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  • READ FIRST - Become an Instant Expert in Bird Flu

    Very good resume... all the blue text link to others articles...



    http://www.newscientist.com/article/...-bird-flu.html

    Instant Expert: Bird Flu
    • 11:31 04 September 2006
    • NewScientist.com news service
    • Debora Mackenzie
    Bird Flu - Learn more about the flu pandemic that could kill millions in our continually updated special report.

    The H5N1 strain of influenza - often referred to as bird flu - is first known to have jumped from chickens to humans
    in 1997. Since 2004 it has ripped through poultry and wild bird populations across Eurasia, and had a 53% mortality rate in the first 147 people it is known to have infected. Health authorities fear this strain, or its descendent, could cause a lethal new flu pandemic in people with the potential to kill billions.

    Flu has been a regular scourge of humanity for thousands of years. Flu viruses each possess a mere 10 genes encoded in RNA. All of the 16 known genetic subgroups originate in water birds, and especially in ducks. The virus is well adapted to their immune systems, and does not usually make them sick. This leaves the animals free to move around and spread the virus - just what it needs to persist.

    But sometimes a bird flu virus jumps to an animal whose immune system it is not adapted to. In chickens - originally a forest bird and not a natural host - it causes a moderate disease but can readily mutate to a more severe, highly pathogenic strain. Just such a strain of H5N1 flu, named after its surface proteins, began rampaging through large chicken farms in east Asia sometime before 2003.

    That was of concern because, in 1997, scientists found for the first time that H5 flu could infect humans. It was found in 18 people, six of whom died. All the poultry in Hong Kong were destroyed to stop the threat. But it continued to circulate, especially in China.

    There were further human cases in China in 2003. Then in early 2004 Vietnam reported widespread poultry outbreaks and some human cases. After initial denials, Cambodia and Thailand admitted they had outbreaks too, followed by Indonesia, then China. That was immediately after China had denied a New Scientist report that scientists strongly suspected Chinese outbreaks.

    The infection also reached Japan, Malaysia and South Korea, but mass culling stopped it spreading there. But outbreaks continued in China, Indonesia and Vietnam, where the virus persisted, most probably in ducks. In 2005, China and Indonesia reported their first human cases.

    European invasion

    In summer 2005 the virus swept across birds in Russia and Kazakhstan, reaching the Ukraine by January 2006. However, there were no reported human c ases outside East Asia until December 2005. Then, the virus suddenly appeared in poultry all over Turkey accompanied by the fastest upsurge in human cases yet seen.

    But scientists insisted that the virus’s arrival in Europe did not pose a greater threat of a pandemic than its continued spread in Asia.

    Attempts to blame the rapid spread of the virus in the Far East on wild birds were discounted early on, so efforts to explain its spread across Eurasia in that way were greeted with suspicion. But in May 2005, thousands of geese died of H5N1 at Qinghai Lake in north-central China. The virus was very similar to isolated samples from southeast China, showing, despite official denials, that it originated there. But it had distinctive differences. This same strain then turned up in H5N1 isolates from poultry and wild birds across Russia, Turkey and Romania, suggesting that this time it probably was being carried by wild birds.

    Meanwhile east Asian H5N1 turned up in imported Taiwanese birds in quarantine in Britain. This, combined with a near-miss with infected eagles smuggled into Belgium, led to a European clamp-down on wild bird imports.

    The virulent strain could to revert to a relatively harmless wild type in wild birds. However, while it is there, it could be carried to poultry far and wide. It has now reached Africa - where it is feared it could run riot. Wild birds are also implicated in its spread across Europe.

    Yet governments resisted repeated UN calls for money to eradicate the poultry infection in poor countries. The World Bank renewed calls for such aid in early 2006, while all afflicted countries struggled to stamp the infection out in poultry, with or without vaccinating animals. The renewed call led to pledges of $1.4 billion - although whether the money will be forthcoming is still unknown.

    Making the jump

    All this has focused attention on ordinary flu. The three flu families that have jumped to humans in the past mostly cause mild disease. This is because we encounter them, and develop some immunity, at an early age - and also because they have adapted to our immune systems. But it is not totally benign. About 700,000 people die of it each year, mainly the very old, the very young and the infirm.

