Sample from Turkish patient shows mutated Bird Flu virus
From Wikinews, the free news source you can write!
Monday, January 23, 2006
- 65th human bird flu case reported In Egypt
- Taiwan culls 18000 chickens due to H5N2 virus outbreak
- Bangladesh reports first human case of H5N1 bird flu
- H5N1 Avian Flu virus has mutated, study says
- Wild Canadian Goose tests positive for H5N1 in England
A mutated form of the Avian (Bird Flu) virus has been found in a sample taken from a Turkish patient.
The mutated form is said to make the virus easier to attach itself to humans rather than animals says a report in the Nature journal.
The situation is being monitored by the World Health Organization but says "it is too early to know whether the virus is changing in ways that would signal the start of a human flu pandemic," says Maria Cheng a spokeswoman for the WHO. "It's one isolate from a single virus from Turkey. The sample suggests the virus might be more inclined to bind to human cells rather than animal cells, but there's no evidence that it's becoming more infectious. If we started to see a lot more samples from Turkey with this mutation and saw the virus changing, we'd be more concerned."
However, the Nature report says there is a second mutation that also "signals adaptation to humans."
Cheng also said that "flu viruses mutate all the time. For us to assign public health significance to a genetic change we need to match it to what is happening epidemiologically — how the virus is behaving — and clinically — if it's more or less virulent."
In Turkey the fatality rate from the Bird Flu is 50% where elsewhere in the world reports of infection were only scattered. Entire families have been affected in Turkey and more reports come out almost every day of mild symptoms.
So far, Turkey has suffered four deaths and 21 infections. In addition to those cases the WHO reports 145 cases and 80 deaths in Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Thailand and Vietnam.
"When this outbreak (in Turkey) was first reported, there was a lot of concern it was behaving differently," said Cheng. Subsequent investigation, however, has indicated no major behavioral change.
"The team there told us that after two weeks of investigating, they haven't found substantial differences in the pattern we've seen in Southeast Asia," said Cheng.
The mutations were discovered by scientists in London, England in a lab.
Cheng said this may "signify the virus is trying different things to see if it can more easily infect humans. So far, we haven't seen that the virus has the ability to do this. But it's important that we continue monitoring. We would be concerned if we were seeing successive generations of spread of the virus. We haven't so far. All these people had a very clear history of contact with diseased birds."
Health officials say that so far they do not see any evidence yet that the virus can spread easily in humans.
The Bird Flu virus, strain H5N1, first started to infect humans in 1997 in Hong Kong. In 2003 it re-emerged and it has so far been difficult to control.
Sources
- "Mutations of bird flu virus detected in Turkish sample". Xinhua, January 23, 2006
- Anita Manning "Bird flu virus mutations found in Turkish sample". USA Today, January 22, 2006
- "Confirmed Human Deaths from Bird Flu Worldwide Reach 80". U.S. Department of State, January 19, 2006
| This page is archived, and is no longer publicly editable.
Got a correction? Add the template {{editprotected}} to the talk page along with your corrections, and it will be brought to the attention of the administrators. Please note that due to our archival policy, we will not alter or update the content of articles that are archived, but will only accept requests to make grammatical and formatting corrections. Note that some listed sources or external links may no longer be available online due to age. |
