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روزبه بشر , r_bashar
روزبه بشر - 16:22 1384/08/5

Avian Flu

? What is avian influenza 
Bird flu is an infection caused by avian (bird) influenza (flu) viruses. These flu viruses occur naturally among birds. Wild birds worldwide carry the viruses in their intestines, but usually do not get sick from them. However, bird flu is very contagious among birds and can make some domesticated birds, including chickens, ducks, and turkeys, very sick and kill them.
Do bird flu viruses infect humans?
Bird flu viruses do not usually infect humans, but several cases of human infection with bird flu viruses have occurred since 1997.
How are bird flu viruses different from human flu viruses?
There are many different subtypes of type A influenza viruses. These subtypes differ because of certain proteins on the surface of the influenza A virus (hemagglutinin [HA] and neuraminidase [NA] proteins). There are 16 different HA subtypes and 9 different NA subtypes of flu A viruses. Many different combinations of HA and NA proteins are possible. Each combination is a different subtype. All known subtypes of flu A viruses can be found in birds. However, when we talk about “bird flu” viruses, we are referring to influenza A subtypes chiefly found in birds. They do not usually infect humans, even though we know they can. When we talk about “human flu viruses” we are referring to those subtypes that occur widely in humans. There are only three known A subtypes of human flu viruses (H1N1, H1N2, and H3N2); it is likely that some genetic parts of current human influenza A viruses came from birds originally. Influenza A viruses are constantly changing, and they might adapt over time to infect and spread among humans.
What are the symptoms of bird flu in humans?
Symptoms of bird flu in humans have ranged from typical flu-like symptoms (fever, cough, sore throat and muscle aches) to eye infections, pneumonia, severe respiratory diseases (such as acute respiratory distress), and other severe and life-threatening complications. The symptoms of bird flu may depend on which virus caused the infection.
How does bird flu spread?
Infected birds shed flu virus in their saliva, nasal secretions, and feces. Susceptible birds become infected when they have contact with contaminated excretions or surfaces that are contaminated with excretions. It is believed that most cases of bird flu infection in humans have resulted from contact with infected poultry or contaminated surfaces. The spread of avian influenza viruses from one ill person to another has been reported very rarely, and transmission has not been observed to continue beyond one person.
How is bird flu in humans treated?
Studies done in laboratories suggest that the prescription medicines approved for human flu viruses should work in preventing bird flu infection in humans. However, flu viruses can become resistant to these drugs, so these medications may not always work. Additional studies are needed to prove the effectiveness of these medicines.
What is the risk to humans from bird flu?
The risk from bird flu is generally low to most people because the viruses occur mainly among birds and do not usually infect humans. However, during an outbreak of bird flu among poultry (domesticated chicken, ducks, turkeys), there is a possible risk to people who have contact with infected birds or surfaces that have been contaminated with excretions from infected birds. The current outbreak of avian influenza A (H5N1) among poultry in Asia and Europe (see below) is an example of a bird flu outbreak that has caused human infections and deaths. In such situations, people should avoid contact with infected birds or contaminated surfaces, and should be careful when handling and cooking poultry. For more information about avian influenza and food safety issues, visit the World Health Organization website. In rare instances, limited human-to-human spread of H5N1 virus has occurred, and transmission has not been observed to continue beyond one person.
What is an avian influenza A (H5N1) virus?
Influenza A (H5N1) virus – also called “H5N1 virus” – is an influenza A virus subtype that occurs mainly in birds. Like all bird flu viruses, H5N1 virus circulates among birds worldwide, is very contagious among birds, and can be deadly.
What is the H5N1 bird flu that has been reported in Asia and Europe?
Outbreaks of influenza H5N1 occurred among poultry in eight countries in Asia (Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Japan, Laos , South Korea , Thailand , and Vietnam) during late 2003 and early 2004. At that time, more than 100 million birds in the affected countries either died from the disease or were killed in order to try to control the outbreak. By March 2004, the outbreak was reported to be under control. Beginning in late June 2004, however, new outbreaks of influenza H5N1 among poultry were reported by several countries in Asia (Cambodia, China [ Tibet ], Indonesia, Kazakhastan, Malaysia, Mongolia, Russia [ Siberia ], Thailand, and Vietnam). It is believed that these outbreaks are ongoing. Most recently, influenza H5N1 has been reported among poultry in Turkey and Romania. Human infections of influenza A (H5N1) have been reported in Cambodia, Indonesia, Thailand, and Vietnam.
What is the risk to humans from the H5N1 virus in Asia and Europe?