    Flu vaccines for common strains are increasing in popularity, although flu evolves so fast that we need new shots every year. In 2004 an unexpected shortage of vaccine in the US underscored the fragility of the vaccine supply, which is produced by very few manufacturers.

    But flu is at its most deadly when it first jumps to people, having had no opportunity to adapt itself to our immune s ystems. H5N1 has continued to infect humans as the outbreak in poultry has raged, with an apparently high fatality rate. It has so far been hard to contract, and has not spread readily between people. If this viral strain should acquire that a bility, it could become a lethal pandemic.

    Deadly pandemic

    That is what happened in 1918, when a virulent flu strain appeared in humans and killed at least 50 million people within a few months.

    Scientists have managed to reconstruct that virus, showing that it was a bird flu that learned to spread in humans. Ominously, H5N1 is acquiring some of the same adaptations. Some feel that reconstructing the 1918 virus put us at as much risk as H5N1, because of the potential for escape from the lab.

    There have been two other pandemics in the past century. The "Asian" flu of 1957 caused between one million and four million deaths, while 1968's "Hong Kong" flu - with about half the estimated deadliness of the Asian flu - caused one million to two million deaths. Both of these were human flu viruses which had recombined with b ird flu viruses, rendering them unrecognisable to the human immune system. The 1957 strain was nearly released by accident in 2005.

    Virologists generally agree that we are due for another pandemic. So they are very worried about H5N1, because - like the 1918 virus - it seems to be evolving to become more deadly to mammals. This is largely in China and, possibly, as New Scientist revealed, in vaccinated chickens.

    Various countries have now hatched detailed pandemic plans and started stockpiling flu drugs.

    Mitigation measures

    Fortunately we can make vaccines for the H5N1 strain, although our ability to g et them tested and manufactured in time for a pandemic is in doubt. Once an effective vaccine is produced, yet a nother hurdle would be administering it swiftly.

    The only hope of making a vaccine fast enough, once a pandemic starts, is with low doses of the virus - as the world has limited capacity for growing vaccine virus. But the first tests of a vaccine against H5N1 showed, as New Scientist predicted, that very high doses were needed for vaccine formulated in the same way as ordinary flu vaccines. More disappointingly, later tests showed even vaccines using an immune-stimulating adjuvant require high doses to work. Various trials of vaccines are underway around the world, but they were slow to get started.

    The only backup in the absence of vaccines is antiviral drugs. A few new ones are on the horizon, and there are signs that other classes of drugs, used now for blood pressure and cholesterol, may have surprising abilities to stave off serious complications of flu.

    But existing antiviral drugs are in short supply. In a successful test of world trade regulations governing patented drugs, several generics manufacturers are now making Tamiflu, the main antiviral, although it is n ot clear whether H5N1 resistance to the drug will be a problem or not.

    In June 2005, New Scientist reported that the H5N1 in East Asia was already resistant to the other major class of antivirals, the adamantanes, because Chinese farmers had fed them to poultry.

    The H5N1 virus must change genetically to become pandemic, and it may become less deadly in the process. However, there is no reason to think this will necessarily happen, and a highly contagious virus with a 50% death rate is a terrifying prospect, particularly given the speed of modern international travel. There is also a c hance that it could evolve into a completely new disease, which we could fail to spot before it spreads.

    Epidemiologists say that if we spot the first small cluster of cases that heralds a pandemic fast enough, we might be a ble to nip it in the bud by giving everyone in the region antivirals. But there is some question about whether we can move fast enough, and also whether surveillance in east Asia - still home to the majority of human cases - is likely to catch the first cluster in time.

