01/21 | Bird flu confirmed in deaths of two children

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Bird flu confirmed in deaths of two children

January 21 2006 at 05:21PM​

Jakarta - A Hong Kong laboratory has confirmed the H5N1 strain of bird flu killed two children from the same Indonesian family this month, a senior official at the health ministry said on Saturday.

Indonesia has now had 14 confirmed deaths from bird flu, said the official, Hariadi Wibisono, director of control of animal-borne diseases at the ministry, and five cases where patients have survived.

"These two cases have been confirmed positive from Hong Kong," Wibisono told Reuters by telephone, referring to the laboratory, which is recognised by the World Health Organisation (WHO).

The two children were a four-year-old boy and a 13-year-old girl from the town of Indramayu in West Java province. Their father has also been admitted to hospital suffering suspected bird flu, although no test results have come back for him yet.

Officials had previously said the boy was aged three.

The Indramayu family is Indonesia's fifth cluster of cases, where people living in close proximity have fallen ill.

There has been no evidence of human-to-human transmission in the deaths of the children and officials have said dead chickens were found in their neighbourhood at Indramayu, which lies 175 km (110 miles) east of Jakarta.

The children died in the past week.

Apart from the two Indramayu children, Indonesia is awaiting confirmation from local tests that showed a 39-year-old man died of bird flu earlier this month.

The H5N1 virus is not known to pass easily between humans at the moment, but experts fear it could develop that ability and set off a global pandemic that might kill millions of people.

Prior to the two Indonesian children, the confirmed death toll from bird flu was 80 people in six countries since late 2003.

The highly pathogenic strain is endemic in poultry in parts of Asia, and has affected birds in two-thirds of the provinces in Indonesia, an archipelago of 17 000 islands and 220 million people.

http://www.int.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=31&art_id=qw113783976135B216

:vik:
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Pandemic Account of 1918-19 flu a chilling reminder
Saturday, January 21, 2006
Reviewed by CORI YONGE
Special to the Register

When he was 15, my grandfather, anxious to leave home, ran off and joined the U.S. Navy. A photo of Grandpa Ed, as my cousins who knew him called him, taken the same year the United States entered World War I, shows a serious young man in his seaman's uniform. I can only imagine that, like any young sailor in wartime, he saw his duty as both a great patriotic adventure and a dangerous obligation. What my grandfather couldn't know was that his greatest risk of dying lay not in fighting the enemy but from the most virulent strain of influenza the world had ever seen. In fact, before World War I would end, far more U.S. troops would die from influenza than from wounds received in combat.

The 1918 influenza pandemic is the topic of John M. Barry's latest book "The Great Influenza: The Epic Story of the Deadliest Plague in History." Barry, probably best known for his award-winning "Rising Tide: The Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 and How it Changed America," is a seemingly prescient writer who labored for seven years to produce an exhaustively thorough story of a virus that, in less than 24 weeks during 1918-1919, killed as many as 100 million people worldwide. Today, as newspapers, television news and the Internet run agog with reports of the avian flu, Barry's work is essential reading for its reminder that, lest history repeat itself, the handling of a future pandemic should not get mired in politics.

As Barry observes, it was the politics surrounding World War I, along with an ill-prepared U.S. Public Health Service and a shortage of adequately trained physicians and nurses that constituted the tinderbox that set off the influenza pandemic. Barry acknowledges that science will never know for certain, but epidemiological evidence suggests that the virus may have first appeared in the Midwestern United States as a mild wave in the spring of 1918. Though it affected more than 1,100 soldiers and killed 38 at Camp Funston in Kansas, it did not draw much attention. Only when the virus mutated and reappeared the following fall did public officials take notice. Not enough notice, however, to stop its spread, paralyzing entire U.S. cities and crossing the ocean with American soldiers to Europe.

Barry repeats the now mostly forgotten, horrific tales of what would come to be called Spanish Influenza. The virus spawned a massive immune response that could turn a patient black with cyanosis and brought death in a matter of hours. It killed an unprecedented number of people between the ages of 20 and 30, and the stories of entire populations consumed with illness are chilling and surreal. Even more chilling was the U.S. government's initial response to push forward with the war effort while keeping the public in the dark about the magnitude of the disease.

In Philadelphia, for example, the death toll climbed into the thousands even as public health director William Krusen, the political appointee of a corrupt government machine, downplayed the danger. Barry writes: "The city morgue had room for thirty-six bodies. Two hundred were stacked there. The stench was terrible; doors and windows were thrown open. No more bodies could fit." In the city's tenements, corpses were wrapped in sheets and pushed into corners. "The dead lay there for days, while the living lived with them, horrified by them, and, perhaps most horribly, became accustomed to them."

Barry's detailed research places great emphasis and much blame on Army camps, transport trains and ships. The push to train men for The Great War mandated that soldiers live in overcrowded conditions, and Army officials initially made few or no concessions to protect the soldiers' health. In September 1918 as Camp Grant in Illinois exploded with influenza, 3,108 troops boarded a train for Camp Hancock in Georgia: "The men leaving Grant on that train were jammed into the cars with little room to move about, layered and stacked as tightly as if on a submarine ... when the train arrived, over seven hundred men -- nearly one-quarter of all the troops on the train -- were taken directly to the base hospital."

