Check out the FAQ,Terms of Service & Disclaimers by clicking the
link. Please register
to be able to post. By viewing this site you are agreeing to our Terms of Service and Acknowledge our Disclaimers.
FluTrackers.com Inc. does not provide medical advice. Information on this web site is collected from various internet resources, and the FluTrackers board of directors makes no warranty to the safety, efficacy, correctness or completeness of the information posted on this site by any author or poster.
The information collated here is for instructional and/or discussion purposes only and is NOT intended to diagnose or treat any disease, illness, or other medical condition. Every individual reader or poster should seek advice from their personal physician/healthcare practitioner before considering or using any interventions that are discussed on this website.
By continuing to access this website you agree to consult your personal physican before using any interventions posted on this website, and you agree to hold harmless FluTrackers.com Inc., the board of directors, the members, and all authors and posters for any effects from use of any medication, supplement, vitamin or other substance, device, intervention, etc. mentioned in posts on this website, or other internet venues referenced in posts on this website.
We are not asking for any donations. Do not donate to any entity who says they are raising funds for us.
gsgs has sent me this link. There is far more information in this video than I can translate. This video is 7.5 minutes long, in Spanish, and includes interviews with the husband of the woman who died in Oaxaca on 4/13, as well as the doctors who treated her, and local health authorities.
My Spanish translation skills cannot keep up with this video. If someone whose skills exceed mine would watch this video and post some of the important points, it would be helpful.
Re: More information on the origins of this (Oaxaca)
There are confirmed cases in Mexico dating back to March 11, if not earlier. The Oaxaca woman likely acquired the virus from a mild human case. This woman in Oaxaca is still at least several generations removed from the index case.
I would appreciate a translation on that video, though.
Re: More information on the origins of this (Oaxaca)
seems that the early cases are from an outbreak in LaGloria.
But I think LaGloria was not the origin, the sequences
show some mutations already.
The fewest mutations are seen in InDre4487, which
I assume is from Adela Maria Gutierrez.
The virus may have survived in the environment
and she may have got it from pork or such.
seems that the early cases are from an outbreak in LaGloria.
But I think LaGloria was not the origin, the sequences
show some mutations already.
The fewest mutations are seen in InDre4487, which
I assume is from Adela Maria Gutierrez.
The virus may have survived in the environment
and she may have got it from pork or such.
Re: More information on the origins of this (Oaxaca)
14. April
it was reported that they sent it to Canada.
Only two sequences marked "InDRE" at genbank,
the other is 4114, no date,gender,age given.
I had sent email to InDRE, no reply.
Edgar from LaGloria is presumably 4108,4m,02.April, 6 mutations,
including the two from
the Northern strain, so not the anchestor of Cancunflu(NY/3215).
(which I think was in Mexico City (4482,4604,) which in turn goes back to
the preserved Oaxaca-strain (4487,4115))
Re: More information on the origins of this (Oaxaca)
Are you sure about that? This woman died in the morning of 4/13. If the sample was taken 4/14, it is unlikely to be hers. What age and gender is given?
Re: More information on the origins of this (Oaxaca)
not sure, no age and gender given.
Samples were taken after her death.
-----------------------------
pieces of liver, lung and traveled to Mexico City, a part of it remained in the Institute of Epidemiological Diagnosis and Reference, the rest went to Canada
The official confirmation by the Ministry of Health was given to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention United States, located in Atlanta, confirmed the case on April 16.
The doctors took samples of their bronchial secresiones, blood and faeces for shipment to laboratories
not sure, no age and gender given.
Samples were taken after her death.
It's possible, but I can't imagine she was any kind of "Patient Zero" - she just happened to get discovered first.
When they were suspecting a novel coronavirus, they were checking out possible animal exposures, and didn't find any. I'm fairly certain she caught it from a human mild case.
Exactly. I also believe that InDre never found novel H1N1 in Gutierrez, it was the NML and CDC that did. Oaxaca has confirmed dozens of cases with onset dates in April - that sample is someone else's.
Re: More information on the origins of this (Oaxaca)
> Leon, who caters food to Oaxaca hotels
> Salcedo guessed that no one else in the Gutierrez and Hernandez families got sick
> because their immune systems were simply strong enough to withstand the swine flu virus.
> But Mexico's Health Secretary Jose Cordova said Thursday that this remains a mystery.
Re: More information on the origins of this (Oaxaca)
Couldn't samples have been taken on the 14th from: pieces of liver, lung and traveled to Mexico City, a part of it remained in the Institute of Epidemiological Diagnosis and Reference, the rest went to Canada
The salvage of human life ought to be placed above barter and exchange ~ Louis Harris, 1918
Exactly. I also believe that InDre never found novel H1N1 in Gutierrez, it was the NML and CDC that did. Oaxaca has confirmed dozens of cases with onset dates in April - that sample is someone else's.
From Gs's MSNBC April 30 link:
In the end, only 18 people — all hospital workers — were tested for swine flu after Gutierrez's sample came back positive around April 20,... Of the 18 saliva samples taken from medical staff, 12 did not have enough cells to be tested. The other six came back negative for swine flu, Coronado said. (So there were no positives?)
Coronado said only 18 of all the (472) people interviewed were tested for swine flu because the others didn't show signs of the disease (no comment on the results of these tests)
Health officials say Ooxaca's 11 current cases of suspected swine flu are unrelated to the tax workers,
The salvage of human life ought to be placed above barter and exchange ~ Louis Harris, 1918
Comment