    Even if H5 does not trigger the next pandemic, its cousins H7 and H9 could. H7 is present in the same region, and also infected large numbers of Dutch people in an outbreak in 2003. Although it caused few symptoms, and only one death, fears remain that such a poultry virus could cross-breed with a human flu, making it even more dangerous.
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    Last edited by AlaskaDenise; February 24, 2007, 04:38 PM. Reason: reformatted for readability

  • #2
    Re: Become a Instant Expert in Bird Flu

    Timeline: Bird Flu
    • 12:05 04 September 2006
    • NewScientist.com news service
    • Debora Mackenzie
    Bird Flu - Learn more about the flu pandemic that could kill millions in our continually updated special report.
    1996

    Highly pathogenic H5N1 virus is isolated from a goose in Guangdong, China
    1997

    Outbreaks of a similar H5N1 virus in Hong Kong poultry. 18 human cases are recorded, the first ever known with any H5 virus and six die. Sometime after this, China starts widespread H5N1 vaccination of intensively-reared poultry
    February 2003

    Hong Kong family gets flu while visiting Fujian, China, and three die. H5N1 virus descended from the goose in Guangdong is isolated from two of the victims
    December 2003

    South Korea reports a poultry outbreak of H5N1. Vietnam has three human deaths. Both involve “Z-genotype” H5N1, descended from Guangdong strain
    January 2004

    January, Vietnam, Japan, Thailand, Cambodia and Laos report H5N1 in poultry; Vietnam and Thailand report human cases as well
    February 2004

    China and Indonesia report H5N1 in poultry. Poultry outbreaks are brought under control throughout region over the next two months
    July 2004

    Poultry outbreaks resume in China, Indonesia, Thailand and Vietnam. Chinese scientists report that the Z-genotype H5N1 evolved in poultry in China and is still evolving, becoming more lethal for mammals
    October 2004

    Scientists discover ducks are acting as a silent reservoir for virus, a problem highly prevalent in Vietnam
    December 2004

    Poultry outbreaks continue in Thailand, Vietnam, Indonesia, Cambodia and Laos. By the year end, there have been 49 human cases and 35 deaths
    January 2005

    Close contact between a sick Thai girl and her mother causes the first known human-to-human transmission in January - both die
    February 2005

    First fatal human cases are recorded in Cambodia. The UN agriculture and health agencies plead for money to stamp out virus in poultry
    March 2005

    UK starts stockpiling the antiviral drug Tamiflu
    April 2005

    Thousands of wild water birds die at Qinghai Lake, China. The virus is the Z-genotype combined with 2003 H5N1
    May 2005

    Vietnam starts vaccinating poultry against H5N1
    June 2005

    China declareslegal action against anyone collecting samples of dead birds or reporting outbreaks outside of the country's official channels
    July 2005

    Indonesia reports first human case. Russia has H5N1 outbreaks in poultry and wild birds across Siberia, and the virus is highly similar to the Qinghai strain
    August 2005

    Poultry and wild birds are hit by H5N1 in Kazakhstan. Wild birds at a lake in Mongolia die of a Qinghai-like strain. US officials report that the first trials of H5N1 vaccine show it is not effective except at very high doses
    October 2005

    An H5N1 virus similar to the Qinghai strain hits poultry in Turkey and Romania, and wild birds in Croatia. Taiwan detects H5N1 in smuggled songbirds from China - and Britain finds H5N1 in imported birds held in quarantine. China reports renewed poultry outbreaks in populous eastern provinces. Generic drug makers start making Tamiflu
    November 2005

    US launches $1.7 billion national pandemic plan. China reports first human cases. UN agencies and the World Bank meet to plan a world pandemic strategy and plead again for money to stamp out virus in poultry
    December 2005

    Tests of a lower-dose H5N1 vaccine containing an immune-stimulating additive cause concern after showing it only works at higher doses than expected – meaning the limited supply of vaccine likely to be available could treat fewer people. At the end of 2005, there have been 143 human cases and 76 deaths
    January 2006

    Turks and Iraqi Kurds start dying of H5N1 as poultry outbreaks spread. Donor countries respond to World Bank calls for funds by pledging $1.4 billion
    February 2006

    H5N1 bird flu reaches Africa, confirming the fears of public health experts who worry that human poverty and millions of backyard poultry could combine to produce many human infections and potentially a human pandemic virus. H5N1 is also found in dead wild birds, mainly swans, in Italy, Germany, Greece, Slovenia, Bulgaria, Azerbaijan, Iran and Austria. Europe pulls its poultry indoors to shield them from migrating birds, but UK refuses, citing “no imminent danger”

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Become a Instant Expert in Bird Flu

      FAQ: Bird Flu
      • 11:33 04 September 2006
      • NewScientist.com news service
      • Debora Mackenzie
      Bird Flu - Learn more about the flu pandemic that could kill millions in our continually updated special report.