In addition to accounts of the pandemic and its physical and emotional toll on the American people, Barry focuses on the men and women who raced to find the cause of the deadly influenza. He reaches as far back as 1870 to expose the inadequacies and, ultimately, the reformation of the American medical system, devoting the first 90 pages of "The Great Influenza" to investigators he aptly names The Warriors. Among these, Barry singles out medical impresario and physician William Henry Welch, Surgeon General William Gorgas, and scientists Simon Flexner, Paul Lewis, Anna Williams, Oswald Avery, William Park and Rufus Cole. Barry is passionate to a fault in his writing about these clinicians and investigators. Fascinating and notable individuals though they are, I found myself like a child on a long literary road trip, counting paragraphs instead of miles and questioning, "When are we going to get there?"

Even so, the significance of the subject and Barry's fine prose masterfully draw the reader from one section of the book to the next. His extensive research gives the reader access to fascinating personal accounts which read eerily like fiction. Additionally, Barry ends many chapters with succinct sentences that can only be called cliffhangers. They challenge the reader's emotions and make it virtually impossible not to turn the page.

"The Great Influenza" is not so much an easy read as it is an important one. As Barry notes: "The disease has survived in memory more than in any literature. Nearly all those who were adults during the pandemic have died now ... Memory dies with people." If what today's scientists say is true -- that the next influenza pandemic is not a matter of "if" but a matter of "when" -- then this book should be mandatory reading for all the world's leaders.

Cori Yonge is a freelance writer who lives in Fairhope.

http://www.al.com/entertainment/mob...ase/entertainment/1137838837190500.xml&coll=3

:vik:
 

JPD

Inactive
6 more Hospitalized with Suspected Bird Flu

http://www.zaman.com/?bl=hotnews&alt=&trh=20060121&hn=28889

By Cihan News Agency
Published: Saturday, January 21, 2006
zaman.com

Six members of the Ozcan family living in the Dogubayazit district of the far eastern Turkish province of Agri on the Iranian border were transferred on Friday to Igdir State Hospital with suspected bird flu.

Six members of the Ozcan family, related to Fatma Ozcan who died of bird flu last Sunday, applied to hospital complaining of sickness.

Father Mehmet Ozcan said that they had paid a condolence visit to Fatma's family. Two days ago he and his children ate chicken which his wife had killed and put into the deep freezer a month ago.
 

JPD

Inactive
Child Suspected To Have Bird Flu Dies On Way To Erzurum

http://www.anatoliantimes.com/hbr2.asp?id=104365

ERZURUM - Prof. Dr. Akin Aktas, head doctor of the Ataturk University Medical Faculty Aziziye Research Hospital in eastern city of Erzurum, has indicated that a child suspected to have the bird flu disease died on the way to his hospital from Bulanik town of eastern city of Mus today.

S.A. (11) was initially diagnosed as a pneumonia patient and sent to Erzurum`s Karacoban State Hospital but lost her life on the way to the Aziziye Research Hospital.

Aktas remarked that blood samples taken from S.A. were sent to Ankara to determine if she actually died of bird flu.

Meanwhile, Aktas noted that another patient F.T., who tested positive for bird flu, and is being treated at Aziziye Research Hospital is in a stable condition and can eat and drink. ``F.T. is under close observation at the hospital.``

BIRD FLU COORDINATION CENTER: THE CHILD WHO DIED ON THE WAY TO THE HOSPITAL DID NOT HAVE ANY UPPER RESPIRATORY COMPLAINTS ACCORDING TO RELEVANT HOSPITALS AND DID NOT HAVE ANY CONTACT WITH ILL OR CULLED FOWL

ANKARA - Turkish Ministry of Health`s Bird Flu Coordination Center has indicated tonight that ten-year-old Sevgi Acar who died on the way to the hospital did not have any upper respiratory complaints according to relevant hospitals and did not have any contact with ill or culled fowl.

In a written press release, the Bird Flu Coordination Center reminded some of today`s news articles which asserted that Sevgi Acar was taken to the Erzurum Karacoban State Hospital with suspicions of carrying the bird flu virus and died on the way to Ataturk University in eastern city of Erzurum.

``According to family members of Acar and relevant hospitals, Sevgi Acar had no respiratory complaints and did not have any contact with ill or culled fowl. We are approaching this subject with utmost attention and have sent blood samples to the reference laboratory for a result,`` noted the press release of the Bird Flu Coordination Center.


Published: 1/21/2006
 

JPD

Inactive
Russia to allot $40 million to combat bird flu - deputy minister

http://news.monstersandcritics.com/health/article_1078096.php/Russia_to_allot_$40_million_to_combat_bird_flu_-_deputy_minister

Jan 21, 2006, 16:34 GMT

The Russian government is set to allocate more than $40 million to combat bird flu in the former Soviet Union, Deputy Foreign Minister Alexander Yakovenko said Saturday.

