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CIDRAP AVIAN FLU SCAN: H5N1 cases in Egypt; H7N9 in China; More H5N8 in Oregon, California; H5N1 in tigers

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  • CIDRAP AVIAN FLU SCAN: H5N1 cases in Egypt; H7N9 in China; More H5N8 in Oregon, California; H5N1 in tigers

    Source: http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/news-persp...an-feb-16-2015


    Avian Flu Scan for Feb 16, 2015
    H5N1 cases in Egypt; H7N9 in China; More H5N8 in Oregon, California; H5N1 in tigers
    Filed Under:
    Avian Influenza (Bird Flu); H7N9 Avian Influenza
    H5N1 infects 6 more in Egypt, one fatally

    The H5N1 avian flu virus has sickened six people in Egypt over the past 4 days, one fatally, according to official sources.
    Few details are available about the patients, who are from five different locations in Egypt, according to government and media sources that health department announcements and were translated by FluTrackers, an infectious disease news message board.
    The patients include a poultry seller from Al Sharqia governorate who is hospitalized in stable condition, a 28-year-old man from Dakahlia governorate who is hospitalized, a 2-year-old child from Asyut governorate who is hospitalized, and two people who are hospitalized in Cairo?a 32-year-old man and a 4-year-old girl.
    The patient who died is a 22-year-old woman from Faiyum governorate, according to FluTrackers.
    Egypt has had a gush of H5N1 cases this winter, and it's unclear how many cases and deaths have been recorded. The health ministry's statements have been irregular and difficult to reconcile with media reports and periodic updates from the World Health Organization (WHO). A running list kept by FluTrackers, which bases its total on official sources, notes that the new cases lift the country's total so far this year to 59 cases, which include 18 deaths.
    Feb 13 FluTrackers thread on Al Sharqia case
    Feb 15 FluTrackers thread on four health ministry?reported cases
    Feb 16 FluTrackers thread on Asyut case

    H7N9 hospitalizes another in China

    Health officials in southern China's Guangdong province have reported another H7N9 infection, which struck a 45-year-old man from Meizhou, according to a Feb 14 statement from Hong Kong's Centre for Health Protection (CHP), which cites the provincial health department.
    The man is hospitalized in critical condition.
    Though several Chinese provinces have reported H7N9 cases this winter, Guangdong has been especially hard hit. The province has reported 50 cases so far from 15 of its 21 prefecture-level cities, Xinhua, China's state newspaper, reported on Feb 14. It said 12 deaths have been reported and that thousands of chickens have been culled and live-poultry trade has been curbed in several cities.
    Guangdong province's new case edges the global H7N9 total to 593 infections, according to a case list maintained by FluTrackers.
    Feb 14 CHP statement
    Feb 14 Xinhua story
    FluTrackers H7N9 case list


    H5N8 strikes backyard flock in Oregon, commercial farm in California

    Highly pathogenic H5N8 avian influenza has struck another backyard flock in Oregon and another commercial farm in California, continuing the outbreaks in those states and elsewhere that have resulted from incursion of the highly pathogenic virus into migratory birds in the Pacific Flyway that began last year.
    The Oregon flock, comprising about 90 domestic birds including chickens, ducks, and turkeys, is near Tumalo, in Deschutes County. The property they inhabit adjoins ponds where migratory birds congregate, according to a Feb 14 Oregon Department of Agriculture (ODA) news release.
    The property has been secured and a quarantine zone set up. Backyard bird owners are being encouraged by the ODA to try to prevent their birds from contact with wild birds, to monitor their birds closely, and to report any sick or dead birds.
    In addition, the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife has asked people to report any observance of dead wild birds. The agencies state that the outbreaks pose no threat to public health.
    Feb 14 ODA news release
    Meanwhile, the World Organization for Animal Health (OIE) has posted notification of another outbreak of H5N8 on a commercial chicken and duck farm in Kings County, California, in the same general region where a similar outbreak occurred in January.
    The number of susceptible birds on the farm is listed as 114,000. No specific number of cases or deaths is given "because of missing information," but the flock experienced an increase in chicken mortality and the situation is being monitored, the report said.
    The OIE notice says the US Department of Agriculture's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) and California agencies are continuing a "comprehensive epidemiological investigation and enhanced surveillance (including wild bird surveillance of hunter harvested birds)."
    Introduction of H5N8 into the Pacific Flyway in 2014 has resulted in new combinations, with avian flu viruses of European and North American origin, including H5N2, explains the notice.
    Feb 13 OIE report
    Jan 26 CIDRAP News story on earlier outbreak


    H5N1 virus strikes tigers in Chinese zoo

    The highly pathogenic H5N1 avian flu virus recently infected eight tigers at a zoo in southern China, killing two of them, according to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).
    The zoo is in Nanning in the autonomous region of Guangxzi, which borders Vietnam, says a Feb 12 FAO notice. The illness in the tigers was first noted on Feb 5, and the virus was identified on Feb 12.
    Yesterday's China's agriculture ministry indicated that no sick poultry had been found in the Nanning area, according to a machine translation of a statement posted today by the blog Avian Flu Diary.
    H5N1 has been found in tigers, leopards, and domestic cats a number of times before. For example, several tigers and leopards at a zoo in Thailand died of the infection in 2003 and 2004.
    Feb 12 FAO notice
    Feb 16 Avian Flu Diary post
    Feb 28, 2006, WHO statement on H5N1 in cats




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