      1. Common flu isn't such a big deal. Why are we suddenly being warned about a deadly pandemic?
      2. Is common flu only a mild disease because past infections provide some protection?
      3. Could flu be about to jump species between birds and humans again?
      4. Currently H5N1 in humans has mostly been contracted from birds, but could it start to spread from person to person?
      5. Why is the virus spreading now? And why can't we stop H5N1 before it turns into a pandemic strain?
      6. How bad would a human pandemic be?
      7. How could we prepare for a H5N1 pandemic, if it were to happen?
      8. Can we develop a bird flu vaccine?
      9. Are there drugs that will protect us against bird flu?
      ----

      1. Common flu isn't such a big deal. Why are we suddenly being warned about a deadly pandemic?
      They won't like this in Kansas, but it's all down to evolution. Flu is such a successful virus that each year almost everyone on Earth is exposed, and about a third of us get sick.
      It is by no means harmless - it kills between 50 and 200 people per million every year, especially the elderly. Flu can kill in several ways. It can destroy your lungs or damage them so much that bacteria run riot and finish the job. Your immune response to the virus can trigger a crisis such as a heart attack or even spiral out of control and kill you.
      Despite these dangers, most of us fight off a flu virus every year and become immune to that particular strain. But flu keeps coming back. Like all viruses with genes made of RNA, its replication is error-prone, and every infection produces swarms of mutants.
      Once most people have become immune to the surface proteins on a strain, this virus cannot spread further. Then a mutant offspring, one that is different enough to partly evade the immune reaction directed against its parent, takes over and dominates the next year's epidemic.
      And so each year many of us get sick again, but not very sick, because our immunity to past viruses gives us some protection against each new, slightly different virus.
      Every now and then, however, a flu virus appears with surface proteins so different that our immunity to past infections does not help us. This is when a pandemic occurs.
      Back to top…
      ----

      2. Is common flu only a mild disease because past infections provide some protection?
      Right. But there's more to it than that. Some flu viruses are also inherently more deadly than others, for reasons we do not yet understand. Dangerous mutations can appear at any time, which is why some years the flu is much nastier than others.
      Luckily for us, viruses often evolve to become less dangerous as they circulate in one species. A virus that quickly kills every creature it infects tends to be less successful than one that leaves its host not only alive but well enough to walk or fly about and spread the virus to others.
      Descendants of the deadly 1918 flu, caused by an H1N1 virus from birds, circulated until 1957. But they became far less dangerous, partly because people developed immunity, but also because the viruses evolved into a milder form. In 1957 H1N1 was replaced by the H2N2 virus that caused the Asian pandemic that year. This also became milder and circulated until the H3N2 virus that caused the 1968 Hong Kong pandemic took over. The last time you got flu, a mild descendant of the 1968 virus was probably to blame.
      The flu viruses that infect aquatic birds such as ducks and geese are even better adapted to their hosts: they infect the birds' guts without causing any obvious symptoms, and spread by defecation in water.
      The real trouble starts when a flu virus from another species jumps into humans, or when human flu viruses pick up genes from a flu virus that usually infects another species.
      Back to top…
      ----

