01/15 | H5N1: Death in the Air; & quote "This is how the Nightmare Begins"

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<i>For the pureists, I have taken the thread's title from the 9th article</i>
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showpost.php?p=1702001&postcount=9

<B><font size=+1 color=red><center>Duck shot in Scotland tests positive for bird flu</font>

BRIAN BRADY
WESTMINSTER EDITOR
<A href="http://news.scotsman.com/health.cfm?id=68502006">news.scotsman.com</a></center>
A GOVERNMENT investigation designed to establish whether bird flu has reached Britain has found that a duck shot in Scotland was suffering from a strain of the disease, it emerged last night. </b>

Scientists who conducted a sweeping check on hundreds of birds rounded up across Britain found that a wild mallard shot in West Lothian last month was the only one that tested positive for avian influenza.

A spokesman for the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) said the findings were not a cause for immediate concern, as the duck was not carrying the virulent H5N1 strain of the disease, which has been sparking increasing alarm across the continent.

But experts believe the discovery underlines the difficulties involved in ensuring the UK stays free of a disease that could be imported by migrating birds.

Defra's first study of wild British birds involved almost 1,500 carcasses, samples caught live and shot.
 
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<B><font size=+1 color=brown><center>Work at home or go abroad if bird flu hits</font>

David Harrison, Catherine Humble and Adam Stones
(Filed: 15/01/2006)
<A href="http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2006/01/15/nflu15.xml&&sSheet=/news/2006/01/15/ixhome.html">www.telegraph.co.uk</a></center>
Thousands of employees will be told to work from home if Britain is hit by a bird flu pandemic.</b>

Many more jobs could go abroad as big companies seek to minimise the potentially devastating impact of the virus that has already travelled from the Far East to Turkey, on the doorstep of Europe.

Up to 25 per cent of the population is expected to be infected by the virus if - as scientists predict - it arrives in Britain in a form that can be passed from human to human, according to the World Health Organisation.

Companies are drawing up emergency plans to reduce or cope with the loss of one in four workers. One expert warned that some could see their entire staff wiped out by the virus.

Vodafone, Norwich Union and the accountancy firms PriceWaterhouseCoopers and KPMG say they would make arrangements for staff to work from home. Some workplace meetings would be replaced by video conference calls.

A senior executive for Vodafone, which employs more than 13,000 in Britain, said: "Bird flu is a real threat and we are taking it seriously. Working from home means that people will be at less risk from getting the virus and could play a crucial role in keeping our business going."

David Way, a national disaster adviser with the insurers Alexander Forbes, said that up to 70 per cent of staff already had the facilities to work away from the office.

Some large international companies will move operations and key staff abroad. Norwich Union plans to transfer claims calls to centres in India and Sri Lanka.

KPMG is strongly advising businesses to prepare to move some operations to countries where the virus has not struck. It says that, because the virus would not strike evenly throughout Britain, some companies might risk losing almost their entire workforce.

"HSBC has said it is planning for staff losses as high as 50 per cent but in some places I think it could be nearer 100 per cent," a KPMG spokesman said.

Even firms expecting a 25 per cent sickness toll - including British Airways, Boots, BP and Vodafone - say the real figure will be increased by staff who stay at home to look after relatives stricken by the virus.

Evidence from the Far East suggests that half of those who have caught bird flu so far have died. In Britain, however, the chief medical officer has put the figure for possible deaths at between 50,000 and 750,000, if the disease spreads between people.

Last week the World Health Organisation warned that the arrival of bird flu in Britain was "inevitable and possibly imminent".

The Sunday Telegraph surveyed dozens of large UK companies and found that more than 80 per cent had made emergency plans - including Asda, Tesco, Royal Mail, O2, Natwest and Ford. Most firms said they were basing preparations on projections that 25 per cent of the population could be infected by the virus.

A 25 per cent loss of staff would cut Britain's 28.8 million working population by 7.2 million - with devastating consequences for the economy. "If we don't prepare properly then the country could be plunged into an economic crisis," one analyst said.

British Airways is already carrying "disease packs" containing face masks, gloves and goggles which will be given to all passengers should the virus - which has killed 78 people since 2003 - become contagious among humans. A BA spokesman said: "We could lose a quarter of our employees and a quarter of our passengers. We have to be ready."

Scientists say it is only a matter of time before the H5N1 strain mutates into a form that can spread from person to person.

Companies are also trying to buy up Tamiflu, the anti-viral vaccine drug, which could reduce the symptoms of bird flu - although it would not be a cure.

Bupa, the private health company, said that 30 per cent of the firms it insured had asked for stocks of Tamiflu for their staff but it had so far been unable to satisfy demand. Many clients had also asked to be supplied with face masks.

Dr Andrew Vallance-Owen, a spokesman for Bupa, said: "There is a feeling that the virus is about to change its form. We must be ready to meet the challenge."

Employers are being urged to raise hygiene standards.

John Lewis is planning to introduce alcohol-based handwashes for staff and customers inside their stores and anti-viral mats at the entrances.
 
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<B><center>[January 14, 2006]
<A href="http://www.tmcnet.com/usubmit/-ministry-health-sending-info-every-home-new-zealand-/2006/jan/1286462.htm">www.tmcnet.com</a>

<font sie=+1 color=green>The Ministry of Health is sending info to every home in New Zealand detailing preparations for a bird flu pandemic.</font></center>
(IRN News Via Thomson Dialog NewsEdge)The Ministry of Health is sending information to every home in New Zealand and launching an ad campaign detailing what preparations to make in case of a major bird flu pandemic. This phase of what has been a continuing process starts tomorrow.</b>

Acting deputy director of public health Doctor Ashley Bloomfield says they are not trying to panic people. He says they started sending out information and broadcasting it before Christmas, and they are simply urging people to take sensible steps in case of a pandemic.

The officials say there is constant monitoring of a plan which would deal with any major flu pandemic to hit New Zealand, and they update it regularly.

Doctor Bloomfield says it is vital there is no panic and that people have all the right information on hand.
 
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<B><font size=+1 color=blue><center>Bird flu stops teams going to Turkey</font>

<A href="http://www.dawn.com/2006/01/15/spt16.htm">www.dawn.com</a>

BUCHAREST, Jan 14: Five Romanian first division teams have cancelled plans to schedule their traditional winter training in Turkey at the last minute because of bird flu.</b>

Three infected children died last week in eastern Turkey and 15 more people have tested positive for bird flu but Turkish officials say their condition is not critical.

Authorities are testing whether a four year-old girl, who died on Friday, has caught the virus.

League leaders Dinamo Bucharest, CFR Cluj, Politehnica Timisoara, Rapid Bucharest and Vaslui switched their travel plans from Antalya to Cyprus, Italy and Greece while another four teams are looking for new locations to train.

“Of course I’m worried because I have two children at home,” Rapid Bucharest midfielder Marius Maldarasanu told reporters.

The only team to go in Turkey are Gloria Bistrita.

“We go there but our players will not eat chicken,” said Bistrita president Jean Padureanu.—Reuters
 
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<b><center>15 January 2006 1056 hrs
<A href="http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/afp_world_business/view/188290/1/.html">www.channelnewsasia.com</a>

<font size=+1 color=purple>Companies in Britain bracing for bird flu: report </font></center>
LONDON : Several of Britain's biggest companies are making contingency plans for a bird flu pandemic that could deal a wicked blow to the economy, the Sunday Telegraph newspaper reported. </b>

Having staff work from home, transferring operations offshore and distributing "disease packs" to airline passengers are among the measures in the cards.

The Sunday Telegraph said it surveyed "dozens" of large British companies and found that "more than 80 percent" had made plans, mainly on projections that 25 percent of the population could be infected.

The companies include Tesco, the nation's biggest food retailer; its rival Asda, a unit of the giant Wal-Mart chain in the United States; Royal Mail; Ford Motor Company; Natwest Bank and mobile phone operator O2, it said.

Last week it emerged that HSBC, the London-based global banking group, has estimated that up to half of its staff could fall ill with bird flu if a pandemic strikes.

"Bird flu is a real threat and we are taking it seriously," a senior executive at mobile phone operator Vodafone, which has more than 13,000 employees in Britain.

"Working from home means that people will be at less risk from getting the virus and could play a crucial role in keeping our business going," he told the Sunday Telegraph.

Norwich Union, a major insurance provider, was reportedly planning to transfer claims calls to India and Sri Lanka - an option that is being encouraged by global accounting firm and consultancy KPMG.

British Airways has meanwhile stockpiled "disease packs" with face masks, latex gloves and goggles to be passed out to travellers should the bird flu virus becomes contagious among humans.

"We could lose a quarter of our employees and a quarter of our passengers," said a spokesman for the airline. "We have to be prepared."

John Lewis, a department store chain, is meanwhile planning to put anti-viral mats at its doors, and to install alcohol-based hand washes for the use of both staff and customers, the Sunday Telegraph said. - AFP/ch
 
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<B><font size=+1 color=red><center>Turkey to test thousands in bid to contain bird flu outbreak</font>

Jo Revill, health editor
Sunday January 15, 2006
The Observer
<A href="http://observer.guardian.co.uk/world/story/0,16937,1686654,00.html">observer.guardian.co.uk</a></center>
Tens of thousands of men, women and children across Turkey may be tested for bird flu, to see whether they carry any symptoms or have developed antibodies to it, in a concerted attempt by international experts to stop the virus before it becomes fully contagious to people.</b>

The World Health Organisation has asked Turkey for permission to send teams into infected villages to take blood samples, swab throats and interview families. They would like to start the work this week to prevent the disease spreading into new regions.