The H5N1 virus does not usually infect humans. In 1997. However, the first case of spread from a bird to a human was seen during an outbreak of bird flu in poultry in Hong Kong, Special Administrative Region. The virus caused severe respiratory illness in 18 people, 6 of whom died. Since that time, there have been other cases of H5N1 infection among humans. Recent human cases of H5N1 infection that have occurred in Cambodia, Thailand, and Vietnam have coincided with large H5N1 outbreaks in poultry. The World Health Organization (WHO) also has reported human cases in Indonesia. Most of these cases have occurred from contact with infected poultry or contaminated surfaces; however, it is thought that a few cases of human-to-human spread of H5N1 have occurred.
So far, spread of H5N1 virus from person to person has been rare and has not continued beyond one person. However, because all influenza viruses have the ability to change, scientists are concerned that the H5N1 virus one day could be able to infect humans and spread easily from one person to another. Because these viruses do not commonly infect humans, there is little or no immune protection against them in the human population. If the H5N1 virus were able to infect people and spread easily from person to person, an influenza pandemic (worldwide outbreak of disease) could begin. No one can predict when a pandemic might occur. However, experts from around the world are watching the H5N1 situation in Asia very closely and are preparing for the possibility that the virus may begin to spread more easily and widely from person to person.
How is infection with H5N1 virus in humans treated?
The H5N1 virus currently infecting birds in Asia that has caused human illness and death is resistant to amantadine and rimantadine, two antiviral medications commonly used for influenza. Two other antiviral medications, oseltamavir and zanamavir, would probably work to treat flu caused by the H5N1 virus, but additional studies still need to be done to prove their effectiveness.
Is there a vaccine to protect humans from H5N1 virus?
There currently is no commercially available vaccine to protect humans against the H5N1 virus that is being seen in Asia and Europe . However, vaccine development efforts are taking place. Research studies to test a vaccine to protect humans against H5N1 virus began in April 2005, and a series of clinical trials is underway. For more information about the H5N1 vaccine development process, visit the National Institutes of Health website.
What is the risk to people in the United States from the H5N1 bird flu outbreak in Asia and Europe ?
The current risk to Americans from the H5N1 bird flu outbreak in Asia is low. The strain of H5N1 virus found in Asia and Europe has not been found in the United States . There have been no human cases of H5N1 flu in the United States . It is possible that travelers returning from affected countries in Asia could be infected if they were exposed to the virus. Since February 2004, medical and public health personnel have been watching closely to find any such cases.
What does CDC recommend regarding the H5N1 bird flu outbreak?
In February 2004, CDC provided U.S. health departments with recommendations for enhanced surveillance (“detection”) in the U.S. of avian influenza A (H5N1). Follow-up messages, distributed via the Health Alert Network, were sent to the health departments on August 12, 2004 , and February 4, 2005 ; both alerts reminded health departments about how to detect (domestic surveillance), diagnose, and prevent the spread of avian influenza A (H5N1). The alerts also recommended measures for laboratory testing for H5N1 virus. CDC currently advises that travelers to countries with known outbreaks of influenza A (H5N1) avoid poultry farms, contact with animals in live food markets, and any surfaces that appear to be contaminated with feces from poultry or other animals. CDC does not recommend any travel restrictions to affected countries at this time. For more information, visit Travelers' Health.
What is CDC doing to prepare for a possible H5N1 flu pandemic?
CDC is taking part in a number of pandemic prevention and preparedness activities, including:
• Providing leadership to the National Pandemic Influenza Preparedness and Response Task Force, created in May 2005 by the Secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
• Working with the Association of Public Health Laboratories on training workshops for state laboratories on the use of special laboratory (molecular) techniques to identify H5 viruses.
• Working with the Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists and others to help states with their pandemic planning efforts.
• Working with other agencies such as the Department of Defense and the Veterans Administration on antiviral stockpile issues.
• Working with the World Health Organization (WHO) and Vietnamese Ministry of Health to investigate influenza H5N1 in Vietnam and to provide help in laboratory diagnostics and training to local authorities.
• Performing laboratory testing of H5N1 viruses.
• Starting a $5.5 million initiative to improve influenza surveillance in Asia .
• Holding or taking part in training sessions to improve local capacities to conduct surveillance for possible human cases of H5N1 and to detect influenza A H5 viruses by using laboratory techniques.
• Developing and distributing reagents kits to detect the currently circulating influenza A H5N1 viruses.
Working together with WHO and the National Institutes of Health (NIH) on safety testing of vaccine seed candidates and to develop additional vaccine virus seed candidates for influenza A (H5N1) and other subtypes of influenza A virus.