      3. Could flu be about to jump species between birds and humans again?
      Yes. Most flu viruses circulate among aquatic birds but they occasionally mutate and infect other species. Right now, we're worried because one bird virus, called H5N1, has become able to infect and kill people.
      Two problems occur when a flu virus jumps species, as H5N1 is doing. One, its surface proteins are different from those on human flu virus, so our immunity to past flu will not help us. Two, the tricks that allowed the virus to evade the immune system of its previous host without much fuss can provoke the immune systems of its new host into a fatal overreaction. Such a virus can be deadly until we develop immunity, and it evolves into a milder form.
      Some H5 bird flus have long been able to infect humans exposed to lots of the virus, but these strains do not appear to have been particularly dangerous. In 1992, up to 7 per cent of Chinese poultry workers surveyed had antibodies to viruses with H5. But at some point the far more lethal H5N1 virus evolved.
      The strain of H5N1 circulating now, called the Z genotype, has been traced back to geese in Guangdong, China, in 1996. Since then H5N1 has appeared more and more in a new host, chickens, in which it is changing very rapidly. For reasons we don't understand, this evolution has also steadily made it more deadly to mammals.
      In 1997, H5N1 shocked virologists when it killed 6 out of 18 people infected by poultry in Hong Kong. That outbreak was stopped when all 1.2 million poultry in Hong Kong were slaughtered. But H5N1 continued to circulate in Chinese poultry and by 2003 had spread with the meat and cockfighting businesses across east Asia. In 2004, Vietnam began reporting human cases. Crucially, though, H5N1 is still unable to pass from person to person with the same ease with which it spreads from bird to bird.
      Back to top…
      ----

      4. Currently H5N1 in humans has mostly been contracted from birds, but could it start to spread from person to person?
      That's the big fear. The arrival of H5N1 in European birds sparked a media frenzy last year. But human cases are very rare even in countries with massive poultry outbreaks.
      The main risk to us from this virus is not the odd person catching it directly from birds - it's that the virus could evolve into a form capable of spreading from person to person and thus causing a human pandemic.
      The last steps in its adaptation to humans are most likely to occur in a human. So what matters is how many human infections there are: the more people are infected, the more likely it is that such a mutation will occur. In east Asia, there have been around 130 confirmed cases of H5N1 infecting humans since the start of 2004. In western Europe, outbreaks in poultry are unlikely to get out of hand as they have in Asia, and even if they did fewer people would be exposed to sick birds.
      It could be a different story if H5N1 arrives in Africa, though, where human contact with poultry is if anything closer than in Asia. The scarcity of veterinary services in Africa makes it unlikely that poultry outbreaks will be controlled, plus many people's immune systems are weakened by HIV. It is there, and in impoverished parts of Asia, that H5N1 is most likely to evolve into a pandemic form.
      Back to top…
      ----