Dr Guenael Rodier, a communicable diseases expert at WHO, said experts need to gain more insight into how the deadly H5N1 strain is spreading and whether it is mutating, as they race to contain the virus in case it becomes easily transmissible from person to person. So far, health experts have focused on the 18 people in Turkey - including three children who died a week ago - who have confirmed H5N1 infection, and on others kept in hospital with flu-like symptoms. All are thought to have caught it after having close contact with chickens.

One of the 18 people known to be infected with the deadly strain, Gulsen Yesilirmak, was discharged from hospital yesterday after responding well to treatment. She had contracted the disease after throwing dead chickens out of a coop.

There was a bird flu scare in Belgium yesterday when a man, thought to be a journalist, fell ill with flu symptoms. The unidentified man was isolated in a hospital in Brussels after a visit earlier in the week to the Turkish province of Van, which has suffered three bird flu fatalities. But blood tests showed that he tested negative for the deadly H5N1 strain. British health officials stress that the level of risk to the UK remained the same, as there was still no evidence yet that the virus was easily transmissible to people.

Meanwhile, the countries surrounding Turkey - Iran, Georgia, Armenia, Iraq, Syria, Bulgaria and Greece - have been put on high alert by the WHO to keep vigilant for any early signs of infected birds.

Turkish officials are trying to organise the culling of thousands of birds in order to wipe out the disease, which has hit their farming industry badly. More than half a million birds have already been culled, but the disease appears to be rife in 13 of Turkey's 81 provinces, with a further 18 provinces thought to be affected. Millions of Turkish families keep chickens, and there is confusion over whether they will be allowed to do so following the outbreak of the disease.
 
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<B><font size=+1 color=brown><center>West Pours Aid Into Turkey as Bird Flu Threat Hits Europe</font>

Agence France Presse
<A href="http://www.arabnews.com/?page=4&section=0&article=76270&d=15&m=1&y=2006">www.arabnews.com</a></center>
ANKARA, 15 January 2006 — Foreign assistance flowed into Turkey yesterday as Western countries sought to help combat the bird flu outbreak that may have put a foot in Europe’s door with one person hospitalized in Brussels with a suspected case of the virus. The unidentified person hospitalized in Belgium showed flu symptoms after returning Thursday from a trip to a region in Turkey infected by the deadly H5N1 strain of the virus.</b>

“The hospital considered it justified in placing the person under monitoring and alerting the Belgian health authorities,” Inge Yooris, a member of a Belgian government committee on bird flu, told AFP. The disease has so far claimed three lives in Turkey, the first outside Southeast Asia and China, where nearly 80 people have died since 2003.

In Ankara, government ministers and representatives of the poultry industry met in a bid to salvage the sector hit hard by the disease. Vice Premier Abdullatif Sener announced the creation of an ad hoc committee to make concrete proposals on how to ease the industry out of its worst crisis yet. Measures might include more state subventions and low-interest loans.

Poultry consumption has plummeted by 70 percent since the outbreak, badly damaging a sector that has an annual turnover of nearly $3 billion and provides revenue for half a million producers, transporters and retailers. On Friday, Agriculture Minister Mehdi Eker said Turkey was expecting $35 million in loans and grants from a World Bank-sponsored program to help countries struck by the disease.

A total of $15 million of that amount will come as a loan from the World Bank and the remainder will be in the form of grants from a special fund set up by countries and international organizations, he said.

The United States also announced Friday that it was sending a team of specialists to Turkey to “evaluate the situation” and support international efforts to combat the disease.
 
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<B><center>Bird flu: Death in the air

<font size=+1 color=green>It really could kill millions. So say the scientists in a locked British lab who are now the best hope of stopping it </font>

Published: 15 January 2006
<A href="http://news.independent.co.uk/world/science_technology/article338687.ece">news.independent.co.uk</a></center>
<font size=+0 color=red>This is how the nightmare begins:</font> a child plays with chickens in her yard and catches bird flu. She already has ordinary flu. The two mix inside her body, combining to produce a new virus that passes easily from human to human. It spreads fast. No existing vaccine is effective. Before long, millions of people are dead. </b>

This is not a scare story. It is the scenario that three research scientists at a locked and sealed laboratory in north London expect to meet every day they go to work. Their high-security lab, hidden away in the unsuspecting suburb of Mill Hill, is suddenly on the front line of the global fight against bird flu.

Yesterday they were placed on high alert as it seemed the nightmare was about to become real. A Russian journalist had got off a flight from an infected area in Turkey and had gone straight to hospital with flu-like symptoms.

He was put in isolation; blood tests were taken and Mill Hill prepared for samples to arrive. Panic began to rise all over Europe. But then the Belgian health minister announced to a packed press conference that the test results had made doctors "100 per cent sure" their patient did not have bird flu after all. Panic over. For now.

If (or when, as the scientists say) the virus does make the change that would enable it to cause a pandemic and kill up to 150 million people worldwide, the British scientists will probably be the first to spot it. The faster they can do so, the more lives will be saved.

"We do have a great responsibility here," says their boss, Sir John Skehel. "Flu research requires that you accept that."

Alan Douglas is one of the scientists, a 54-year-old research associate who last week became the first person to isolate and grow the strain that had killed three children in a village in Turkey. He and his colleagues at the World Influenza Centre worked flat out on their samples for days. They knew people were dying, but that their results would tell doctors which drugs to use against the virus.

They were also looking for evidence of the big change that the world dreads. Two days ago the World Health Organisation announced that the H5N1 virus found in the body of a 14-year-old boy from a village in Turkey had mutated. The protein spikes on its surface had changed and it was now more attracted to people than birds. This was not the nightmare scenario, insisted Sir John Skehel, but it was "one step along the way".

He is director of the National Institute for Medical Research at Mill Hill, which contains the World Influenza Centre on its 50-acre site. The centre is one of four labs that receive samples from new victims of bird flu - but as the others are in America, Japan and Australia, it is London that will test the European outbreaks first. Few outsiders ever see the lab, but last week The Independent on Sunday was given unprecedented access.

The head of the centre, Dr Alan Hay, cut short a holiday when he heard the news of an outbreak in the Van region of Turkey. The other scientists cancelled days off as samples from the dead boy and his sister were flown to London, a week ago last Thursday. They were driven to Mill Hill from the airport in a car with Turkish diplomatic plates. As it swept through red and white security barriers the passenger, a woman from the Ministry of Health in Turkey, may just have felt she had seen the institute before. The main block is a tall building with a presence unsettling enough to have been used as an asylum in Batman Begins.

The samples were driven down the hill overlooking the parklands and big houses of Totteridge - "where the millionaires live", as one member of staff on government wages puts it - to Containment Four, the laboratory with the highest level of security. From the outside, the lab looks like the boiler house on a 1960s polytechnic campus, with pipes and ducts sprouting from the walls. Only four people have permission to enter the laboratory: the security manager and three scientists.

Before starting work, Alan Douglas showered and left his clothes in a decontamination room, then dressed in royal blue overalls very like a surgeon would wear in an operating theatre, with a white laboratory coat. He unlocked the door and entered the laboratory, the air in which passes through a complicated series of filters, each sterilised with formaldehyde. This is to stop unwelcome particles from ruining experiments, but it is also to stop viruses with which the scientists work from escaping into the atmosphere.

The air pressure inside the building is lower than outside, so that if an accident happens air will be sucked inside rather than out. Black polythene is taped up at the windows to prevent sunlight from getting in. All waste leaving the lab is sterilised.

The Turkish samples came in plastic tubes, protected by bubble wrap, in a box containing carbon dioxide to keep them at the right temperature. One by one they were placed in an airtight chamber, then passed into a main cabinet. Mr Douglas and his colleagues work with their hands and arms thrust through a portal into gloves, or look into a microscope that extends out of the cabinet as a hood.

The best of the samples was a swab or slice from the lungs of Mehmet Kocyigit, a 14-year-old boy who had lived on a farm thousands of miles away in the village of Dogubayazit, in the mountains close to the border with Iran. He had died from the pneumonia-like symptoms of avian flu which have hospitalised 78 other people across Turkey. It is thought that Mehmet and his siblings had been playing with the severed heads of infected birds. His sisters Fatima and Hulya also died.

"I knew the boy offered our best chance of isolating and growing the virus," says Mr Douglas, who diluted the sample, and from part of it extracted the RNA, the genetic material that is the virus equivalent of DNA. This was then analysed.

The rest of the sample was shared out between dishes in which the virus might grow. Some contained chicken eggs, which are usually used for growing ordinary flu viruses; others contained tissue culture made from canine kidney cells.

"Four of us were working flat out," says Mr Douglas, 55, a research associate who was in the laboratory all last weekend. More people were being hospitalised in Turkey as he worked. "I came in on Sunday morning, checked the tissue culture under the microscope in the hood and took out fluids from all the eggs, and found out that the virus had grown."

