Tuesday, September 10, 2013
New bird flu 'has unique traits'
The new H7N9 bird flu has killed 44 people
The new flu which has emerged in China has
unique traits, say scientists.
It is able to infect both the nose, giving it the
potential to spread easily, and penetrate deep in the
lungs where it causes pneumonia.
The authors of the American Journal of Pathology say
the twin attack has not been detected in previous
bird flus.
Meanwhile, a separate study has taken the early
steps towards a vaccine for another emerging virus,
Mers-coronavirus.
There have been 135 people infected with avian
influenza A(H7N9) and 44 deaths since the outbreak
started in Spring.
However, restrictions on live poultry markets have
largely curbed the number of infections.
The study, by the Erasmus University Medical Centre
in The Netherlands, looked at what parts of the body
the virus could bind to and infect.
Infections like the common cold spread easily as they
infect the upper respiratory tract, the nose and
throat, so sneezing releases a lot of viruses into the
air.
Other more deadly infections, such as the H5N1 bird
flu, infect the lower respiratory tract deep in the lung
where they can cause deadly pneumonia.
One of the researchers Prof Thijs Kuiken told the BBC
the new bird flu could do both: "This has not been
shown for this virus before.
"The study points to the fact that the virus has the
potential to transmit easily in people and give
pneumonia."
Mers
A separate infection called Mers-coronavirus, which is
centred on Saudi Arabia, has infected 114 people and
killed 54.
Researchers at the University of Madrid have created
a mutated version of the virus, which could be the
first steps towards creating a vaccine.
Their study in the journal, mBio, shows the modified
virus can infect cells but struggles to spread round
the body.
Prof Ian Jones, a virologist at the University of
Reading, said: "These papers address the challenging
question of what we can do about potentially
emerging viruses.
"The Mers results produce a candidate vaccine that,
while not currently required, could be a future
therapy while the H7 influenza paper demonstrates
the ability of the recent China strains to infect man,
essentially a heads up for what to look for when
assessing risk.
"They neatly cover both surveillance and prevention
approaches to being one-step ahead of the virus."
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