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روزبه بشر , r_bashar
روزبه بشر - 19:47 1385/05/3
56

BANGKOK, July 24 (Reuters) - A strain of bird flu has been found in chickens in Thailand and it may prove to be the deadly H5N1 virus, senior Agriculture Ministry official Yukol Limlaemthong said on Monday.

"There is a high possibility it is the N1 strain given that the area has had outbreaks before," Yukol told Reuters.

Officials said the H5 virus was detected on a farm in the northern province of Pichit, one of seven "red zone" provinces where surveillance was stepped up this month, and test results were expected in a few days.

If H5N1 is confirmed, it would be Thailand's first confirmed outbreak of the virus in nearly nine months.

Livestock officials culled all chickens in the affected area and restricted poultry movements within a 10 km (six mile) radius for at least 30 days.

The H5N1 virus has killed 14 Thais since it first arrived in the country in late 2003. The last death occurred in December 2005.

An 11-year-old girl was in a Pichit hospital on Monday with flu-like symptoms after chickens died on her family farm, a doctor told Reuters. Test results are due on Tuesday.

"The chickens started to die on July 8 and she helped her mother bury the dead chickens without any protective gear," said Sunee Thirakaroonwongse of the Pichit Provincial Hospital.

Thailand was slow to respond to bird flu when it began ravaging poultry flocks in late 2003, but it now has one of the strongest surveillance systems in the region.

However, recent incidents in which villagers have ignored government warnings and handled dead chickens have raised fears that public vigilance against the disease is waning.

The global human death toll is now at least 132 since the virus re-emerged in east Asia in 2003.

روزبه بشر , r_bashar
روزبه بشر - 19:52 1385/04/24
55
Indonesia bird flu toll hits 41

Indonesia could overtake Vietnam in terms of human bird flu deaths
Indonesian authorities have confirmed that a child who died last week was the country's 41st victim of the deadly H5N1 bird flu virus.
The three-year-old girl died in a Jakarta hospital on 6 July. Officials said an overseas laboratory had confirmed the presence of the virus.

This means the country's human bird flu toll now stands only one behind hardest-hit Vietnam.

Indonesia has been accused of not doing enough to stop the spread of bird flu.

Health Ministry official Nyoman Kandun said the little girl, from Cisauk village near Jakarta, had been in contact with sick chickens belonging to a neighbour.

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Bird flu


Samples sent to the Atlanta-based US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention tested positive for the virus, he said.

There was no information on whether any of the toddler's relatives had been infected, another official said.

Criticised

Indonesian has registered more bird flu deaths this year than any other country. In one case, seven members of the same family died from the virus.

The government has been criticised for not ordering a mass cull of birds in infected areas, but says it does not have enough money to compensate farmers.

On Thursday, a senior official in charge of handling the bird flu outbreak was moved from his post, but an Agriculture Ministry spokesman said his departure was part of a routine rotation of personnel.

Vietnam, where 42 people have died from the virus, has introduced an aggressive culling and vaccination programme. No human victims have been reported in 2006.

Globally, more than 130 people have died of bird flu since late 2003. Most of the deaths have been in East Asia.

The virus has also spread to Europe, Africa and South and Central Asia.

The virus cannot pass easily from one person to another. But experts fear it could mutate and in its new form trigger a flu pandemic, potentially putting millions of human lives at risk
روزبه بشر , r_bashar
روزبه بشر - 19:54 1385/04/24
54
JAKARTA (Reuters) - A three-year-old Indonesian girl who died this month has tested positive for bird flu according to tests by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, a health ministry official said on Friday.
The child's death takes the number of human bird flu deaths in the country to 41.

Lily Sulistyowati, the health ministry's spokeswoman, said the toddler had contact with sick fowl, the usual route of transmission of the H5N1 virus, which is endemic in poultry in almost all of Indonesia's 33 provinces.

"There was one dead chicken in her backyard," she said.

Sulistyowati said there was no information on whether any other members of the toddler's family were also infected.

Indonesia has seen a steady rise in human bird flu infections and deaths since its first known outbreak of H5N1 in poultry in late 2003, and has registered more deaths this year than any other country.

It has the second highest number of human deaths from bird flu after Vietnam.

Indonesia has been criticized for not doing enough to stamp out the H5N1 virus, which still remains essentially an animal disease but experts fear could spark a pandemic if it mutates into a form that can pass easily among people.

The government has so far shied away from mass culling, citing lack of funds and the impracticality of the move in a country with millions of backyard fowl. Vaccination is the preferred method to prevent the spread of bird flu among poultry.

Runizar Ruesin, the head of the health ministry's Bird Flu Information Center, said the ministry planned to launch a pilot project in August for the prevention and control of avian influenza.

The three-year 44.6 billion rupiah ($4.90 million) project will be based in Tangerang municipality, on the western outskirts of Jakarta, because Indonesia's first cases of bird flu both in poultry and humans were detected in the area.

"This project will include handling bird flu cases, applying prevention measures as well as restructuring small and backyard farms," Ruesin told reporters at an international bird flu symposium. He did not give details.
Indonesia drew international attention in May when the virus killed seven members of a single family in North Sumatra. Experts said there could have been limited human-to-human transmission in the cluster case.