He was thrilled. Nobody in Turkey had been able to grow, isolate and test the strain. Nobody else in the world had been asked to try. "On Monday morning I continued extracting, and I got the results that afternoon, then repeated the tests."

The World Health Organisation (WHO) let it be known that the virus had been isolated. American newspapers got hold of the story early and described Mill Hill as only one of the labs working on it. Mr Douglas and his colleagues were furious. "It was as if we were just another bunch of people working away in the background, but that's not true. We are the only ones in the world who have grown this virus. A lot of people are asking for it now, obviously. The Americans are going to be last on the list, I can tell you."

This is not merely a spat. The scientific world depends on patronage, which depends on kudos. The institute has been threatened with a move into central London and its workers do not want to go. They want the world to know about the work they are doing, and the Government to let them stay put. Another colleague shakes his head when asked about the Americans he perceives to be glory-grabbers: "Bastards," he sighs.

The World Influenza Centre used to spend most of its time tracking changes in human flu, but now it also has to keep pace with the avian virus that has so far infected 150 people and killed at least 78. People working with chickens in Hong Kong and South Korea were the first to die in the current outbreak, in 1997 and 2003. Since then there have been outbreaks and mass bird culls across South-east Asia. A South American parrot in a quarantine centre in Essex was said to have brought the virus to England in November, but the real carriers were 53 Taiwanese finches in the same compound. No humans were infected here.

Wild ducks can carry the virus without symptoms as they migrate, and give it to domestic poultry. British bird owners have been told to keep them away from lakes and waterways where the ducks might land during the migratory season. Once chickens are infected, humans can pick up the virus by touching the birds, their droppings or secretions, or inhaling faecal dust. Somebody with the virus might travel to another country before succumbing to the symptoms, as may have been the case with the suspected bird flu reported in Belgium yesterday. But so far humans cannot pass it to each other.

The tests at Mill Hill last week enabled the WHO to confirm that the anti-viral drugs Tamiflu and amantadine are effective against the Turkish strain. The British Government is one of many around the world stockpiling Tamiflu in case of an outbreak: the UK has four million doses now and expects to have another 10.6 million by the end of the year.

But the tests also showed that the H5N1 virus had changed in the boy's body. "Each virus contains eight RNA molecules carrying information for the proteins in the virus," says Sir John Skehel. "In one of the samples, one of the proteins had mutated in a way that would allow it to move from bird to human cells more effectively." That has been seen before, in Hong Kong in 2003 and Vietnam last year, but two more genetic changes will probably have to take place before the virus becomes infectious among humans, says Sir John.

In the meantime, the fewer people who become infected with avian flu now, the less likely one of them will be a host in which it mutates. "This is why all these chickens need to be killed," says Sir John. "It is not that they have done anything at all wrong; it is just that we cannot afford for them to infect large numbers of humans."

The leader of the World Influenza Centre, Dr Alan Hay, flew to Turkey last week to advise doctors and scientists there. "A flu pandemic really is inevitable," he said last year. "We don't know when it will arrive, but we are anticipating it."

There on a hill in north London, hidden in a lab that looks like a boiler house, his team will be ready to tell the world if the nightmare comes true.

THE HUMAN MIXING BOWL

How avian flu could mutate and cause a pandemic

1. WILD DUCKS

Migrating wildfowl may carry the H5N1 virus without symptoms as they fly thousands of miles to another continent

2. CHICKENS

Domestic poultry become infected with the virus if they have contact with the nasal secretions or faeces of migrating wildfowl

3. HUMANS

People working closely with chickens inhale faeces dust or touch secretions and droppings carrying the H5N1 virus

4. MUTATION

If avian flu infects a patient who also has human flu the body may act as a mixing bowl for the two. They will combine to form a new avian/human flu virus with a new genetic make-up. The protein spikes on its surface are a new shape, making the virus resistant to all known vaccines. The victim could travel to another country before succumbing to the symptoms

5. PERSON TO PERSON

The new virus may be so different that humans have little or no immunity. This would allow it to spread across the world very quickly, carried through the air like old-fashioned flu by droplets from coughs and sneezes. Experts say it could kill as many as 150 million people

1997 was when the current outbreak of avian flu first killed a human being

6 people died in Hong Kong that year and 18 were infected

72 more people have been killed by the virus since that time

158 have needed treatment in countries spreading from Thailand to Turkey

14.6m shots of the Tamiflu anti-viral drug ordered by the British government

150m people could die across the world if the virus mutates and causes a pandemic

This is how the nightmare begins: a child plays with chickens in her yard and catches bird flu. She already has ordinary flu. The two mix inside her body, combining to produce a new virus that passes easily from human to human. It spreads fast. No existing vaccine is effective. Before long, millions of people are dead.

This is not a scare story. It is the scenario that three research scientists at a locked and sealed laboratory in north London expect to meet every day they go to work. Their high-security lab, hidden away in the unsuspecting suburb of Mill Hill, is suddenly on the front line of the global fight against bird flu.

Yesterday they were placed on high alert as it seemed the nightmare was about to become real. A Russian journalist had got off a flight from an infected area in Turkey and had gone straight to hospital with flu-like symptoms.

He was put in isolation; blood tests were taken and Mill Hill prepared for samples to arrive. Panic began to rise all over Europe. But then the Belgian health minister announced to a packed press conference that the test results had made doctors "100 per cent sure" their patient did not have bird flu after all. Panic over. For now.

If (or when, as the scientists say) the virus does make the change that would enable it to cause a pandemic and kill up to 150 million people worldwide, the British scientists will probably be the first to spot it. The faster they can do so, the more lives will be saved.

"We do have a great responsibility here," says their boss, Sir John Skehel. "Flu research requires that you accept that."

Alan Douglas is one of the scientists, a 54-year-old research associate who last week became the first person to isolate and grow the strain that had killed three children in a village in Turkey. He and his colleagues at the World Influenza Centre worked flat out on their samples for days. They knew people were dying, but that their results would tell doctors which drugs to use against the virus.

They were also looking for evidence of the big change that the world dreads. Two days ago the World Health Organisation announced that the H5N1 virus found in the body of a 14-year-old boy from a village in Turkey had mutated. The protein spikes on its surface had changed and it was now more attracted to people than birds. This was not the nightmare scenario, insisted Sir John Skehel, but it was "one step along the way".

He is director of the National Institute for Medical Research at Mill Hill, which contains the World Influenza Centre on its 50-acre site. The centre is one of four labs that receive samples from new victims of bird flu - but as the others are in America, Japan and Australia, it is London that will test the European outbreaks first. Few outsiders ever see the lab, but last week The Independent on Sunday was given unprecedented access.

The head of the centre, Dr Alan Hay, cut short a holiday when he heard the news of an outbreak in the Van region of Turkey. The other scientists cancelled days off as samples from the dead boy and his sister were flown to London, a week ago last Thursday. They were driven to Mill Hill from the airport in a car with Turkish diplomatic plates. As it swept through red and white security barriers the passenger, a woman from the Ministry of Health in Turkey, may just have felt she had seen the institute before. The main block is a tall building with a presence unsettling enough to have been used as an asylum in Batman Begins.

The samples were driven down the hill overlooking the parklands and big houses of Totteridge - "where the millionaires live", as one member of staff on government wages puts it - to Containment Four, the laboratory with the highest level of security. From the outside, the lab looks like the boiler house on a 1960s polytechnic campus, with pipes and ducts sprouting from the walls. Only four people have permission to enter the laboratory: the security manager and three scientists.

Before starting work, Alan Douglas showered and left his clothes in a decontamination room, then dressed in royal blue overalls very like a surgeon would wear in an operating theatre, with a white laboratory coat. He unlocked the door and entered the laboratory, the air in which passes through a complicated series of filters, each sterilised with formaldehyde. This is to stop unwelcome particles from ruining experiments, but it is also to stop viruses with which the scientists work from escaping into the atmosphere.

The air pressure inside the building is lower than outside, so that if an accident happens air will be sucked inside rather than out. Black polythene is taped up at the windows to prevent sunlight from getting in. All waste leaving the lab is sterilised.

The Turkish samples came in plastic tubes, protected by bubble wrap, in a box containing carbon dioxide to keep them at the right temperature. One by one they were placed in an airtight chamber, then passed into a main cabinet. Mr Douglas and his colleagues work with their hands and arms thrust through a portal into gloves, or look into a microscope that extends out of the cabinet as a hood.

The best of the samples was a swab or slice from the lungs of Mehmet Kocyigit, a 14-year-old boy who had lived on a farm thousands of miles away in the village of Dogubayazit, in the mountains close to the border with Iran. He had died from the pneumonia-like symptoms of avian flu which have hospitalised 78 other people across Turkey. It is thought that Mehmet and his siblings had been playing with the severed heads of infected birds. His sisters Fatima and Hulya also died.

"I knew the boy offered our best chance of isolating and growing the virus," says Mr Douglas, who diluted the sample, and from part of it extracted the RNA, the genetic material that is the virus equivalent of DNA. This was then analysed.

The rest of the sample was shared out between dishes in which the virus might grow. Some contained chicken eggs, which are usually used for growing ordinary flu viruses; others contained tissue culture made from canine kidney cells.