'The government is considering a proposal to allocate $41.7 million to modernize epidemiological services and virologic laboratories in Russia and the CIS in 2006-2009,' he said in an interview with the daily Rossiiskaya Gazeta. 'By helping our neighbors, we will help ourselves.'

He said Russia was also planning to contribute $3 million to the World Bank fund set up to help Asia and Africa deal with containing the spread of bird flu.

Yakovenko said African and Asian countries facing high risks of a bird flu epidemic could not tackle the problem alone and needed the help of the international community.

He said Russia should continue to play a serious role in bird flu research and creating vaccines.

According to international organizations, measures against bird flu will require more than $1.2 billion in the next three years.

© 2006 RIAN Novosti
 

JPD

Inactive
Declaration To Fight Bird Flu Issued In Beijing

http://www.turkishpress.com/news.asp?id=104361

Published: 1/21/2006

BEIJING - ``Beijing Declaration`` was issued on Wednesday at the end of the funding conference, co-sponsored by the World Bank, the European Commission and the Chinese government, to combat bird flu.

The declaration noted that parties which attended the conference committed to fight the flu by determining a control strategy and allocating their sources through short, medium and long term measures.

Alarmed by the spread of bird flu beyond Asia, nations pledged 1.9 billion USD to fight the virus and stave off a possible flu pandemic.

The funding conference brought together some 700 delegates from more than 100 countries.
 

JPD

Inactive
Human Bird Flu Cases Present Puzzling Patterns
The World Health Organization has issued a new fact sheet​

http://usinfo.state.gov/xarchives/d...9cmretrop0.7842676&t=livefeeds/wf-latest.html

20 January 2006
Human Bird Flu Cases Present Puzzling Patterns

New U.N. fact sheet details observations, as human cases mount

The World Health Organization (WHO) has issued a new fact sheet on avian influenza, the first since the disease moved out of Asia into Europe.

The document summarizes the course of bird flu in its two-year spread across Eurasia. In regard to the human cases that have appeared in six nations, the fact sheet points out some puzzling unknown factors. Human cases of disease have not appeared in commercial poultry enterprises or culling operations, as might be expected. Instead, the majority of cases have stricken previously healthy children and young adults exposed to small flocks kept in domestic settings.

The document also describes physicians’ observations about the “unusually aggressive clinical course” of the disease in humans.

The fact sheet follows:

(begin fact sheet)

World Health Organization
[Geneva, Switzerland]
Avian influenza (" bird flu") - Fact Sheet
January 2006

THE DISEASE IN BIRDS

Avian influenza is an infectious disease of birds caused by type A strains of the influenza virus. The disease occurs worldwide. While all birds are thought to be susceptible to infection with avian influenza viruses, many wild bird species carry these viruses with no apparent signs of harm.

Other bird species, including domestic poultry, develop disease when infected with avian influenza viruses. In poultry, the viruses cause two distinctly different forms of disease – one common and mild, the other rare and highly lethal. In the mild form, signs of illness may be expressed only as ruffled feathers, reduced egg production, or mild effects on the respiratory system. Outbreaks can be so mild they escape detection unless regular testing for viruses is in place.

In contrast, the second and far less common highly pathogenic form is difficult to miss. First identified in Italy in 1878, highly pathogenic avian influenza is characterized by sudden onset of severe disease, rapid contagion, and a mortality rate that can approach 100% within 48 hours. In this form of the disease, the virus not only affects the respiratory tract, as in the mild form, but also invades multiple organs and tissues. The resulting massive internal haemorrhaging has earned it the lay name of “chicken Ebola”.

All 16 HA (haemagluttinin) and 9 NA (neuraminidase) subtypes of influenza viruses are known to infect wild waterfowl, thus providing an extensive reservoir of influenza viruses perpetually circulating in bird populations. In wild birds, routine testing will nearly always find some influenza viruses. The vast majority of these viruses cause no harm.

To date, all outbreaks of the highly pathogenic form of avian influenza have been caused by viruses of the H5 and H7 subtypes. Highly pathogenic viruses possess a tell-tale genetic “trade mark” or signature – a distinctive set of basic amino acids in the cleavage site of the HA – that distinguishes them from all other avian influenza viruses and is associated with their exceptional virulence.

Not all virus strains of the H5 and H7 subtypes are highly pathogenic, but most are thought to have the potential to become so. Recent research has shown that H5 and H7 viruses of low pathogenicity can, after circulation for sometimes short periods in a poultry population, mutate into highly pathogenic viruses. Considerable circumstantial evidence has long suggested that wild waterfowl introduce avian influenza viruses, in their low pathogenic form, to poultry flocks, but do not carry or directly spread highly pathogenic viruses. This role may, however, have changed very recently: at least some species of migratory waterfowl are now thought to be carrying the H5N1 virus in its highly pathogenic form and introducing it to new geographical areas located along their flight routes.

Apart from being highly contagious among poultry, avian influenza viruses are readily transmitted from farm to farm by the movement of live birds, people (especially when shoes and other clothing are contaminated), and contaminated vehicles, equipment, feed, and cages. Highly pathogenic viruses can survive for long periods in the environment, especially when temperatures are low. For example, the highly pathogenic H5N1 virus can survive in bird faeces for at least 35 days at low temperature (4° C). At a much higher temperature (37° C), H5N1 viruses have been shown to survive, in faecal samples, for six days.