On Thursday, leading science journal Nature reported that multiple mutations have been found in the H5N1 virus that killed the family members in Sumatra although scientists are unsure of the significance of the mutations.

روزبه بشر , r_bashar
روزبه بشر - 15:28 1385/04/14
53
Bird flu kills 40th human in Indonesia
By Telly Nathalia

JAKARTA (Reuters) - A World Health Organisation laboratory test has confirmed a 5-year-old Indonesian boy who died last month was infected with bird flu, a health ministry official said on Monday.

His death takes the total number of confirmed bird flu fatalities in the country to 40.

The victim died on June 16 in Tulungagung in East Java province after being admitted to hospital on June 8, I Nyoman Kandun, director general for communicable disease control at the health ministry, told Reuters.

The infection was confirmed to be from the H5N1 avian virus by a WHO laboratory in Hong Kong, he said.

An official at the health ministry's bird flu centre who declined to be identified said: "There was a dead chicken near his house."

The chicken cage was 15 metres (49 ft) from the boy's home, the official added.

Indonesia has seen a steady rise in human bird flu infections and deaths since its first known outbreak of H5N1 in poultry in late 2003, and has registered more deaths this year than any other country.

Indonesia has 220 million people and an estimated 1.2 billion chickens, some 30 percent of them in the yards of homes in both rural and urban areas.

The bird flu virus is endemic in poultry in nearly all of the 33 provinces in Indonesia, a country of 17,000 islands sprawling across some 5,000 km (3,100 miles).

Despite the climbing death toll, the government has resisted mass culling of birds, saying it is too costly and impractical.

Vaccination has been preferred to culling, which has been done only sporadically at selective farms and their immediate surroundings.

Bird flu remains essentially an animal disease but many countries around the world are on alert over fears it may mutate into a disease that could pass easily among people and trigger a pandemic, killing millions.

Indonesia drew international attention in May when the virus killed members of a single family in North Sumatra. Experts said there could have been limited human-to-human transmission in this cluster case.

But they stressed genetic analyses of the virus have not shown all of the traits that are known so far to allow it to spread easily among people.

(c) Reuters 2006. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by caching, framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters and the Reuters sphere logo are registered trademarks and trademarks of the Reuters group of companies around the world.

This article: http://news.scotsman.com/latest.cfm?id=971212006

روزبه بشر , r_bashar
روزبه بشر - 14:53 1385/04/7
52
Bird flu 'to kill 40,000'
David Uren
June 27, 2006
A BIRD flu epidemic would kill 40,000 people in Australia, even if it were only a fraction of the severity of the outbreak that ravaged the world in 1919.
Modelling on the effect of an epidemic of bird flu, conducted by the federal Government's economic adviser ABARE, shows the Australian economy would shrink by 6.8 per cent.

Healthy adults aged 19 to 45 were among the hardest hit by the 1919 flu epidemic, which struck randomly, without regard to geography, climate or economic development.

But the Australian Bureau of Agriculture and Resource Economics says good health infrastructure and services could reduce the death rates.

Australia and other developed countries could lose 0.2 per cent of their total population, while 1.4 per cent of the population of developing countries would die.

ABARE estimates bird flu would kill 280 million people around the world. If the outbreak were as severe as the 1919 epidemic, between 180 million and 360 million would die.

Australia's proximity to Asia means its economy would suffer more severely than that of the US or Europe. ABARE estimates the Chinese economy would contract by 8.7 per cent, while the ASEAN economies would shrink by 7.1 per cent.

Even if Australia were successful in keeping bird flu out of the country, it would suffer a 3per cent fall in its economy as other nations were hit.

روزبه بشر , r_bashar
روزبه بشر - 18:55 1385/03/28
51
16 June 2006

The Ministry of Health in China has confirmed the country’s 19th case of human infection with the H5N1 avian influenza virus.

The patient is a 31-year-old man employed as a truck driver in Shenzhen City, Guangdong Province, near the border with Hong Kong. He developed symptoms on 3 June and was hospitalized on 9 June. He remains hospitalized, in critical condition, with severe pneumonia.

Investigation of his source of infection is under way. Preliminary reports indicate the man visited a local market where live poultry are sold on several occasions prior to symptom onset. However, health authorities have not been able to determine whether he was exposed to infected poultry at that market or elsewhere. H5N1 infections in poultry have not been officially reported in the area.

Of the 19 laboratory-confirmed cases in China reported to date, 12 have been fatal.
روزبه بشر , r_bashar
روزبه بشر - 15:33 1385/03/24
50
Indonesia's Bird Flu Reports Underestimate Disease (Update1)
June 13 (Bloomberg) -- Indonesia's bird flu reports underestimate the extent of the outbreaks in poultry and are hampering efforts to fight the disease in the country that has 1.3 billion chickens, an international veterinary agency said.

