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New norovirus strain responsible for wave of gastrointestinal infections

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  • New norovirus strain responsible for wave of gastrointestinal infections



    Date: Sat 10 Mar 2007
    From: ProMED-mail <promed@promedmail.org>
    Source: Times Argus, Sat 10 Mar 2007 [edited]
    <http://www.timesargus.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070310/NEWS01/703100369/1002/NEWS01>


    New norovirus strain responsible for wave of gastrointestinal infections
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Federal scientists have discovered that a new
    strain of norovirus is responsible for the wave
    of intense gastrointestinal infections that have
    overwhelmed hospitals, nursing homes, and college
    dormitories across New England and the nation
    this winter. The finding provides an important
    clue to the severity and breadth of this season's
    outbreak, which has alarmed disease specialists
    because so many adults and children have become
    so sick. Knowing that few people had previously
    been exposed to the strain, researchers assume
    virtually everyone is vulnerable to the germ,
    which can prove especially dangerous to the frail and elderly.

    The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
    (CDC) expects to officially report its findings
    on the new form of the virus in coming weeks.
    Genetic fingerprinting shows that the virus
    infecting patients is distinct and aggressive:
    When the CDC tested stool specimens from October
    through December [2006], 60 percent of those
    patients were positive for the new form of
    norovirus. "When we get these emergent strains of
    a virus, it's very hard to know where or why they
    sprang up -- they seem to come up like daffodils
    in spring," said Dr. Marc-Alain Widdowson, a top
    norovirus researcher at the CDC in Atlanta....
    .
    Thought has a dual purpose in ethics: to affirm life, and to lead from ethical impulses to a rational course of action - Teaching Reverence for Life -Albert Schweitzer. JT

  • #2
    Re: New norovirus strain responsible for wave of gastrointestinal infections

    Stomach flu outbreak traced to new strain of norovirus


    March 10, 2007

    Boston Globe

    Federal scientists have discovered that a new strain of norovirus is responsible for the wave of intense gastrointestinal infections that have overwhelmed hospitals, nursing homes, and college dormitories across New England and the nation this winter.

    The finding provides an important clue to the severity and breadth of this season's outbreak, which has alarmed disease specialists because so many adults and children have become so sick.

    Knowing that few people had previously been exposed to the strain, researchers assume virtually everyone is vulnerable to the germ, which can prove especially dangerous to the frail and elderly.

    The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention expects to officially report its findings on the new form of the virus in coming weeks.

    Genetic fingerprinting shows that the virus infecting patients is distinct and aggressive: When the CDC tested stool specimens from October through December, 60 percent of those patients were positive for the new form of norovirus.

    "When we get these emergent strains of a virus, it's very hard to know where or why they sprang up - they seem to come up like daffodils in spring," said Dr. Marc-Alain Widdowson, a top norovirus researcher at the CDC in Atlanta.

    Disease trackers first detected evidence in January 2006 that a novel type of norovirus might be circulating, when passengers aboard the Minerva II cruise ship fell ill with a particularly virulent gastrointestinal bug.

    By last fall, researchers' sophisticated genetic testing on stool samples had begun to better distinguish the new strain from previously identified versions.

    The federal researchers have christened the strain GII.4 Minerva.

    Identifying the new strain could prove useful as researchers investigate drugs to treat the viral infection and, potentially, vaccines to prevent contagion, scientists said.

    "There isn't any doubt that the public health-communicable disease community has been abuzz about norovirus over the past six months," said Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease specialist at Vanderbilt University.

    "In some jurisdictions, there have been so many outbreaks they can barely tote them up, let alone investigate them. And it's a much more substantial infection this year, so knowing its identity is important for several reasons."

    The Northeast and California have been particularly hard-hit, Widdowson said.

    Norovirus outbreaks are nothing new aboard cruise ships or in schools. In fact, the virus acquired its name from Norwalk, Ohio, where a virulent virus infected an elementary school in 1968.

    But outbreaks in US hospitals and nursing homes had been uncommon ? until this year.

    In Massachusetts, patients and staff have fallen ill at the VA Boston Healthcare System, McLean Hospital, and, most recently, Hebrew Rehabilitation Center in Roslindale, where 225 residents and 119 staff members became sick over the last two weeks.

    The size of the outbreaks and their severity suggested that an especially nasty bug had arrived.