For highly pathogenic disease, the most important control measures are rapid culling of all infected or exposed birds, proper disposal of carcasses, the quarantining and rigorous disinfection of farms, and the implementation of strict sanitary, or “biosecurity”, measures. Restrictions on the movement of live poultry, both within and between countries, are another important control measure. The logistics of recommended control measures are most straightforward when applied to large commercial farms, where birds are housed indoors, usually under strictly controlled sanitary conditions, in large numbers. Control is far more difficult under poultry production systems in which most birds are raised in small backyard flocks scattered throughout rural or periurban areas.

When culling – the first line of defence for containing outbreaks – fails or proves impracticable, vaccination of poultry in a high-risk area can be used as a supplementary emergency measure, provided quality-assured vaccines are used and OIE recommendations are strictly followed. The use of poor quality vaccines or vaccines that poorly match the circulating virus strain may accelerate mutation of the virus. Poor quality animal vaccines may also pose a risk for human health, as they may allow infected birds to shed virus while still appearing to be disease-free.

Apart from being difficult to control, outbreaks in backyard flocks are associated with a heightened risk of human exposure and infection. These birds usually roam freely as they scavenge for food and often mingle with wild birds or share water sources with them. Such situations create abundant opportunities for human exposure to the virus, especially when birds enter households or are brought into households during adverse weather, or when they share areas where children play or sleep. Poverty exacerbates the problem: in situations where a prime source of food and income cannot be wasted, households frequently consume poultry when deaths or signs of illness appear in flocks. This practice carries a high risk of exposure to the virus during slaughtering, defeathering, butchering, and preparation of poultry meat for cooking, but has proved difficult to change. Moreover, as deaths of birds in backyard flocks are common, especially under adverse weather conditions, owners may not interpret deaths or signs of illness in a flock as a signal of avian influenza and a reason to alert the authorities. This tendency may help explain why outbreaks in some rural areas have smouldered undetected for months. The frequent absence of compensation to farmers for destroyed birds further works against the spontaneous reporting of outbreaks and may encourage owners to hide their birds during culling operations.

THE ROLE OF MIGRATORY BIRDS

During 2005, an additional and significant source of international spread of the virus in birds became apparent for the first time, but remains poorly understood. Scientists are increasingly convinced that at least some migratory waterfowl are now carrying the H5N1 virus in its highly pathogenic form, sometimes over long distances, and introducing the virus to poultry flocks in areas that lie along their migratory routes. Should this new role of migratory birds be scientifically confirmed, it will mark a change in a long-standing stable relationship between the H5N1 virus and its natural wild-bird reservoir.

Evidence supporting this altered role began to emerge in mid-2005 and has since been strengthened. The die-off of more than 6000 migratory birds, infected with the highly pathogenic H5N1 virus, that began at the Qinghai Lake nature reserve in central China in late April 2005, was highly unusual and probably unprecedented. Prior to that event, wild bird deaths from highly pathogenic avian influenza viruses were rare, usually occurring as isolated cases found within the flight distance of a poultry outbreak. Scientific studies comparing viruses from different outbreaks in birds have found that viruses from the most recently affected countries, all of which lie along migratory routes, are almost identical to viruses recovered from dead migratory birds at Qinghai Lake. Viruses from Turkey’s first two human cases, which were fatal, were also virtually identical to viruses from Qinghai Lake.

COUNTRIES AFFECTED BY OUTBREAKS IN BIRDS

The outbreaks of highly pathogenic avian influenza that began in south-east Asia in mid-2003 and have now spread to a few parts of Europe, are the largest and most severe on record. To date, nine Asian countries have reported outbreaks (listed in order of reporting): the Republic of Korea, Viet Nam, Japan, Thailand, Cambodia, the Lao People’s Democratic Republic, Indonesia, China, and Malaysia. Of these, Japan, the Republic of Korea, and Malaysia have controlled their outbreaks and are now considered free of the disease. Elsewhere in Asia, the virus has become endemic in several of the initially affected countries.

In late July 2005, the virus spread geographically beyond its original focus in Asia to affect poultry and wild birds in the Russian Federation and adjacent parts of Kazakhstan. Almost simultaneously, Mongolia reported detection of the highly pathogenic virus in wild birds. In October 2005, the virus was reported in Turkey, Romania, and Croatia. In early December 2005, Ukraine reported its first outbreak in domestic birds. Most of these newer outbreaks were detected and reported quickly. Further spread of the virus along the migratory routes of wild waterfowl is, however, anticipated. Moreover, bird migration is a recurring event. Countries that lie along the flight pathways of birds migrating from central Asia may face a persistent risk of introduction or re-introduction of the virus to domestic poultry flocks.

Prior to the present situation, outbreaks of highly pathogenic avian influenza in poultry were considered rare. Excluding the current outbreaks caused by the H5N1 virus, only 24 outbreaks of highly pathogenic avian influenza have been recorded worldwide since 1959. Of these, 14 occurred in the past decade. The majority have shown limited geographical spread, a few remained confined to a single farm or flock, and only one spread internationally. All of the larger outbreaks were costly for the agricultural sector and difficult to control.