The World Organization for Animal Health last learned of an outbreak in Indonesia of the H5N1 avian influenza strain seven weeks ago when the agriculture department reported 789 poultry died or were culled to control its spread. Since then, H5N1 infected at least 17 Indonesians, killing 13 of them, and spread in birds as far east as Papua province.

``It's very important in terms of planning intervention programs'' to have regular, detailed reports, Antonio Petrini, deputy head of information at the Paris-based animal health organization, said yesterday by telephone. ``But it's very difficult to obtain'' in many developing countries.

Delayed or inadequate data on outbreaks makes it difficult for international agencies to anticipate where the virus may emerge next or to know where to send animal health officials. Diseased fowl increase the risk for humans and create more opportunity for the virus to mutate into a pandemic form.

The H5N1 flu virus has infected at least 225 people in 10 countries, killing 128 of them since late 2003, the World Health Organization said June 6. Indonesia has reported one new human case a week on average this year and accounts for 29 percent of the fatalities worldwide and the most this year.

Poor Response

``Indonesia has among the highest highly pathogenic avian influenza risks and lowest capacity to respond,'' the World Bank said in a report released in the capital, Jakarta, yesterday. ``The H5N1 virus is now considered endemic in poultry in most provinces in the country, but surveillance coverage is limited and generally unreliable to detect outbreaks.''

In February and March, 45 chickens and a duck died of H5N1, Mathur Riady, Indonesia's director general of livestock services, said in a report to the World Organization for Animal Health, also known as the OIE. In addition, 743 chickens were destroyed as part of control measures, Riady said.

The report was received by the OIE on April 24 and posted on its Web site. The outbreaks in the provinces of Kepulauan Riau and Irian Jawa Barat are the only ones in 2006 reported by Indonesia to the OIE.

``It's underestimated of course,'' Petrini said. ``I don't know the true number.''

Riady and his predecessor, H.R. Wasito, reported more than 360,000 domestic fowl died or were culled in the country last year.

Romania, Nigeria

In comparison, other countries' reports to the OIE estimate Romania's avian flu toll this year at about 652,000 poultry, Myanmar's at 507,000, India's at 415,000, Nigeria's at 374,000 and Azerbaijan's at 296,000.

Figures for dead and culled birds in Indonesia this year and in 2005 aren't reliable and don't reflect the ability to find the virus, said Peter Roeder, an animal health officer with the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations.

Roeder spent about five of the past eight months in Indonesia setting up FAO's field program for avian flu.

``The virus is widespread and circulating,'' he said yesterday in an interview.

Initial Outbreak

Indonesia's pattern of communicating outbreaks to the OIE is typical of developing countries, where limited veterinary resources often mean reports are submitted weekly only in the first months after an initial outbreak and become progressively less frequent as financial resources dwindle, Petrini said.

``For sure, it's endemic in Indonesia, everybody knows that, but we don't have data week-by-week,'' he said.

The Southeast Asian nation of 238 million people has about 70,000 villages spread across 17,000 islands. Poultry are raised in the backyards of about 80 percent of the country's 55 million households, said John Budd, head of communications with the United Nations Children's Fund in Jakarta.

There is a ``significant financing gap'' as well as a mismatch between the government's national avian flu plan and the allocation of funding, the World Bank said in its report. The 2006 national budget includes 555 billion rupiah ($59 million) for avian flu, of which a third is for animal health and two- thirds for human health, it said.

``Surveillance and control in animals, which should be top priorities, are under-funded,'' the World Bank said.

The FAO wants to add three more people to its five-person team in Indonesia to bolster surveillance and infection control, and to liaise with communities and government officials, Roeder said. The Rome-based agency also wants to build community acceptance of the program and to station animal health professionals at nine disease investigation centers being set up across the country.



To contact the reporters on this story:
Jason Gale in Singapore at j.gale@bloomberg.net;
John Lauerman in Boston at jlauerman@bloomberg.net.
Last Updated: June 13, 2006 01:37 EDT
روزبه بشر , r_bashar
روزبه بشر - 15:25 1385/03/24
49
Ukrainian village put in quarantine over bird flu scare
15:22 | 13/ 06/ 2006




KIEV, June 13 (RIA Novosti) - Quarantine regulations have been imposed on a village in eastern Ukraine in a bid to deter the spread of bird flu, the Ukrainian emergencies ministry said Tuesday.

"The village [of Peski] has been put in quarantine to deter the spread of the dangerous virus," Igor Krol, head of the emergencies ministry's press service, said.