"Four of us were working flat out," says Mr Douglas, 55, a research associate who was in the laboratory all last weekend. More people were being hospitalised in Turkey as he worked. "I came in on Sunday morning, checked the tissue culture under the microscope in the hood and took out fluids from all the eggs, and found out that the virus had grown."
He was thrilled. Nobody in Turkey had been able to grow, isolate and test the strain. Nobody else in the world had been asked to try. "On Monday morning I continued extracting, and I got the results that afternoon, then repeated the tests."

The World Health Organisation (WHO) let it be known that the virus had been isolated. American newspapers got hold of the story early and described Mill Hill as only one of the labs working on it. Mr Douglas and his colleagues were furious. "It was as if we were just another bunch of people working away in the background, but that's not true. We are the only ones in the world who have grown this virus. A lot of people are asking for it now, obviously. The Americans are going to be last on the list, I can tell you."

This is not merely a spat. The scientific world depends on patronage, which depends on kudos. The institute has been threatened with a move into central London and its workers do not want to go. They want the world to know about the work they are doing, and the Government to let them stay put. Another colleague shakes his head when asked about the Americans he perceives to be glory-grabbers: "Bastards," he sighs.

The World Influenza Centre used to spend most of its time tracking changes in human flu, but now it also has to keep pace with the avian virus that has so far infected 150 people and killed at least 78. People working with chickens in Hong Kong and South Korea were the first to die in the current outbreak, in 1997 and 2003. Since then there have been outbreaks and mass bird culls across South-east Asia. A South American parrot in a quarantine centre in Essex was said to have brought the virus to England in November, but the real carriers were 53 Taiwanese finches in the same compound. No humans were infected here.

Wild ducks can carry the virus without symptoms as they migrate, and give it to domestic poultry. British bird owners have been told to keep them away from lakes and waterways where the ducks might land during the migratory season. Once chickens are infected, humans can pick up the virus by touching the birds, their droppings or secretions, or inhaling faecal dust. Somebody with the virus might travel to another country before succumbing to the symptoms, as may have been the case with the suspected bird flu reported in Belgium yesterday. But so far humans cannot pass it to each other.

The tests at Mill Hill last week enabled the WHO to confirm that the anti-viral drugs Tamiflu and amantadine are effective against the Turkish strain. The British Government is one of many around the world stockpiling Tamiflu in case of an outbreak: the UK has four million doses now and expects to have another 10.6 million by the end of the year.

But the tests also showed that the H5N1 virus had changed in the boy's body. "Each virus contains eight RNA molecules carrying information for the proteins in the virus," says Sir John Skehel. "In one of the samples, one of the proteins had mutated in a way that would allow it to move from bird to human cells more effectively." That has been seen before, in Hong Kong in 2003 and Vietnam last year, but two more genetic changes will probably have to take place before the virus becomes infectious among humans, says Sir John.

In the meantime, the fewer people who become infected with avian flu now, the less likely one of them will be a host in which it mutates. "This is why all these chickens need to be killed," says Sir John. "It is not that they have done anything at all wrong; it is just that we cannot afford for them to infect large numbers of humans."

The leader of the World Influenza Centre, Dr Alan Hay, flew to Turkey last week to advise doctors and scientists there. "A flu pandemic really is inevitable," he said last year. "We don't know when it will arrive, but we are anticipating it."

There on a hill in north London, hidden in a lab that looks like a boiler house, his team will be ready to tell the world if the nightmare comes true.

THE HUMAN MIXING BOWL

How avian flu could mutate and cause a pandemic

1. WILD DUCKS

Migrating wildfowl may carry the H5N1 virus without symptoms as they fly thousands of miles to another continent

2. CHICKENS

Domestic poultry become infected with the virus if they have contact with the nasal secretions or faeces of migrating wildfowl

3. HUMANS

People working closely with chickens inhale faeces dust or touch secretions and droppings carrying the H5N1 virus

4. MUTATION

If avian flu infects a patient who also has human flu the body may act as a mixing bowl for the two. They will combine to form a new avian/human flu virus with a new genetic make-up. The protein spikes on its surface are a new shape, making the virus resistant to all known vaccines. The victim could travel to another country before succumbing to the symptoms

5. PERSON TO PERSON

The new virus may be so different that humans have little or no immunity. This would allow it to spread across the world very quickly, carried through the air like old-fashioned flu by droplets from coughs and sneezes. Experts say it could kill as many as 150 million people

1997 was when the current outbreak of avian flu first killed a human being

6 people died in Hong Kong that year and 18 were infected

72 more people have been killed by the virus since that time

158 have needed treatment in countries spreading from Thailand to Turkey

14.6m shots of the Tamiflu anti-viral drug ordered by the British government

150m people could die across the world if the virus mutates and causes a pandemic
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
WHO: Bird flu could be passing between people
William J Kole | Ankara, Turkey
13 January 2006 04:05​

The deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu could be passing from person to person in Turkey even though health experts have no evidence that the virus is spreading that way, a senior World Health Organisation (WHO) expert said on Thursday.

Guenael Rodier, the WHO's head of communicable diseases and response, said experts cannot rule out person-to-person infection because "we haven't documented each and every case properly".

"When you have a mother and a child, and both get sick, you don't know if they both were exposed to the chickens or if the mother got sick because she was caring for the child," Rodier said. "It leaves room for some question marks. We have not documented every transmission story."

But he said that even if human-to-human contact is established, it could end up being contained within families and not necessarily trigger the pandemic that experts fear could kill millions.

Preliminary tests have confirmed H5N1 in 18 Turks, including three children who died last week.

"The virus could spread like Sars [severe acute respiratory syndrome] and still be contained," Rodier said, referring to outbreaks of Sars in 2002 and 2003.

Experts have said that all the cases appear to have involved people who touched or played with infected birds, and there is no hard evidence pointing to direct infection between people.

"At the moment, there is absolutely no element that makes me think this is the case," Rodier said.

Gene change
The WHO said on Thursday that an analysis of H5N1 samples from two Turkish victims has detected a change in one gene in one of two samples tested, but that it is too early to tell whether the mutation is significant.

The mutation, which allows the virus to bind to a human cell more easily than to a bird cell, is a shift in the direction of the virus being able to infect people more easily than it does now, the agency said. However, that does not mean the mutation has taken root, it cautioned.

"The lab people are not so alarmed," Rodier said on Friday, adding that further analysis is needed to determine how the virus might be evolving. "If there are implications, we will see them."

"It could mean a lot of things. Finding something in the [genetic] sequence is not necessarily linked to something in the field," he added.

The United Nations health agency has said it is not alarmed by the finding in a single virus sample because this exact genetic change has been seen before, in samples from southern China in 2003, and it had no impact on the course of the disease, the behaviour of the virus or the pattern of human infections.

Small shift
An official from the UN Food and Agriculture Agency said on Friday that the Turkish mutation occurred in one of the children who died a week ago in the first H5N1 fatalities documented outside East Asia.

The shift in the gene is very small and there is no cause for concern, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to speak to reporters. The virus in Turkey displayed a 99,5% similarity to the strain that surfaced in birds in China's northwestern Qinghai province, and a 99,2% similarity to the flu detected in Russia's Novosibirsk region in Siberia, he said.

Rodier said the WHO has asked Turkey's health ministry for permission to conduct more intensive screening in villages in the areas where outbreaks have occurred, and that the proposal includes plans for blood tests, throat swabs and interviews with families.

Patients seem to be responding well to the antiviral drug Tamiflu, he said.

Some experts have expressed concern that H5N1 could become entrenched in Turkey, and that a permanent presence of the strain on the rim of Europe would pose a serious threat to the rest of the continent as well as to Africa, since the country lies on a major migratory route for wild birds.

Rodier said he could not say whether H5N1 would become endemic to Turkey, but he conceded: "We are expecting this constant threat for months to come." -- Sapa-AP

http://www.mg.co.za/articlepage.asp...ing_news__international_news&articleid=261307

:vik:
 

mandatroy

Inactive
BIRD FLU: H5N1 SAME VIRUS AS SPANISH FLU

I haven't seen it stated like this before.

http://www.agi.it/english/news.pl?d...-CRO-0-NF11&page=0&id=agionline-eng.oggitalia

BIRD FLU: H5N1 SAME VIRUS AS SPANISH FLU (50 MLN DEATHS)
(AGI) - Rome, Jan. 9 - Spanish flu, which in 1918 killed 50 million people, was caused by a bird flu virus, which evolved and passed from birds to humans.

Today's H5N1 is a variant of the same virus and "is the worst ever seen and the most likely candidate to cause the next pandemic", declared in an interview published by "Le Scienze", the virologist, R. G. Webster, who is the biggest world expert in flu epidemics. A bird flu virus, H2N2 causing Asian flu in 1957, and H3N2 causing Hong Kong flu 1968 (both with 1 - 4 million deaths) and again H1N1 in Russia in 1977: in all these cases the virus spread among animals and then transmuted and was spread from man to man.

The current virus has not yet spread man to man, but the WHO fears that it could mutate from one moment to the next. H5N1 is fatal for bird in 100 pct of cases, in just 48 hours. It has also hit other mammals, even tigers and leopards and then has spread among man in China, Vietnam, Thailand, Cambodia, Indonesia and is showing worrying signs in Turkey.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) has already sent a "pandemic alert" to all governments worldwide a few months back, which indicated what to do to prepare for a pandemic. The main problem is the impossibility of deploying enough vaccine. Indeed, world production is just 300 million doses a year, so governments need to decide who will be first in queue: health workers, political leaders, forces of order, medicine production workers, transport employees, old people, children, the sick.