THE DISEASE IN HUMANS

History and epidemiology. Influenza viruses are normally highly species-specific, meaning that viruses that infect an individual species (humans, certain species of birds, pigs, horses, and seals) stay “true” to that species, and only rarely spill over to cause infection in other species. Since 1959, instances of human infection with an avian influenza virus have occurred on only 10 occasions. Of the hundreds of strains of avian influenza A viruses, only four are known to have caused human infections: H5N1, H7N3, H7N7, and H9N2. In general, human infection with these viruses has resulted in mild symptoms and very little severe illness, with one notable exception: the highly pathogenic H5N1 virus.

Of all influenza viruses that circulate in birds, the H5N1 virus is of greatest present concern for human health for two main reasons. First, the H5N1 virus has caused by far the greatest number of human cases of very severe disease and the greatest number of deaths. It has crossed the species barrier to infect humans on at least three occasions in recent years: in Hong Kong in 1997 (18 cases with six deaths), in Hong Kong in 2003 (two cases with one death) and in the current outbreaks that began in December 2003 and were first recognized in January 2004.

A second implication for human health, of far greater concern, is the risk that the H5N1 virus – if given enough opportunities – will develop the characteristics it needs to start another influenza pandemic. The virus has met all prerequisites for the start of a pandemic save one: an ability to spread efficiently and sustainably among humans. While H5N1 is presently the virus of greatest concern, the possibility that other avian influenza viruses, known to infect humans, might cause a pandemic cannot be ruled out.

During the first documented outbreak of human infections with H5N1, which occurred in Hong Kong in 1997, the 18 human cases coincided with an outbreak of highly pathogenic avian influenza, caused by a virtually identical virus, in poultry farms and live markets. Extensive studies of the human cases determined that direct contact with diseased poultry was the source of infection. Studies carried out in family members and social contacts of patients, health workers engaged in their care, and poultry cullers found very limited, if any, evidence of spread of the virus from one person to another. Human infections ceased following the rapid destruction – within three days – of Hong Kong’s entire poultry population, estimated at around 1.5 million birds. Some experts believe that that drastic action may have averted a pandemic.

All evidence to date indicates that close contact with dead or sick birds is the principal source of human infection with the H5N1 virus. Especially risky behaviours identified include the slaughtering, defeathering, butchering and preparation for consumption of infected birds. In a few cases, exposure to chicken faeces when children played in an area frequented by free-ranging poultry is thought to have been the source of infection. Swimming in water bodies where the carcasses of dead infected birds have been discarded or which may have been contaminated by faeces from infected ducks or other birds might be another source of exposure. In some cases, investigations have been unable to identify a plausible exposure source, suggesting that some as yet unknown environmental factor, involving contamination with the virus, may be implicated in a small number of cases. Some explanations that have been put forward include a possible role of peri-domestic birds, such as pigeons, or the use of untreated bird faeces as fertilizer.

At present, H5N1 avian influenza remains largely a disease of birds. The species barrier is significant: the virus does not easily cross from birds to infect humans. Despite the infection of tens of millions of poultry over large geographical areas for more than two years, fewer than 200 human cases have been laboratory confirmed. For unknown reasons, most cases have occurred in rural and periurban households where small flocks of poultry are kept. Again for unknown reasons, very few cases have been detected in presumed high-risk groups, such as commercial poultry workers, workers at live poultry markets, cullers, veterinarians, and health staff caring for patients without adequate protective equipment. Also lacking is an explanation for the puzzling concentration of cases in previously healthy children and young adults. Research is urgently needed to better define the exposure circumstances, behaviours, and possible genetic or immunological factors that might enhance the likelihood of human infection.

Assessment of possible cases. Investigations of all the most recently confirmed human cases, in China, Indonesia, and Turkey, have identified direct contact with infected birds as the most likely source of exposure. When assessing possible cases, the level of clinical suspicion should be heightened for persons showing influenza-like illness, especially with fever and symptoms in the lower respiratory tract, who have a history of close contact with birds in an area where confirmed outbreaks of highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza are occurring. Exposure to an environment that may have been contaminated by faeces from infected birds is a second, though less common, source of human infection. To date, not all human cases have arisen from exposure to dead or visibly ill domestic birds. Research published in 2005 has shown that domestic ducks can excrete large quantities of highly pathogenic virus without showing signs of illness. A history of poultry consumption in an affected country is not a risk factor, provided the food was thoroughly cooked and the person was not involved in food preparation. As no efficient human-to-human transmission of the virus is known to be occurring anywhere, simply travelling to a country with ongoing outbreaks in poultry or sporadic human cases does not place a traveller at enhanced risk of infection, provided the person did not visit live or “wet” poultry markets, farms, or other environments where exposure to diseased birds may have occurred.