Krol said more than 7,000 domestic fowl would have to be culled, adding that villagers would be compensated for the dead poultry. He said more than 70 ministry experts were currently working in the area, and that work would be completed within the next two days.

"There is no danger to people's health," he said.

The disease, originating in East Asia, has spread worldwide. Scientists fear the highly pathogenic H5N1 virus of bird flu could mutate into a form that passes easily between humans and spark a global pandemic.

Ukraine was previously hit by several bird flu outbreaks in its Crimea region on the Black Sea coast last fall, when more than 150,000 domestic fowl were culled in 40 locations around the peninsula.

روزبه بشر , r_bashar
روزبه بشر - 15:02 1385/03/21
48
Avian influenza – situation in Indonesia – update 18

6 June 2006

The Ministry of Health in Indonesia has confirmed the country’s 49th case of human infection with the H5N1 avian influenza virus.

The case occurred in a 15-year-old boy from Tasikmalaya District, West Java Province. He developed symptoms on 24 May, was hospitalized on 26 May, and died on 30 May.

An investigation conducted by provincial health authorities found a history of contact with sick and dying chickens in the boy’s household in the week before the onset of his symptoms. Monitoring of family members and close contacts has detected no cases of influenza-like illness.

Of the 49 cases confirmed to date in Indonesia, 37 have been fatal.

The H5N1 virus is considered firmly entrenched in poultry throughout much of Indonesia. Unless this situation is urgently and comprehensively addressed, sporadic human cases will continue to occur.

The newly confirmed case is one of several where exposure occurred despite a clear signal of a high-risk situation arising from poultry deaths. Pending better control of the disease in animals, WHO and officials in the Ministry of Health see an urgent need to improve public awareness of this disease, the risk factors for infection, and the behaviours that should be avoided.
روزبه بشر , r_bashar
روزبه بشر - 22:51 1385/03/20
47
Jun 9, 2006 (CIDRAP News) – Australian officials who coordinated an exercise Jun 7 and 8 on pandemic influenza response among Asia-Pacific nations called the drill a success, according to an Agence France-Presse (AFP) story today.

Meanwhile, in Vienna a 2-day international meeting on avian flu that adjourned yesterday called attention to the urgent need for substantial funding and preparedness, especially in Africa, and announced plans for an international meeting in Africa later this year, according to news services.

The pandemic exercise included the 21 countries of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC). It began in New Zealand and ended yesterday with calls to the United States, according to AFP.

The test scenario involved a new avian flu strain—dubbed the "Malacca Straits Flu"—sparking a pandemic in the region after several infected fishermen were rescued by a cruise ship, AFP reported. APEC countries then needed to respond to the mock crisis and communicate with each other.

"The scenario successfully achieved the goal of testing communication responses during the exercise, which lasted 26 hours across eight time zones," Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer and Attorney-General Philip Ruddock said in a statement, according to AFP. They said the exercise "attracted credible responses."

Neil Head, director of development with Emergency Management Australia, which coordinated the exercise, told AFP he found the level of cooperation among countries encouraging.

"The things that make [a pandemic threat] preventable are early detection, close cooperation and information sharing, and the rapid sourcing and the development of appropriate antibodies and medicines," Head told AFP. "The fact that these [countries] seem willing to do all these things, we would have to say, is a very positive outcome."

Detailed results of the drill will be presented at an APEC leaders conference in November, according to the AFP story.

In addition to Australia and New Zealand, APEC countries that played a major role in the drill, according to a Jun 7 Reuters report, were Chile, China, Indonesia, Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, Thailand, and Vietnam.
روزبه بشر , r_bashar
روزبه بشر - 15:00 1385/03/16
46
Focus on the Flu
Research: Prevention/Changing Virus
Foods and the Flu: Another Good Reason to Eat Your Whole Grains
Can what you eat affect a flu virus?

“You bet it can,” says Melinda Beck, Ph.D., professor of pediatrics and nutrition at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. In fact, according to Dr. Beck, it’s more what you don’t eat that counts.

Dr. Beck and her multidisciplinary team of colleagues are currently building upon an earlier discovery that in mice, a diet poor in the nutrient selenium causes mutations to occur in the influenza virus, making it more dangerous. Once the virus has changed, even mice whose diets are selenium-adequate are vulnerable to the more dangerous strain.

“These observations suggest a new area for flu researchers, namely the interaction between host nutrition and viral genetics,” says Dr. Beck.

Selenium is found in plant foods, such as Brazil nuts and whole grain cereals, as well as in some meats and seafood. Its content in foods depends on the amount of selenium in the soil where the plants grow or animals graze. Selenium is incorporated into enzymes that have antioxidant properties. These enzymes are important in protecting cells from damage by free radicals that are produced during infection.

