studied to gain insight into flu transmissibility in people, scientists in China, Canada and the U.S. found that H7N9 could spread from one ferret to another -- suggesting that it could also pass between humans. "Under appropriate conditions human-to-human transmission of the H7N9 virus may be possible," the co-authors wrote.

But H7N9 only spread efficiently when the ferrets were placed in the same cage and came into direct contact. The virus did not transmit easily between animals in adjacent cages, who couldn't touch but could breathe in the droplets from each others' sneezes and coughs.

"We think for a virus to take off in humans, it has to be efficient at both" forms of transmission, said Richard Webby, a virologist at St. Jude Children's Hospital in Memphis, Tenn. and a coauthor of the paper. But, he added, the H7N9 virus is likely to mutate over time, and could become more transmissible in humans as time goes by.

Webby said that the team's data reflected the epidemiology on the ground: So far, public health officials believe most cases have occurred in people who have had close contact with poultry, and do not think H7N9 spreads easily between humans. But even though the findings "may seem a little 'duh,' " Webby said, they help scientists answer some of the more subtle questions surrounding H7N9 transmissibility in people.

When people get sick with H7N9, health workers don't know how much of their susceptibility is influenced by underlying heath conditions, cross-reactive immunity, or other external factors. By performing an experiment in ferrets, Webby said, researchers can control for such variables and get a more clear picture of the virus' transmissibility.

The team also performed their experiment in pigs, in an effort to see what role the animals might play in harboring the virus in the wild. H7N9 did not transmit efficiently in the pigs, suggesting that they "probably are not big players in the epidemiology of the disease at the moment," Webby said.

According to the World Health Organization's latest update on human infections with H7N9, there were no new lab-confirmed cases of H7N9 in humans between May 8 and May 17. Webby said that cases of the illness did seem to be "tailing off," perhaps because live poultry markets have been shut down in the region, or perhaps because it's almost summer.

In the future, the coauthors of the Science paper wrote, as markets reopen, authorities in areas where the virus has taken hold may want to adjust the way they manage poultry markets to prevent further spread of the virus.

A letter published Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine also focused on on the importance of poultry markets in the spread of H7N9 among humans. That journal also published new H7N9 research this week, which updated reports of the clinical characteristics of 111 cases of the illness.
 

SusieSunshine

Veteran Member
Oh, gee Caregiver it is both. If a virus starts weak like the Spanish flu did then it spreads and spreads. Then it gets stronger and kills quickly. There will be plenty of healthy young people dying with this next year as this makes your body attack itself.

Thanks for the reply. Dang, It keeps getting deeper. Stay safe China!
 

Mysty

Veteran Member
Having a lazy day today due to .. rain, rain and more rain.. Started digging around a bit on The Alabama / Texas unexplained illness / death due to flu like symptoms.
There are three thoughts going around about the origin of these. I don't remember if it had a thread of its own, so Ill pop it in here because this thread expanded into all of them. Yes.. Im bored..=p

1..Mers
2..Stolen Virus
3..GMO cotton


1. Fort in Alabama, perhaps military from the ME returned and brought the MERS
State health officials have collected and analyzed samples of specimens from all patients. So far, one sample has tested positive for H1N1 influenza A, but it's not clear that that is behind the unusual illnesses. There's no evidence of other kinds of flu, including the H7N9 strain that has caused illness and death in China, McIntyre said. Laboratory samples have been sent to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, but testing results are not yet available, officials said.
There's no evidence that any of the victims had a connection or traveled outside the country, which would have put them at risk for unusual pathogens, including a deadly new coronavirus recently christened MERS or Middle East Respiratory Syndrome.

2. Last week, there were five vials of Guanarito virus catalogued in the Galveston National Laboratory, University of Texas Medical Branch. Today, there are four. The facility, which is home to secure lockdown for the world’s deadliest viruses, was designed with the strictest containment protocols possible; yet, there is a vial of deadly virus lost in Texas.
Virus Causes Hemorrhagic Fever

Researchers were conducting a routine inspection when they noticed there were only four Guanarito vials instead of five. They announced the lapse on March 23, according to ABC News. It is unknown how long the vial has been missing.

ABC News reported, “The university does not believe this was the result of a security breach or any wrongdoing, but it notified the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. An investigation is ongoing, but researchers suspect the vial was destroyed during normal laboratory sterilization practices.”
Not Likely to Survive in U.S.

Guaranito virus is classified as an “arenavirus” by the National Center for Disease Control, and is associated with Venezuelan rodents. Arenaviruses are generally associated with rodent-human disease transmission, and the CDC warns, “Arenavirus infections are relatively common in humans in some areas of the world and can cause severe illnesses.” There is no treatment or cure for the Guanarito virus; however, experts agree that it is unlikely the virus can survive in the U.S. rodent population.

3. The Russian Maritime Register of Shipping (RS) today has issued an “Extreme Danger” warning for all vessels entering or nearing the United States Port of Mobile, located in the State of Alabama, as the death toll rises from what this report claims is an environmental disaster related to the flowering of genetically modified cotton crops located in this region.

The RS is tasked with providing the safety of navigation, safety of life at sea, security of ships, safe carriage of cargo, environmental safety of ships, prevention of pollution from ships, performance of authorizations issued by Administrations and customers, while the Port of Mobile is the 9th largest US deep water port.

According to this report, RS officials became “highly concerned” this past week after the Alabama Department of Public Health (ADPH) reported that at least 2 people have died, and another 5 put in hospital, due to a “mysterious illness” attacking the respiratory systems of those affected and causing flu-like symptoms.

According to ADPH spokeswoman Mary McIntyre, the illness was first reported late last week and the last of the seven patients was hospitalized Monday, though it wasn't immediately clear which municipalities the illnesses were concentrated in.

“We're only aware of the Southeast, but we don't know — we haven't received reports from anywhere else,” McIntyre said, “That's why we're trying to get the information out.”

RS officials in their “Extreme Danger” warning, however, state that the deaths and symptoms being reported in Alabama are “identical” to those that were reported by Indian farmers last year who were planting the latest version of Monsanto’s Deltapine® genetically modified (GM) cotton seed, and which caused the single largest wave of recorded suicides in human history and resulted in India revoking the right for this most dangerous of seed to be sold.
 
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