Clinical features (1) In many patients, the disease caused by the H5N1 virus follows an unusually aggressive clinical course, with rapid deterioration and high fatality. Like most emerging disease, H5N1 influenza in humans is poorly understood. Clinical data from cases in 1997 and the current outbreak are beginning to provide a picture of the clinical features of disease, but much remains to be learned. Moreover, the current picture could change given the propensity of this virus to mutate rapidly and unpredictably.

The incubation period for H5N1 avian influenza may be longer than that for normal seasonal influenza, which is around 2 to 3 days. Current data for H5N1 infection indicate an incubation period ranging from 2 to 8 days and possibly as long as 17 days. However, the possibility of multiple exposure to the virus makes it difficult to define the incubation period precisely. WHO currently recommends that an incubation period of 7 days be used for field investigations and the monitoring of patient contacts.

Initial symptoms include a high fever, usually with a temperature higher than 38oC, and influenza-like symptoms. Diarrhoea, vomiting, abdominal pain, chest pain, and bleeding from the nose and gums have also been reported as early symptoms in some patients.

Watery diarrhoea without blood appears to be more common in H5N1 avian influenza than in normal seasonal influenza. The spectrum of clinical symptoms may, however, be broader, and not all confirmed patients have presented with respiratory symptoms. In two patients from southern Viet Nam, the clinical diagnosis was acute encephalitis; neither patient had respiratory symptoms at presentation. In another case, from Thailand, the patient presented with fever and diarrhoea, but no respiratory symptoms. All three patients had a recent history of direct exposure to infected poultry.

One feature seen in many patients is the development of manifestations in the lower respiratory tract early in the illness. Many patients have symptoms in the lower respiratory tract when they first seek treatment. On present evidence, difficulty in breathing develops around 5 days following the first symptoms. Respiratory distress, a hoarse voice, and a crackling sound when inhaling are commonly seen. Sputum production is variable and sometimes bloody. Most recently, blood-tinted respiratory secretions have been observed in Turkey. Almost all patients develop pneumonia. During the Hong Kong outbreak, all severely ill patients had primary viral pneumonia, which did not respond to antibiotics. Limited data on patients in the current outbreak indicate the presence of a primary viral pneumonia in H5N1, usually without microbiological evidence of bacterial supra-infection at presentation. Turkish clinicians have also reported pneumonia as a consistent feature in severe cases; as elsewhere, these patients did not respond to treatment with antibiotics.

In patients infected with the H5N1 virus, clinical deterioration is rapid. In Thailand, the time between onset of illness to the development of acute respiratory distress was around 6 days, with a range of 4 to 13 days. In severe cases in Turkey, clinicians have observed respiratory failure 3 to 5 days after symptom onset. Another common feature is multiorgan dysfunction, notably involving the kidney and heart. Common laboratory abnormalities include lymphopenia, leukopenia, elevated aminotransferases, and mild-to-moderate thrombocytopenia with some instances of disseminated intravascular coagulation.

Limited evidence suggests that some antiviral drugs, notably oseltamivir (commercially known as Tamiflu), can reduce the duration of viral replication and improve prospects of survival, provided they are administered within 48 hours following symptom onset. However, prior to the outbreak in Turkey, most patients have been detected and treated late in the course of illness. For this reason, clinical data on the effectiveness of oseltamivir are limited. Moreover, oseltamivir and other antiviral drugs were developed for the treatment and prophylaxis of seasonal influenza, which is a less severe disease associated with less prolonged viral replication. Recommendations on the optimum dose and duration of treatment for H5N1 avian influenza, also in children, need to undergo urgent review, and this is being undertaken by WHO.

In suspected cases, oseltamivir should be prescribed as soon as possible (ideally, within 48 hours following symptom onset) to maximize its therapeutic benefits. However, given the significant mortality currently associated with H5N1 infection and evidence of prolonged viral replication in this disease, administration of the drug should also be considered in patients presenting later in the course of illness.

Currently recommended doses of oseltamivir for the treatment of influenza are contained in the product information at the manufacturer’s web site. The recommended dose of oseltamivir for the treatment of influenza, in adults and adolescents 13 years of age and older, is 150 mg per day, given as 75 mg twice a day for 5 days. Oseltamivir is not indicated for the treatment of children younger than 1 year of age.

As the duration of viral replication may be prolonged in cases of H5N1 infection, clinicians should consider increasing the duration of treatment to 7 to 10 days in patients who are not showing a clinical response. In cases of severe infection with the H5N1 virus, clinicians may need to consider increasing the recommended daily dose or the duration of treatment, keeping in mind that doses above 300 mg per day are associated with increased side effects. For all treated patients, consideration should be given to taking serial clinical samples for later assay to monitor changes in viral load, to assess drug susceptibility, and to assess drug levels. These samples should be taken only in the presence of appropriate measures for infection control.

In severely ill H5N1 patients or in H5N1 patients with severe gastrointestinal symptoms, drug absorption may be impaired. This possibility should be considered when managing these patients.