Selenium also has toxic properties if consumed in excess, so the Institute of Medicine has established a Tolerable Upper Limit for adults of 400 micrograms per day.


Transmission electron micrograph of human nasal epithelium infected by influenza virus (dark circular objects). Credit: Dr. Beck

In a new project funded by the NIAID, Dr. Beck is further investigating the relationship between selenium deficiency and mutation of the influenza virus. Working with a team of virologists, immunologists, cell biologists, biochemists, and nutrition experts, she is exploring what happens at the cellular and molecular level when selenium-deficient mice as well as human epithelial cells growing in the laboratory are infected with an influenza virus.

Among other things, the team hopes to learn

how the flu virus evolves in a selenium-deficient host,
how the host’s cells and immune system respond to the mutated virus,
the amount of selenium required to prevent mutations from occurring, and
whether a diet poor in other antioxidant nutrients, such as vitamin C, could also lead to viral mutations.
In a study comparing the effect of a mutated flu virus in mice with or without adequate selenium in their diets, the researchers found that half of the selenium-deficient mice died of infection—often within a few days—while no mice with adequate selenium died. The selenium-deficient mice had large amounts inflammation-promoting chemicals in their lungs, which may account for the extensive lung damage in those animals, notes Dr. Beck. “This finding is particularly interesting,” she adds, “because deaths in humans infected with avian flu may be due to the body’s inability to control inflammation.”

روزبه بشر , r_bashar
روزبه بشر - 20:02 1385/03/13
45
Research: Immune Response
Landmark Immunity Study Could Give Vaccine Research a Shot in the Arm
By its very nature, influenza poses a serious threat to become a pandemic. For this reason, scientists are also concerned that a genetically altered version of the flu virus might be used in a bioterror attack.

To better understand the issue, researchers at Stanford University’s NIAID-funded Cooperative Center for Translational Research on Human Immunology and Biodefense are analyzing the body's immune response to the influenza virus. By focusing on how the body wages war against the flu, the researchers hope to identify new vaccine strategies to better protect against a pandemic strain.

In this study, center director Ann Arvin, M.D., and co-director Harry Greenberg, M.D., are comparing the body's responses to two widely used influenza vaccines: the inactivated flu vaccine, which delivers killed virus through a shot in the arm, and the live attenuated influenza vaccine, which delivers live, weakened virus through a nasal spray.

"Our goal is to conduct a side-by-side comparison of the immune responses induced by these two very different vaccines, both of which work well but in different ways," says Dr. Arvin.

The researchers will examine how the two vaccines influence T-cell and B-cell immune responses, including the production of antibodies, in children as well as in adults. In addition, the research team will observe the activity of natural killer cells, cells that nonspecifically destroy virus-infected cells, to determine if they play a role in the body's early warning system.

Team members believe that observed immune responses will serve as an excellent model for understanding how the immune system fights other respiratory pathogens as well. The new information could be used to develop more rapid-acting vaccines or to develop vaccines targeted to flu proteins less prone to change.

The project is a large multidisciplinary effort of Stanford researchers.

For more information, visit Dr. Ann Arvin’s Web site.

روزبه بشر , r_bashar
روزبه بشر - 19:28 1385/03/6
44

Malaysia to ban entry of poultry from Indonesia
Kuala Lumpur: Malaysian authorities has said all birds and eggs from Indonesia will be seized and destroyed at entry points to keep avian flu at bay after reports of human deaths in Medan.

"There will be no laboratory tests. Any bird and egg found will be immediately destroyed by veterinary officers, even if the birds are pets," said Veterinary Services Department official Mustapa Abdul Jalil.

Under the Animal Act 1953, animals can be destroyed to prevent the spread of diseases, and those responsible for bringing the animals into the country without a valid permit would be liable to two years' jail or a RM 5,000 fine or both.

He said the department had stepped up surveillance at all entry points, especially in Johor, Selangor, Malacca and Perak. Surveillance has also been beefed up at entry points at the border with Thailand.

Mustapa said the department was also getting help from the Customs and Immigration departments. Five veterinary officers were currently in Medan to discuss how Malaysia and Indonesia could cooperate on the matter.

The situation in Medan was said to be serious. A woman, her four children and a nephew had died after allegedly being infected with a virus transmitted by ducks.

Two other villagers were reported to be in critical condition, he said, adding that the matter was of concern to Malaysia as Medan was just 150 km away.

Mustapa said no new cases of H5N1 had been reported for over 80 days at the earlier affected areas in Kuala Lumpur, Perak and Penang. These areas would be declared cleared of the virus in the second week of June.
روزبه بشر , r_bashar
روزبه بشر - 03:19 1385/03/1
43
Focus on the Flu
Research: Flu Primer
What We Know About the Flu Virus
A flu virus is roughly round, but it can also be elongated or irregularly shaped. Inside are eight segments of single-strand RNA containing the genetic instructions for making new copies of the virus. Flu's most striking feature is a layer of spikes projecting from its surface. There are two different types of spikes: one is the protein hemagglutinin (HA), which allows the virus to "stick" to a cell and initiate infection, the other is a protein called neuraminidase (NA), which enables newly formed viruses to exit the host cell.