The advent of a pandemic is like hurricanes or earthquakes, explained Webster, in that no one can know exactly what will happen. He writes in "Le Scienze" - the WHO evaluates that "since the end of 2003 the world is approaching a new flu pandemic more than in any other moment", over the last forty years.
 

Fuzzychick

Membership Revoked
"Small shift
An official from the UN Food and Agriculture Agency said on Friday that the Turkish mutation occurred in one of the children who died a week ago in the first H5N1 fatalities documented outside East Asia."

A shift is a shift! This isn't good!:sht:
 
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<B><font size=+0 color=blue><center>BIRD FLU: A RACE AGAINST TIME</font>

15 January 2006
<A href="http://www.sundayherald.com/53546">www.sundayherald.com</a></center>
As the spectre of avian flu draws ever closer, scientists all over the world are striving to develop vaccines and strategies in a desperate attempt to prevent a global pandemic that could kill millions.
<center>By Torcuil Crichton</b></center>

LIKE the distant rumbling of a storm on the horizon, the television images of children’s’ funerals in eastern Turkey have send a shudder across Europe. When a human case of avian flu was mistakenly reported in Belgium yesterday, in someone just returned from Turkey, it seemed as though the virus had almost completed its inexorable march across the globe from Asia. Not yet, it transpires; but it may be only a matter of time.
At least 15 people have been diagnosed with the deadly H5N1 strain of avian flu across Turkey and three children in Dogubeyazit have succumbed, two of them confirmed flu cases.

As devastating as the outbreak in Turkey is, it is providing invaluable information for those scientists working with the leading medical centres on the planet desperately trying to outwit the virus.

“I must say the genetic analysis is quite stupendous,” says one of those scientists, John Oxford, professor of virology at the Institute of Cell and Molecular Science at Queen Mary’s Hospital in London.

Samples obtained from Turkish victims and analysed at the National Institute of Medical Research in London show that H5N1 has undergone a slight mutation which makes it more likely to attach to human cells.

“There is a mutation in the virus which gives it a potential to bind on to human cells as well as chicken cells,’’ says Oxford. ‘‘The fear now is that the flu has mutated into a strain that is more easily transferred between humans but it doesn’t seem to have taken off in Turkey.

“It is only one of the mutations we’re looking for, we need another one before it will really fly. On the ground there is still no evidence of person-to-person spread.”

The doctors who have seen at first hand the effects of bird flu are themselves shaken. In chickens, H5NI seems to spread to all internal organs, but in humans it appears to devastate the lungs in particular. Researchers at the University of Hong Kong have found that a victim’s own immune system may be part of the problem. It reacts to the virus with a flood of chemical messengers that draw white-blood cells into the lungs, where they trigger a massive inflammatory reaction.

“It’s kind of like inviting in trucks full of dynamite,” says Malik Peiris, who led the work. Healthy tissue dies and blood vessels leak, filling the lungs with fluid.

Although the flu has so far shown no great ability to pass between humans, a worldwide pandemic is seen by experts as inevitable. A pandemic born out of avian flu will be one of the great levellers of our time. The last great flu pandemic, the Spanish flu that followed the end of the first world war, killed 50 million people across the world.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) estimates a variant of the virus that targets humans could spread around the world within three months, killing at least two million to 7.4 million people. In the event of a pandemic outbreak in the UK – where the government has taken the contingency of stock piling £200 million worth of anti-viral drugs and two million doses of vaccine – 50,000 people would die. The HSBC bank, which has 253,000 staff in 77 countries, estimated last week that half its employees would be hit in an outbreak.

It is hardly surprising then that Western governments are preparing furiously behind the scenes for a pandemic. Stocks of Tamiflu, the anti-viral first line of defence against a pandemic, are at high levels across the globe, but the WHO has had difficulty in calming fears that the drug could have only a limited usefulness in a flu pandemic.

Professor Hugh Pennington, president of the Society for General Microbiology, believes the government should have already produced a vaccine based on the current strain of H5N1, rather than relying on Tamiflu. ‘‘It is like pre paring for war, and we should be making a vaccine for the whole population now,’’ he says.

Of eight people who were infected with bird flu in Vietnam and treated with Tamiflu, four died. In two other cases, reported by the Oxford University Clinical Research Unit in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, the bird flu virus in their bloodstream mutated and became resistant to the Tamiflu drug.

The virus in Turkey looks similar to the 2003 Vietnam strain, for which a vaccine has been developed. Companies have been making vaccine and the Department of Health has ordered several million doses for front-line staff in the event of an outbreak.

“It’s rather good news that it hasn’t mutated from the 2003 strain,” says Professor Oxford. “The other good news is that it is not drug-resistant. Either of the anti-virals, Tamiflu or Relenza, would inhibit this new strain.

“The armour is being built up and the stockpiling of anti-virals would have a role to play in preventing the spread of a flu pandemic. So it’s not all bad news coming out of Turkey.”

Because they believe Tamiflu can protect against H5N1, governments are building up stockpiles, and drug maker Roche is hard-pressed to keep up with demand. The UK has ordered enough for 15 million people, a quarter of the population, and France almost as much.

The US has opted for a smaller stockpile – just 2.3 million treatments so far, and most of them bought from European manufacturers like Glaxo Smith Kline. President George W Bush, however, intends to use a $3 billion chunk of the $7bn pandemic fund he is touting to re-establish a vaccine industry in the US.

Two million doses would be scant protection for a country of nearly 300 million. But officials hope the vaccine formula will be fully tested and ready before it is ever needed. Makers would know how to produce it and could boost production fast, says Anthony S Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. “At the first sign of a pandemic we’ll be able to say, ‘Go, take off the brakes and make millions and millions of doses.’”

But nobody knows whether an H5N1 pandemic strain will be similar enough to the virus now stalking Asia for this vaccine to offer full protection.

The odds seem stacked in favour of a strain of bird flu developing which can jump from human to human, and that at some stage will spread throughout the world. Despite our wealth and distance from the origins of the flu strain in Asia, there is little we can do to stand against the rhythms of nature and migration. Wild birds flying from the northern to the southern hemisphere for the winter and back again transmit the virus to domestic fowl, which can then pass it on to the human population through close contact. And the cyclical nature of flu pandemics, with a deadly strain to which humans have little natural resistance emerging every second generation, has caught us out. The last flu pandemic was in 1968 and the next one is well overdue. Jeremy Farrar, an Oxford University doctor who works on avian flu at the Hospital for Tropical Diseases in Ho Chi Minh City, says it’s bound to happen. “And when it does, the world is going to face a truly horrible pandemic,” he adds.

In the 1919 pandemic, everyone on the planet breathed the virus and half became ill. Across America, Europe and Asia, people took to their beds and never recovered. The rapidity of the infection and the fact that it struck young people, usually the healthiest and most resistant, left medical experts wondering whether it was flu at all.

The H5NI avian flu strain found in Turkey is highly pathogenic. It can kill a chicken in a matter of hours leaving it swollen and bleeding. It can kill anything from a mouse to a tiger with much the same efficiency whenever it manages to cross the species barrier. In humans it is just as deadly. Half of the people who have been infected with H5N1 have died, although that still numbers just 79 people. Yet its very deadliness has prevented it becoming very efficient at spreading from human to human. It hasn’t learned the trick of the common flus that can lay low a whole family, classroom or office each winter.

H5N1 doesn’t always kill. Some infections may even be so mild that they go unnoticed. But doctors who have treated patients seriously ill with avian flu have recorded shocking death rates .

Everyone agrees that instead of waiting for H5N1 to make the next move it should be eradicated before it jumps species successfully. That means killing a lot of chickens, which, as Asian countries and Turkey and its eastern European neighbours are dis covering, is no easy task. Tens of millions of chickens were killed in Vietnam three years ago to beat the disease, but in 2004 it roared back on to the scene.

A new strain will probably emerge in rural Asia and spread from its first human victim into a family and a community. The WHO containment plan involves a rapid deployment of epidemiologists and trained medical investigators to the scene of the first reports of the virus spreading between humans, and the use of anti-virals and antibiotics. Quarantine would be part of the plan.

The containment team’s mission would be to halt or slow the spread of the disease while scientists race to the lab with samples of the virus and manufacture a vaccine. The plan relies on two things in short supply: Tamiflu, sold by the Swiss company Roche, and alert, candid health officials who would be the first to report an outbreak.

Roche has offered three million treatment courses of the drug for use in the WHO containment plan, which will be available by the middle of the year. Roche is keeping half the WHO stockpile in the US and half in Switzerland so that it can be flown to an affected area as quickly as possible.

If it’s caught early, say within two weeks, the disaster planners reckon they can flood a country with anti-virals before it reaches the major cities. There it would be uncontrollable, infecting thousands of inhabitants and travellers who would take it from hotel to airport to their own homes half a world away.