COUNTRIES WITH HUMAN CASES IN THE CURRENT OUTBREAK

To date, human cases have been reported in six countries, most of which are in Asia: Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Thailand, Turkey, and Viet Nam. The first patients in the current outbreak, which were reported from Viet Nam, developed symptoms in December 2003 but were not confirmed as H5N1 infection until 11 January 2004. Thailand reported its first cases on 23 January 2004. The first case in Cambodia was reported on 2 February 2005. The next country to report cases was Indonesia, which confirmed its first infection on 21 July. China’s first two cases were reported on 16 November 2005. Confirmation of the first cases in Turkey came on 5 January 2006. All human cases have coincided with outbreaks of highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza in poultry. To date, Viet Nam has been the most severely affected country, with more than 90 cases.

Altogether, more than half of the laboratory-confirmed cases have been fatal. H5N1 avian influenza in humans is still a rare disease, but a severe one that must be closely watched and studied, particularly because of the potential this virus to evolve in ways that could start a pandemic.

(1) This section has been reviewed by a virtual network of clinicians experienced in the treatment of H5N1 infections and other severe respiratory diseases. The network was convened for the first time on 16 January 2006. Physicians from Yüzüncü Yil University, Faculty of Medicine, Van, Turkey participated in the exchange of information and experiences. Other institutions represented include the University of Hong Kong (China); the Hospital for Tropical Diseases, Ho Chi Minh City (Viet Nam); and the University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia (USA).

(end fact sheet)

(Distributed by the Bureau of International Information Programs, U.S. Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)
 

RAT

Inactive
Kocyigit and Ozman H5N1 Victims Are Cousins

Recombinomics Commentary
January 20, 2006

The first deaths were three children from the Koçyiğit family, aged 11, 14 and 15, hailing from the impoverished eastern town of Dogubayazit. They were followed on Monday by Fatma Özcan, their 16-year-old cousin.

There are currently four children diagnosed as H5N1 carriers in Van hospital.

One is Fatma's five-year-old brother Muhammed; the others are his cousins, 11-year-old Ayşegül and three-year-old Yusuf;

The above comments indicate that not only are the two sets of Ozcan cousins, but so are the children in the Kocyigit family. Media reports also indicate that that the families were together at the end of December, just before the children began developing symptoms.

The number of patients involved was remarkable. The first four patients admitted to van were the Kocyigit siblings. All four had similar symptoms, except the three oldest siblings were unconscious upon arrival in Van. All four initially tested negative, but the three oldest died and tested positive for H5N1.

The siblings were described in WHO updates, However, the updates did not disclose disease onset dates or the fact that 9 cousins and an aunt had been admitted to the same hospital with symptoms and two of the cousins Asyegul Ozman and Yusuf Ozman tested positive for H5N1. Thus, out the first 20 patients admitted to Van, 14 were related.

They were followed by two more cousins Fatma and Yusuf. Like her cousins, Fatma initially tested negative, died, and then tested positive for H5N1. Yusuf also tested positive. The WHO report of these two cousins also failed to not that three family members had died and two more were H5N1 positive.

Thus, there were 16 relatives admitted. 4 died and were H5N1 positive, 3 are still hospitalized and are H5N1 positive, and 9 were hospitalized and released. None of the nine released are confirmed H5N1 cases, although some or all had bird flu symptoms when hospitalized.

The failure to include the relationships in the WHO updates was not an oversight. WHO officials had issued statement early in the outbreak indicating two large families had symptoms and were being investigated, However, when the relatives died or were confirmed to be H5N1 positive WHO did not include information about the H5N1 confirmed or suspected relatives.

This deliberate obfuscation of relevant information is cause for concern. The 9 discharged patients have not been retested to show that they indeed were H5N1 positive. Moreover, WHO uses false negatives to exclude patients in clusters that demonstrate human-to-human transmission. The data manipulation is now extending into the new guidelines which stretch out incubation to further obscure obvious human-to-human transmission. The early dismissal of the fatality in Iraq with clear bird flu symptoms suggest the credibility of WHO has reached a new low.

The scandalous behavior creates a lack of transparancy and gives license to countries hiding bird and human H5N1 outbreaks.
 

RAT

Inactive
First H5N1 Case In Iraq Confirmed by Clinical Presentation

Recombinomics Commentary
January 20, 2006

According to doctors in Sulaimaniyah, the symptoms were exactly like those seen in victims in neighbouring Turkey, where 22 people this month have been confirmed as having the virus.

"She was a perfect victim of bird flu," noted Dr Sardar Abbas, a clinician at the hospital. "We just need the final results of her samples to confirm it."

The above comments indicate the first report cases of H5N1 in Iraq has been identified. Unfortunately. lab confirmation of cases has been poor since H5N1 was first identified in humans in Vietnam in early 2004. The poor testing is easily seen in clusters, because the negatives are clearly false. This is most obvious in initial cases in a country, because countries are reluctant to confirm H5N1 initial cases.

The exclusion of clear H5N1 from WHO's confirmed list has been firmly in place since early 2004 and has been applied to all countries reporting H5N1. An early cluster in Vietnam involved a groom and his two sisters who cared fro him. The index developed a fatal H5N1 infection but was never tested. His sisters developed symptoms on the same, were admitted to the hospital the same, initially tested inclusive, subsequently tested H5N1 positive and died within 1 hour of each other. Since the index was not tested and the two family members initially were inconclusive, positive results may not have been recorded had not the cases formed a cluster.