Virus A, B, C

Influenza A virus. Credit: CDC

Influenza viruses are classified as type A, B, or C based upon their protein composition. Type A viruses are found in many kinds of animals, including ducks, chickens, pigs, whales, and also in humans. The type B virus widely circulates in humans. Type C has been found in humans, pigs, and dogs and causes mild respiratory infections, but does not spark epidemics.

Type A influenza is the most frightening of the three. It is believed responsible for the global outbreaks of 1918, 1957 and 1968. Type A viruses are subdivided into groups based on two surface proteins, HA and NA. Scientists have characterized 16 HA subtypes and 9 NA subtypes.

Naming Viral Strains
Type A subtypes are classified by a naming system that includes the place the strain was first found, a lab identification number, the year of discovery, and, in parentheses, the type of HA and NA it possesses, for example, A/Hong Kong/156/97 (H5N1). If the virus infects non-humans, the host species is included before the geographical site, as in A/Chicken/Hong Kong/G9/97 (H9N2). There are no type B or C subtypes.

Where Influenza Comes From
In nature, the flu virus is found in wild aquatic birds such as ducks and shore birds. It has persisted in these birds for millions of years and does not typically harm them. But the frequently mutating flu viruses can readily jump the species barrier from wild birds to domesticated ducks and then to chickens. From there, the next stop in the infectious chain is often pigs.

Pigs can be infected by both bird (avian) influenza and the form of influenza that infects humans. In a setting such as a farm where chickens, humans and pigs live in close proximity, pigs act as an influenza virus mixing bowl. If a pig is infected with avian and human flu simultaneously, the two types of virus may exchange genes. Such a "reassorted" flu virus can sometimes spread from pigs to people.

Depending on the precise assortment of bird-type flu proteins that make it into the human population, the flu may be more or less severe.

In 1997, for the first time, scientists found that bird influenza skipped the pig step and infected humans directly. Alarmed health officials feared a worldwide epidemic (a pandemic). But, fortunately, the virus could not pass between people and thus did not spark an epidemic. Scientists speculate that chickens may now also have the receptor used by human-type viruses.

Drifting and Shifting
Influenza virus is one of the most changeable of viruses. These genetic changes may be small and continuous or large and abrupt.

Small, continuous changes happen in type A and type B influenza as the virus makes copies of itself. The process is called antigenic drift. The drifting is frequent enough to make the new strain of virus often unrecognizable to the human immune system. For this reason, a new flu vaccine must be produced each year to combat that year's prevalent strains.

Type A influenza also undergoes infrequent and sudden changes, called antigenic shift. Antigenic shift occurs when two different flu strains infect the same cell and exchange genetic material. The novel assortment of HA or NA proteins in a shifted virus creates a new influenza A subtype. Because people have little or no immunity to such a new subtype, their appearance tends to coincide with very severe flu epidemics or pandemics.

روزبه بشر , r_bashar
روزبه بشر - 18:46 1385/02/12
42
La Chine a annoncé, jeudi 27 avril, un dix-huitième cas humain de grippe d'origine aviaire, une fillette habitant dans la province du Sichuan, dans le Sud-Ouest. Résidant dans la ville de Suining, Sun, âgée de 8 ans, a été admise, en proie à de la fièvre, le 16 avril dernier à l'hôpital, a précisé le ministère de la santé chinois sur son site Internet.

Les résultats des tests, parvenus jeudi, ont confirmé qu'il s'agissait du virus H5N1. Aucune information n'a été fournie sur l'état actuel de la fillette. Le ministère de la santé a précisé que les volailles appartenant à la famille de cette enfant étaient mortes, sans préciser toutefois si elles avaient été victimes de la grippe aviaire. Aucun foyer de grippe aviaire n'a été recensé depuis fin février dans les élevages d'oiseaux du pays.
Les autorités ont mis en observation toutes les personnes ayant été en contact étroit avec Sun, a fait savoir le ministère, ajoutant qu'aucun symptôme de cette maladie n'avait été décelé
درتاریخ 27 آوریل چین ابتلای هجدهمین انسان به آنفلوانزای مرغی در این كشور را تایید نمود. بیمار یك دختر بچه 8 ساله از استان سی چوان در جنوب غربی این كشور بود. پس از بستری شدن بیمار در بیمارستان نتیجه آزمایشات ابتلای بیمار به H5N1 را تایید نمود.
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