H5NI, or a close cousin of it, first appeared in the New Territories of Hong Kong in 1997. That was a small but deadly outbreak that re-occurred in 2001 and then radiated out through China into southeast Asia as far as Indonesia. One imported parrot made it to England last year carrying H5N1, but the infection was contained. Turkey is a possible stepping stone, but experts still think the outbreak will come in southeast Asia and spread quickly from there. Barriers like closing ports and airports and restricting travel will, at best, buy a fortnight’s respite, planners estimate. In that time the nation’s economy could be devastated and the population panicked.

But flu viruses do have a remarkable capacity to change and jump species, and among the front-line experts in the field there is a terrible sense that if H5N1 doesn’t get us, then one of its cousins will.

15 January 2006
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
[January 15, 2006]

IN BRIEF: Bird flu kills woman in Indonesia

(Daily Post (Liverpool) Via Thomson Dialog NewsEdge)THE number of people killed by bird flu in Indonesia climbed to 12 yesterday after a laboratory sanctioned by the World Health Organisation confirmed the death of a woman, officials said. The 29-year-old victim died on Wednesday night. Bird flu has killed hundreds of millions of chickens and ducks since it started ravaging poultry stocks across Asia in 2003, and has jumped to humans, killing at least 78 people.

http://www.tmcnet.com/usubmit/-brief-bird-flu-kills-woman-indonesia-/2006/jan/1286625.htm

:vik:
 
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<B><center>16/01/2006, 01:57:15
<A href="http://www.radioaustralia.net.au/news/stories/s1547912.htm">Radio Australia.net.au</a>

<font size=+1 color=red><center>A girl in eastern Turkey has died from suspected bird flu.</font></center></center>
Turkish health authorities are awaiting results of tests on the 12 year old, who has been seriously ill for several days.

The tests will reveal if she died from the H5N1 virus which has already killed three children in the same region. </b>

The H5N1 virus has been found in wild birds and poultry across large parts of Turkey, particularly in poor villages in Istanbul, near Europe to settlements at the Iranian and Iraqi borders.

The Turkish victims are the first human cases reported outside east Asia since H5N1 re-emerged in 2003,
infecting about 150 people and claiming at least 78 lives in Asia.
 
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<B><font size=+1 color=brown><center>Boy hospitalized in Istanbul with suspected bird flu, two cases worsen</font>

01-15-2006, 08h42
ANKARA (AFP)
<A href="http://www.turkishpress.com/news.asp?id=103396">www.turkishpress.com</a></center>
A pigeon rests on a wire in front of a Turkish flag in Taksim Square, in downtown Istanbul. The bird flu outbreak has continued to strike at Turkey's children with a small boy hospitalized in Istanbul on suspicion of having the disease and two others reported in serious condition in Van, at the other end of the country.
(AFP) </b>

The bird flu outbreak has continued to strike at Turkey's children with a small boy hospitalized in Istanbul on suspicion of having the disease and two others reported in serious condition in Van, at the other end of the country.

Five-year-old Ferhat Budak was brought to an Istanbul hospital from his hometown Gebze, 100 kilometers (60 miles) to the east, suffering from high fever after coming into contact three days ago with chickens kept in the yard of his house, the Anatolia news agency reported Sunday.

If the case is confirmed, he will become the first person to be infected by the deadly H5N1 strain of avian flu at a hospital in Istanbul, Turkey's biggest city and commercial hub, on the doorstep of Europe.

Non-human cases of bird flu have already been reported in the Istanbul area, but all tests conducted on people there so far have proven negative.

In Van, 1,600 kilometers (1,000 miles) to the east near Iran, a doctor said the condition of two children being treated for bird flu-like symptoms at the university hospital there had deteriorated.

Fatma Ozcan, 12, is in "critical condition" and on an artificial respirator, the hospital's chief physician Huseyin Avni Sahin told AFP by telephone.

Her brother Muhammed, five, is also suffering from complications and "his condition is worse than that of others being treated for the same symptoms," Sahin said.

He said the two children had been in contact with infected chickens and had been brought to the hospital "late", six days after they began showing the first symptoms.

They were both being treated with Tamiflu, an antiviral drug considered to be the most effective against avian influenza, Sahin said.

He said the results of tests for the deadly H5N1 virus conducted on the Ozcan siblings had not yet been received but were expected Monday.

In the first deaths from bird flu disease outside eastern Asia, H5N1 has so far killed three children aged 11, 14 and 15, all from the same family in Dogubeyazit, eastern Turkey, and infected 15 others countrywide.

Of those infected, all but two are children or teenagers, according to figures provided by the health ministry.

Three children, two in Van and one in the Black Sea port of Samsun, have been discharged "in full health" after being cured of the potentially deadly virus, according to media reports.

The current outbreak of bird flu emerged in Dogubeyazit in late December and has spread across the country like wildfire.

It has now been reported in nearly a third of the country's 81 provinces, and teams of veterinary experts have culled some 600,000 birds throughout the country, the agriculture ministry has said.

As Europe fears the westward advance of the disease, health officials from around the globe are preparing to meet in Beijing on Tuesday to raise the 1.5 billion dollars needed to tackle the potential pandemic and urge greater international cooperation.
 
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<B><font size=+1 color=brown><center>Boy becomes 19th Turk confirmed with bird flu</font>

Published: 1/15/2006
<A href="http://www.turkishpress.com/news.asp?id=103388">www.turkishpress.com</a></center>
ANKARA - A five-year-old boy being treated at a hospital in the eastern Turkish city of Van has tested positive for bird flu, bringing to 19 the number of victims in Turkey, including three who have died, the Turkish health ministry said Sunday.
Tests on Muhammed Ozcan, whose 12-year-old sister Fatma died Sunday in the same hospital after presenting symptoms of the deadly H5N1 strand of bird flu, came back positive, the ministry said in a statement. </b>

"The preliminary tests on Fatma are negative however," said the document, which added that other tests would be carried out.


01/15/2006 14:51 GMT
 
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<B><font size=+1 color=blue><center>Stay vigilant warning by bird flu expert</font>

Jan 12 2006
By Guardian-series
<A href="http://www.guardian-series.co.uk/news/stratfordnews/display.var.672190.0.stay_vigilant_warning_by_bird_flu_expert.php">guardianseries.co.uk</a></center>
AN expert on bird flu has warned that we cannot afford to be complacent in Britain following the outbreak of the deadly H5N1 virus in Turkey.</b>

Dr Ron Cutler is a microbiologist who lectures at the University of East London. He is often consulted for his expert opinion in interviews on CNN, Sky News and LBC.

In a week that has seen three people in Turkey killed by the virus, and 15 people testing positive for the disease, Dr Cutler says preparations must be made to prevent a potential pandemic.

The three children - two sisters and their brother, who died in Turkey - were believed to have caught the virus while playing with infected chickens.

Dr Cutler said bio-security was of prime importance.

For this to happen, controls were needed. These included reducing the introduction of new birds into flock, educating the poultry industry and banning the import of live chickens from countries affected by avian flu.

There has not yet been transfer of the virus between people.

The increasing concern over the possibility of a bird flu epidemic is fired by factors such as farmers who may not be reporting potential cases in their livestock because they fear the poultry will be culled without compensation, and the fact that some cases in South East Asia have been linked to the practice of cock fighting.

If the outbreaks in Turkey spread, Dr Cutler advises vets to be vigilant and quick to cull endangered flocks, as is happening in Hong Kong and elsewhere.

He also emphasised the importance of global co-operation and increased surveillance in order to manage the deadly disease.
 
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<B><center>Sunday, 15 January 2006 9:47 am EST
Category: iFlu.org comment
<A href="http://www.iflu.org/?p=16269">www.iflu.org</a>

<font szie=+1 color=purple>Official bird flu numbers mask the truth as another child dies in Turkey</font></center>
The death of a 12 year old girl today, despite her case not being counted within the official figures, highlights the need for greater transparency and more critical reporting of bird flu in Turkey.</b>

Much has been made of the Turkish government's apparent openness to inform the media about bird flu in the country, not least by the government itself — "The fight against this disease had been pursued through a clear and transparent policy," Health Ministry spokeswoman Mine Tuncel said a few days ago — and compared to some other nations, this is true. However, perhaps with one eye on the threat bird flu poses for tourism, or perhaps from advice from the WHO (which has more experience with such things), reports of suspected cases have largely been replaced by laboratory confirmed cases only. The UK's Sunday Times today said 180 suspect cases were now being investigated, but in most of the media the numbers quoted are far smaller — eighteen confirmed cases, two of which died.

Nobody wishes to cause unnecessary alarm, but playing down the situation, even unwittingly, is not going to help Turkey and certainly isn't helping ordinary people make rational decisions about what bird flu and a future pandemic might mean for their families. Worse still, the under-reporting of cases may be hiding the true nature of the threat Turkey, and arguably the whole world, now faces.

Take those two confirmed deaths. In this family cluster — the Kocigit family — there were actually three deaths (three out of four siblings died), but as the WHO couldn't confirm H5N1 in the third case the official number is two. To be fair, even the WHO seems to publicly acknowledge that the third case was probably caused by bird flu, as does much of the media. But the lone survivor who has now been discharged from hospital also officially remains H5N1 negative.