In Thailand a similar situation developed with a girl staying with her aunt. The index case developed symptoms after burying her pet bird. The index case was diagnosis as dengue fever because she was bleeding from the gums. Her mother, who worked hundreds of miles away in a Bangkok office visited her daughter in the hospital. Because of the Dengue misdiagnosis, the mother was allowed to hold her daughter. After her daughter dies, the mother developed symptoms and died in Bangkok, she also was not tested. However, a nurse notified investigators who found the mother just prior to cremation. They collect tissue, which was positive. The aunt also developed symptoms. After initially testing negative the aunt testes positive and survived.

In Cambodia the first reported case died after collecting dead chickens in the village. After he died his sister developed symptoms. After seeing a local doctor she was rushed to Ho Chi Minh City, where she died. However, she tested positive for H5N1, so she was considered the first H5N1 patient in Cambodia, although her brother died first.

The pattern was repeated in Indonesia. The index case was not tested initially. Her sister also became infected as did her father. However, only the father is confirmed as positive. The index case had high titer antibody in two samples, but they were collected three days apart and the high titer did not go up fold fold over the first collection.

In China the initial case was also a cluster. The oldest child developed symptoms and died. The younger sibling eventually tested positive.

In Turkey the first four siblings all tested negative initially. The three fatal cases tested positive, but the youngest family member was discharge and is still negative, although he has symptoms.

Thus, the large number of false negatives makes the clinical diagnosis in Iraq more credible than lab tests with a history of false negatives.

WHO's position of using the false negatives to exclude H5N1 infected patients has limited the number of cases and clusters, but the clinical picture leaves little doubt that the H5N1 case in Iraq is infected and represents the first reported case in Iraq.

However, the explosion of H5N1 bird and human cases in Turkey leaves little doubt that addition H5N1 infections exist in countries neighboring Turkey, such as Iraq.
 

RAT

Inactive
Five Brothers With H5N1 Bird Flu Symptoms in Dogubeyazit

Recombinomics Commentary
January 21, 2006

In Dogubeyazit where 4 children died, 5 people from the same family were taken to Dogubeyazit State Hospital upon suspicion of avian influenza. According to information received, brothers called Deniz (14), Erol (12), Gülsen (10), Nazli (7) ,Erkan Ulutas (6), suffering from lassitude for 4 days and complaining for blood flow from mouth in Ortulu Village were taken to emergency service in Dogubeyazit State Hospital.

The above description of 5 brothers from Dogubeyazit with bird flu symptoms including blood flow from the mouth sounds virtually identical to the four Kocyigit siblings rushed to Van three weeks ago. The Kocygit siblings and two sets of Ozcan cousins had previously been together at the Kocyigit residence in Dogubeyazit and eventually four family members died, 3 more were H5N1 confirmed, and 9 more were hospitalized and some of all of the hospitalized relatives had symptoms.

These large clusters show that H5N1 is more efficiently transmitting from birds to humans and additional transmission are seen human-to-human within families. This large cluster indicates that although a large number of residents from Digubeyzit have been admitted to the hospital or were examined, new large cluster are still happening.

Details of the larger cluster are still lacking and many family members have not tested positive for H5N1. It is not clear if this is yet another cluster with the above five brothers as the first five cases.

Hopefully information on these patients and their relationship to other Dogubeyazit residents will be more forthcoming.
 

RAT

Inactive
Six More Ozcan Family Members With H5N1 Bird Flu Symptoms

Recombinomics Commentary
January 21, 2006

Six members of the Ozcan family living in the Dogubayazit district of the far eastern Turkish province of Agri on the Iranian border were transferred on Friday to Igdir State Hospital with suspected bird flu.

Six members of the Ozcan family, related to Fatma Ozcan who died of bird flu last Sunday, applied to hospital complaining of sickness.

Father Mehmet Ozcan said that they had paid a condolence visit to Fatma's family. Two days ago he and his children ate chicken which his wife had killed and put into the deep freezer a month ago.

The above comments raise more questions concerning extended human-to-human transmission chains within the Ozman/Kocyigit family. There have already been 4 H5N1 confirmed fatalities and 3 more H5N1 positive family members in the hospital, but 9 additional family members have been hospitalized and released and it remains unclear if the six new patients are among those released or are additional family members.

Answers to these questions are not in the WHO updates on H5N1 positive patients in Turkey because although the 7 H5N1 family members are described, WHO failed to give any relationship information for those hospitalized patients who were or were not lab confirmed.

It is unclear if the admission of these family members to Igdir State Hospital indicates they live in a separate village, or merely reflects that fact that the other hospitals in Dogubeyitz or Van are already full.

The WHO updates also failed to give disease onset dates. Dates in various media reports strongly supported extensive human-to-human transmission through several transmission chains over an extended time period.
 

pandora

Membership Revoked
From what I'm reading, it appears we are starting to see more cases where the victims are not known to have been in contact with birds, that points to H2H. These are clusters as well. One article even stated that the virus is transferring H2H more easily. This thing is picking up the pace definitely, not good news.
 
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