    In the past, norovirus infections routinely passed after a day and fever was rare. This year, specialists said, some patients were sick for three or four days and developed fevers.

    "We have received more reports involving fever and longer duration of symptoms," said Jan Vinj?, a CDC virus specialist and one of the discoverers of the new strain.

    "I have not had norovirus, but I cannot imagine how you can survive four days of vomiting."

    The discovery of the new strain, though, only partially answers the question of why norovirus has proved so threatening this winter.

    "When you get a new strain sweeping through, there are questions about why is this such a successful strain," said Emory University infectious disease specialist Christine Moe, whose research group spends much of its time studying norovirus. "And it could be due to a number of reasons."

    There could be something about the emergent strain, for example, that makes it hardier, allowing it to survive longer on elevator buttons, telephone receivers, or salad bar counters. The strain may also be more resistant to cleaning agents.
    It may also survive longer in its victims, meaning that even after patients recover, the virus would be present in their stools and they could infect others through poor personal hygiene.

    Specialists also hypothesize that the new strain may have the capacity to attach itself at more points to a human cell, making it more dangerous to more people.
    Determining the reasons for the virulence of the current strain is pivotal, but not easy. Although scientists identified the first strain of norovirus more than three decades ago, they have not succeeded in routinely growing it in laboratories.

    That makes the virus more difficult to study and, by extension, makes development of antiviral drugs and vaccines more daunting.

    "If we had a system that could grow the virus, we would be able to ask a lot of other questions that we might be able to get answers to," said Dr. Robert Atmar, a virus specialist at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston.

    Still, Vinj? said, federal agencies are talking to big pharmaceutical companies as well as smaller boutique firms about exploring pills and shots against norovirus.

    Dr. Anita Barry, Boston's director of communicable disease control, said that it is important to recognize that a new strain of norovirus is making the rounds.

    "We know with norovirus that when you get one strain, it doesn't necessarily offer protection against another strain," Barry said. "'You can get this illness repeatedly, and that's why prevention is really the way that people need to go to prevent this.

    "So, please, make sure you wash your hands," she said.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: New norovirus strain responsible for wave of gastrointestinal infections

      NOW they tell us about it. I posted here about this illness last YEAR, and I watched the Hilton and Olive Garden chains wander around in circles, spreading it in plain sight while public health officials said next to nothing.

      THIS is what we can expect from our public health system, folks. Pronouncements that come late, and STILL do not contain any useful information.

      To wit: Anyone who has recently had norovirus can SPREAD it to others for WEEKS.

      Had CDC announced its alarm last fall, and has it ever stressed that recovered people spread it very easily for weeks, a lot of people wouldn't have caught it, a lot of cooks wouldn't have spread it when they raced back to their minimum wage jobs.

      I suspect this is what triggered that brouhaha at Taco Bell (no, not the rats in NYC!) when they couldn't find the veggies that they were so convinced had been contaminated with e coli. One cook with norovirus, a bunch of barfing patrons, some news reports, other sick people who had eaten recently at Taco Bell and voila, False Alarms.

      We sure are too sophisticated to have a pandemic. Maybe we're just too slick to see one coming.

      Best, DA

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: New norovirus strain responsible for wave of gastrointestinal infections

        .....wouldn't have spread it when they raced back to their minimum wage jobs.
        Good point - as long as employers don't give paid leave when employees have communicable diseases, they will always return to work sooner than advisable for public health issues. If we can compensate poultry farmers for culled chickens, why not compensate folks ill with highly communicable dangerous diseases who need to stay home while contagious?

        .
        "The next major advancement in the health of American people will be determined by what the individual is willing to do for himself"-- John Knowles, Former President of the Rockefeller Foundation

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: New norovirus strain responsible for wave of gastrointestinal infections

          I fear my husband bringing home some kind of nasty bug, like norovirus, because of the new sick leave policy at USAirways. He has over 200 hrs. earned sick leave, but if he takes a sick day, he only get 4 hrs, not 8. He recently had to take 3 days, and his pay was docked 12 hrs. for that week. And this is a policy at a large American company! Should be illegal. The flying public gets exposed to a lot more because of this kind of policy. Makes no sense, - cut everyone's pay so they can barely get by, then make it impossible to use earned sick leave.

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