Another family cluster — the Ozcan family from Dogubyazit — had at least 10 family members hospitalized. Three year old Yusuf Ozcan and Aysegul Ozcan, 9, are currently receiving intensive care, and have both tested positive for H5N1. At least 8 other family members who were also hospitalized have not had H5N1 confirmed however. More recently, four more patients with the Ozcan surname, also from Dogubyazit, were hospitalized (although it is not clear whether they are related to the family admitted earlier in the week). 12 year-old Fatma Ozcan has just died, and her brother, 5 year-old Muhammet Ozcan, is also in an ICU. Neither has officially been confirmed to be H5N1 positive. 1

These, and other clusters, are important because they suggest an improved ability of the virus to infect. However, determining whether this also involved human to human transmission is impossible if you do not accept that all those who became ill, are likely to have been made ill by the H5N1 virus.

Let's be clear about this, probable limited human to human infection is not unprecedented, but the situation in Turkey is not exactly the same as we have seen before. The situation is far from being under control. The numbers involved are greater than those reported, and the instances of large clusters is concerning. Human to human transmission, albeit still limited, is not unlikely.

There are important economic factors, not least tourism, but any attempt to fudge human infection investigations or play down the true extent of the risks is highly likely to backfire. When the current transparency is already being clouded by uncertainty, tourists are likely to protest with their wallets at the slightest hint that they are looking at a trick mirror and not an open window.

<i>Family cluster research undertaken by Dr. Henry Niman of Recombinomics Inc.</i>
 

Caplock50

I am the Winter Warrior
Two bits of info I have read in this thread combined with another very old thread here, and it hit me. The main point from this thread is that this bird flu is the same as the 1918 flu. And that old thread was the one about scientist digging up the victims of the 1918 pandemic to get samples to study. They knew. They knew, for sure, at least a year ago what we are now facing. Why else dig up those bodies for samples?
 
Caplock50 said:
Two bits of info I have read in this thread combined with another very old thread here, and it hit me. The main point from this thread is that this bird flu is the same as the 1918 flu. And that old thread was the one about scientist digging up the victims of the 1918 pandemic to get samples to study. They knew. They knew, for sure, at least a year ago what we are now facing. Why else dig up those bodies for samples?


Cap... The first thought I had (when I read the 1918 thread) was that the medical PTB were trying to get a head start on developing a vaccine for the H5N1 flu...
 

gdpetti

Inactive
Turkey H5N1 Is

Turkey H5N1 Is
Recombining With
Mammalian Polymorphisms
Turkish H5N1 Isolate Has Recombinant HA S227N

By Dr. Henry L. Niman, PhD
Recombinomics.com
1-14-6

Virus from one of the patients shows mutations at the receptor-binding site. One of the mutations has been seen previously in viruses isolated from a small outbreak in Hong Kong in 2003 (two cases, one of which was fatal) and from the 2005 outbreak in Viet Nam. Research has indicated that the Hong Kong 2003 viruses bind preferentially to human cell receptors more so than to avian cell receptors. Researchers at the Mill Hill laboratory anticipate that the Turkish virus will also have this characteristic.

The above comments from the WHO update strongly indicate that the polymorphism found in the isolate from the fatal case in Turkey is S227N (also called S223N using H3 numbering). The polymorphism lead to an increased affinity for human receptors and a deceased affinity for avian receptors. Since the same change in receptor binding affinity is expected from the Turkey isolate, the change would be S227N.

H5N1 has been evolving by capturing mammalian polymorphisms via recombination. The HA wild bird sequence was used to identify donor sequences that would allow S227N to be created. All of the donor sequences were in the HA of H9N2 isolates and all recent sequences were from the Middle East. Since H5N1 had not been previously reported to have been in the Middle East, the wild bird H5N1 would have a unique opportunity to acquire this polymorphism which was not found in prior wild bird sequences tracing back to Qinghai Lake. This acquisition would therefore be likely to happen when the H5N1 migrated into the region surrounding the Middle East where H9N2 was endemic.

This acquisition increased the efficiency for human receptors, resulting in the first reported human infections by H5N1 wild bird sequences migrating toward the west. Such cases were reported in Turkey and the large number of cases and increased size of familial clusters indicated transmission to humans was more efficient than had been seen previously. In additional, there have now been several reports of infection in young brothers tossing a dead bird or playing with gloves used to carry dead birds. These are more examples of increased efficiency. In the past, none of the H5N1 cullers in southeast Asia were reported positive for H5N1. Now in addition to the young children, there are reports of soldiers developing symptoms after handling infected pigeons.

The latest results indicate H5N1 continues to acquire mammalian polymorphisms via recombination, not random mutation, and these acquisitions are leading to more efficient transmission of H5N1 to humans.

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/0
1130601/H5N1_Turkey_S227N_Fixed.html

_____

Fixing Of Human Polymorphisms In H5N1 In Wild Birds

By Dr. Henry L. Niman, PhD
Recombinomics.com
1-13-6

Genetic and antigenic analyses have shown that, compared to previous H5N1 isolates, 20042005 isolates share several amino acid changes that modulate antigenicity and perhaps other biological functions. Furthermore, our molecular analysis of the HA from isolates collected in 2005 suggests that several amino acids located near the receptor-binding site are undergoing change, some of which may affect antigenicity or transmissibility. For example, an isolate (VN/JP12-2/05) showed a change from serine to asparagine at position 223 of the HA1 (S223N) that may affect receptor-binding specificity.

The above comments from a WHO report in Emerging and Infectious Diseases adds some additional information regarding the S227N (also called S223N) poymorphism found in an isolate from a fatal Turkish case, but specifics are lacking. The WHO report on the Manila meeting in May, 2005 mentioned changes in positions near the receptor binding domain for northern Vietnam isolates, but did not give details. The data in the table associated with the above comments indicates the S227N in Vietnam was only found in human isolates.

This species restriction monitors another change, PB2 E627K, which was also limited to mammalian isolates prior to Qinghai Lake in May, 2005. In Vietnam, Thailand, and Hong Kong, this change was only found in mammalian isolates and was associated with poor outcomes. However, it was detected in all 16 wild bird isolates from Qinghai Lake and appears to be fixed in the migratory bird population, because all subsequent isolates have had the change. This change is of concern because it allows H5N1 to grow efficiently at 34 C, the temperature of a human nose in the winter.

The large number of cases and clusters in Turkey suggest S227N has also become fixed in the bird population, although the wording in the WHO announcement is somewhat unclear on the number of changes found in the receptor binding domain. The description indicates one change is S227N, but no details are given for additional changes.

The composition of the 2005 isolates from Vietnam are also unclear, because none of the sequences have been made public, even though the above isolate was described in a peer reviewed journal, which usually requires sequences be made pubic.

The acquisition of S227N was predicted based on donor sequences present in H9N2 in the Middle East. The presence of H5N1 in migratory birds allowed for dual infections involving H5N1 and H9N2 in the Middle East, which may have been due to the expected recombination. The fixing of S227N in the bird population is cause for concern.

The two isolates from the Hong Kong patients in 2003 did not have the PB2 E627K, so the human isolate from Turkey may be the first example of H5N1 with both HA S227N and PB2 E627K.

Moreover, both changes may now be fixed in H5N1 in birds, which moves H5N1 on step closer toward sustained human-to-human transmission.


Free use applies... http://www.rense.com/general69/trl.htm
 
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<B><center>[January 15, 2006]
<A href="http://www.tmcnet.com/usubmit/-initial-tests-bird-flu-suspect-germany-prove-negative-/2006/jan/1286790.htm">www.tmcnet.com</a>

<u><font size=+1 color=red>Initial tests on bird flu suspect in Germany prove negative</u>; NZ gears up for expected flu pandemic</font></center>
(IRN News Via Thomson Dialog NewsEdge)New Zealand is embarking on a bird flu publicity campaign, as the disease causes increasing concern in Europe.

A person who had been travelling in Turkey has been admitted to hospital in Germany after showing symptoms of the disease. Initial tests have proved negative.</b>

The acting director of New Zealand public health, Dr Ashley Bloomfield, says authorities do not know quite when there will be a pandemic, but there will be one at some stage. He says New Zealand has been following the advice of the World Health Organisation and is putting the right preparations in place.

Dr Bloomfield says the expected flu pandemic may not be related to the avian strain in Turkey.

There are only about 150 known cases of bird flu in the world, but of those about half the victims have died.
 
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<B><font size=+1 color=green><center>Syria culls birds near Turk border to prevent flu</font>
(Reuters)

15 January 2006
<A href="http://www.khaleejtimes.com/DisplayArticle.asp?xfile=data/middleeast/2006/January/middleeast_January383.xml&section=middleeast&col=">www.khaleejtimes.com</a></center>
DAMASCUS - Syria destroyed birds at a market near its northeastern border with Turkey on Sunday to try to head off any spread of bird flu, the state news agency said.

“The city is taking precautions against the spread of bird flu,” Kibrael Kourou, an official in the border city of Kamishli, told SANA.</b>

Health officials also shut down the city’s live bird market, which takes place every Sunday, and inspected poultry shops for hygiene, it said.

The agency said the birds came from rural areas and were being traded “outside regulations”. It gave no indication whether they were suspected of having bird flu.

A Turkish girl who died on Sunday is suspected to be the fourth child killed by avian influenza since the deadly H5N1 strain of the virus was found in many parts of Turkey.

Syria shares a 300-mile long border with southern Turkey so the virus could potentially spread through infected birds migrating south for winter, scientists say.

No bird or human cases have been reported in Syria.


<center>======================</center>
 
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<B><center>1/15/06

<font size=+1 color=blue>Iran Destroys Birds Along Border with Turkey</font>

By VOA News
<A href="http://www.payvand.com/news/06/jan/1114.html">www.payvand.com</a></center>
Iranian health officials have begun slaughtering thousands of birds along the country's border with Turkey, in an attempt to prevent the spread of avian flu.

The move reported Saturday comes as the disease continues to spread in Turkey. Three children died of bird flu there last week, and 15 more people have been diagnosed with the disease. </b>

In Ankara, government ministers and representatives of the poultry industry are discussing how to minimize the economic effects of the bird flu outbreak.

Industry experts say poultry sales in the country have dropped by 70 percent since the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu was reported in humans in Turkey late last month - the first bird flu deaths outside Asia.

Meanwhile, Belgian health officials said a Russian journalist hospitalized in Brussels for suspected bird flu has been tested and shows no sign of the disease.
 
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<B><font size=+1 color=purple><center>Turk girl dies from suspected bird flu, brother ill</font>

<A href="http://www.deepikaglobal.com/ENG4_sub.asp?ccode=ENG4&newscode=129735">www.deepikaglobal.com</a></center>
VAN, Turkey, Jan 15 (Reuters) A Turkish girl died today from suspected bird flu, while her brother was critically ill in hospital after testing positive for the virus.

Although the Health Ministry said initial tests on Fatma Ozcan had proved negative, doctors still suspect she contracted the deadly disease.

If both siblings are confirmed to have the disease, it would bring the number of human cases in Turkey to 20.</b>

The ministry said tests on her brother Muhammet, five, showed he has the H5N1 strain of avian influenza, which has already killed three other children in Dogubayazit, the same town in eastern Van province that the Ozcan family come from.

Several tests are required to establish whether a patient has H5N1. One of the children who died last week initially tested negative.

''The girl who was under treatment in Van, Fatma Ozcan, died today of lung failure. She couldn't be saved,'' the Health Ministry said in a statement.

''The first laboratory tests ... came out negative for bird flu but tests continue.'' It added: ''Her brother who was in the same hospital ... came out positive today.'' Separately, Van university hospital doctor Huseyin Avni Sahin told reporters: ''Fatma Ozcan died today from suspected avian influenza, she came from Dogubayazit five days ago.'' Sahin said Fatma, 12, was initially taken to a hospital in Dogubayazit after developing a fever and a cough after preparing and chicken with her family. She was later taken to Van.

The H5N1 virus has been found in wild birds and poultry across large parts of Turkey, particularly in poor villages stretching from Istanbul at the gates of Europe to Van near the Iranian and Iraqi borders.

<B><center>===================</B></center>


<B><font size=+1 color=red><center>Another Victim of Suspected Bird Flu in Turkey</font>

Politics: 15 January 2006, Sunday.
<A href="http://www.novinite.com/view_news.php?id=57840">www.novinite.com</a></center>
A 12-year-old sister Turkish girl died of a suspected bird flu infection. Results are still to confirm whether the victim named Fatma Ozcan was killed by the deadly H5N1 strain of the virus.

Her five-year-old brother Muhammet Ozcan has tested positive for avian flu, bringing the total number of people in the country infected to nineteen. </b>

If the cause of death is confirmed, the teen girl will be the fourth victim of the deadly virus. All four killed by the bird flu in Turkey were kids.

The siblings are from Dogubayazit, the same town in eastern Van province where three other children died after touching contaminated birds.

Bird flu is now confirmed or suspected in 26 of the country's 81 provinces.

Nearly half a million domestic birds have been culled in Turkey to stop the virus from spreading.

Tests are being carried out in the Turkish capital Ankara to see if more people have the virus, health authorities said.
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Caplock50 said:
:lol: Ok, let me see if I can get this moved to the 'Religious' sig. The islamics claimed that all those terrible hurricanes we suffered through were 'punishments from (their)god'. Ok, if that were so, then can this 'flu' be in retaliation for their god's attacks on us by our God? Seems just about every case has been 'centered' in a country dominated by the islamic religion...or one contrary to our 'popular' beliefs here in the 'Western World'.

This post is 'on topic', but, I realize, is not in line with the general flow. So, if deemed so 'off', Mods either move it out or delete it, won't hurt my feelings either way. TIA.

There are also people who would argue that AF is one of the plagues St John wrote about in his Apocalypse while residing on the Isle of Pathmos.

That discussion belongs in the religion section. Caplock, maybe you should start a 'Devine Retribution' thread there? At least from my perspective the daily H5N1 threads are a place to keep current on the physical development of AF. To get into religion here would just muddy the thread.

:vik:
 

BREWER

Veteran Member
BREWER

Gentlemen: Thank you for all your hard work keeping us informed. Things seem to be moving rapidly. I believe the next couple of weeks may present us with a leap of H5N1 into western Europe. For the night crew....:chg:
BUMP, Bump, bump
 

Doomer Doug

Deceased
Caplock, Flying Dutchman you had the same ill feelings I have had about digging up the Spanish bird flu. IN THE DEEP DANK, DARK RECESSES OF MY CONSPIRACY ADLED BRAIN I SEE A NWO PATTERN HERE.

But seriously, I actually saw a PBS special where they were BOASTING about how the US army had actually CREATED the first LIVE spanish flu virus since 1918. Of course they did this to SAVE us. :lol:

Yep, the bird flu pandemic is a process well underway. But I still think we have some time, as in about 6 to 8 months before it creams the USA. And I still think Indonesia and China are ground zero and not Turkey.

Step up on soap box and turn ranting mode on.
Flying Dutchman your posts should be archived and saved for the historical record for future generartions: THEY ARE THAT IMPORTANT. Step down off soap box and stop ranting mode now on. :lol:

Between Bird flu, ie Spanish flu, and Iran 2006 will be remembered just like 1348 or 1914 was. :dstrs:
 

RAT

Inactive
...and then...what about all those dead microbiologists??? It seems that they died at a most inopportune time, eh?

:confused:
 
Doomer Doug said:
Caplock, Flying Dutchman you had the same ill feelings I have had about digging up the Spanish bird flu. IN THE DEEP DANK, DARK RECESSES OF MY CONSPIRACY ADLED BRAIN I SEE A NWO PATTERN HERE.

But seriously, I actually saw a PBS special where they were BOASTING about how the US army had actually CREATED the first LIVE spanish flu virus since 1918. Of course they did this to SAVE us. :lol:

Yep, the bird flu pandemic is a process well underway. But I still think we have some time, as in about 6 to 8 months before it creams the USA. And I still think Indonesia and China are ground zero and not Turkey.

Step up on soap box and turn ranting mode on.
Flying Dutchman your posts should be archived and saved for the historical record for future generartions: THEY ARE THAT IMPORTANT. Step down off soap box and stop ranting mode now on. :lol:

Between Bird flu, ie Spanish flu, and Iran 2006 will be remembered just like 1348 or 1914 was. :dstrs:


ROTFLMAO

Doomer Doug;

I have told Dennis for years now, that he ought to store the archives; that in the years to come, when some one wanted to know what had happened (since Y2K) the TB2000 archives would be an excellent sourse of the news and events (which may be leading up to WW III).

Shoot! Just think of the money the disc sales would bring in?

And, over the years, I will admit it, I have posted those 'linking news articles. Which some one could follow event by event to the end. I did it, well, for some one to be able to understand why their "Bold New World" got to be the way it was......
 

vampire

Inactive
Oh, I get someone is keeping a backup, probably nice and safe deep within a mounain too :dvl1:

The Flying Dutchman said:
ROTFLMAO

Doomer Doug;

I have told Dennis for years now, that he ought to store the archives; that in the years to come, when some one wanted to know what had happened (since Y2K) the TB2000 archives would be an excellent sourse of the news and events (which may be leading up to WW III).

Shoot! Just think of the money the disc sales would bring in?

And, over the years, I will admit it, I have posted those 'linking news articles. Which some one could follow event by event to the end. I did it, well, for some one to be able to understand why their "Bold New World" got to be the way it was......
 

Caplock50

I am the Winter Warrior
My second post to this thread will be deleted. I will do it myself. Either the Mod who started this thread thought it was ok, or he hasn't seen it yet, but, no matter, I am getting rid of it. Thank you PCViking for pointing it out to me. I apologize for my monentary lapse in judgement.
 

Bill P

Inactive
Doomer Doug,

For once I agree with you almost 100%.

Between Bird flu, ie Spanish flu, and Iran 2006 will be remembered just like 1348 or 1914 was.

Why do you think the USA will have 6 to 8 months lead time b efore the H5N1 comes here?

All it will take is one or two infected Iranians/jihadists.
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Caplock50 said:
My second post to this thread will be deleted. I will do it myself. Either the Mod who started this thread thought it was ok, or he hasn't seen it yet, but, no matter, I am getting rid of it. Thank you PCViking for pointing it out to me. I apologize for my monentary lapse in judgement.

You're cool cap...

You did have a point, that I'm certain some woudl love to pursue.

:vik:
 
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