      5. Why is the virus spreading now? And why can't we stop H5N1 before it turns into a pandemic strain?
      Because as China and other east Asian countries have grown wealthier, there has been an explosion in meat production, especially of chicken. There are billions of chickens in crowded battery farms on offer to any flu virus capable of infecting them. And the many small farms where geese, ducks and chickens intermingle offer numerous opportunities for flu viruses to jump species.
      Massive slaughtering campaigns have failed to eradicate H5N1 in poultry. This is partly because countries such as Indonesia do not compensate people whose poultry is slaughtered, so outbreaks often aren't reported. The virus can also lurk undetected in ducks, because they show no obvious symptoms.
      China has tried vaccinating birds, but vaccines do not always prevent low-level infections, allowing the virus to spread widely without any obvious mass deaths of birds. The virus's persistence in vaccinated birds can also drive it to evolve into new forms.
      The sheer mass of the virus in Asia has allowed it to push its way into wild bird species. This, along with the trade in birds, has helped it spread as far as Europe and possibly Africa. It is now the biggest outbreak of an animal disease ever recorded.
      Back to top…
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      6. How bad would a human pandemic be?
      Past pandemics have varied in severity. The worst was in 1918, when 98 per cent of all people in the world were exposed, about 28 per cent got sick and 3 per cent of those died. There were more than 40 million deaths, over 1 per cent of everyone alive at the time. Yet the next pandemic, the Asian flu of 1957, killed only 2 million in a more populous world, and the Hong Kong flu of 1968 was only slightly worse than normal flu.
      What made the difference? The 1918 pandemic was caused by an H1N1 bird flu virus becoming able to spread from person to person. By contrast, the two later pandemics arose when a flu virus circulating in humans picked up genes from a bird flu virus.
      Flu viruses contain eight strands of RNA. If a cell is infected by two different strains at the same time, they can swap strands, or re-assort, to form new viruses containing a mixture of genes from the two parents.
      The 1957 and 1968 pandemics were caused by human flu strains picking up one or two surface proteins from bird flu viruses, allowing them to evade the immune system. That made them nastier than usual, but their human-adapted half seems to have taken the edge off.
      So if H5N1 re-assorts with a human virus, it might mean a rerun of 1957, with perhaps a few million dead. If, however, it doesn't re-assort but mutates so it can spread easily among people, as in 1918, the resulting pandemic could be far worse - after all, H5N1 seems to kill a third of the people it infects.
      Before you panic, it is possible that some people infected with H5N1 suffer few or no symptoms, meaning the death rate is far lower than we think (although there is little evidence of this). More probably, mutations that make H5N1 more likely to spread from person to person might also make it less deadly, but there is no guarantee of this. And if we spot an emerging pandemic early enough, we might be able to nip it in the bud by treating all exposed people with antiviral drugs.
      If a pandemic virus does emerge, much will depend on how quickly it evolves and whether it becomes less deadly. In today's crowded global village a lethal virus might not run out of hosts so fast that it must rapidly evolve to become milder.
      Back to top…
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      7. How could we prepare for a H5N1 pandemic, if it were to happen?
      Well, here's some certainty: there will be another flu pandemic. We don't know when it will happen or how severe it will be, but it is usually best to prepare for the worst.
      What will not help is expecting the next pandemic to be like the last ones. Most predictions are simply the toll of one of the past three pandemics, scaled up to the current world population. These numbers are meaningless: the next pandemic will involve a different virus in a very different world from 1918 or 1968.
      Here's another calculation that's just as valid: if H5N1 went pandemic with its current virulence and a third of the world got sick, as in 1918, roughly 10 per cent of all people would die. The truth is, we have no idea what the death rate would be, but that last calculation really worries some scientists.
      Back to top…
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      8. Can we develop a bird flu vaccine?
      The snag is that until the next flu pandemic begins, we won't know exactly what form the virus will take. So we can't produce a perfect vaccine in advance. Yet waiting for the pandemic to begin before starting to make any vaccine at all means the vaccine will arrive too late for most.
      What we could do, though, is vaccinate people against the existing strain of H5N1. As long as the pandemic virus is not too different, this should provide partial immunity; it might not stop you getting sick but it could stop you dying.
      By June 2004, scientists had created a vaccine virus bearing the surface proteins of the H5N1 then in Vietnam. But it must be tested in people to make sure it is safe and elicits a sufficient immune response. Drug companies were given the money to organise trials for an H5N1 vaccine only in mid-2005.
      Then the first trials wasted time testing formulations that require large doses of viral protein. Even if all the world's flu vaccine factories switched to making such vaccines for H5N1, they could make only a few hundred million doses in a year - which won't go far in a world of 6.4 billion people.
      Add an immune stimulant called an adjuvant, and much smaller doses of viral protein may suffice: 10 times as many people could be vaccinated. Tests on these low-dose formulations are now getting under way. Yet even with a low-dose formulation, it will still take months to make enough vaccine for the world after a pandemic starts, by which time the first wave could be over.
      So a pre-pandemic vaccine makes sense. Yet most governments are not enthusiastic about it, and companies, of course, won't make an H5N1 vaccine unless governments pay them to do so. One reason for this lack of enthusiasm is that there's no ironclad guarantee that the next pandemic will even be H5N1. Other bird flu viruses may yet surprise us. As the Dutch discovered during a massive poultry outbreak in 2003, H7 can make people ill, occasionally kill and even spread a little between people. H9 is even better at infecting us: a third of the people in the southern Chinese city of Shantou have antibodies to it.
      And let's say we do carry out widespread pre-pandemic vaccination against H5N1, but there's no pandemic and a few people suffer serious side effects. Flu vaccine is usually pretty safe, but there will always be the odd adverse event. Governments fear there would be hell to pay, and not without reason.
      In 1976, amid fears of an incipient flu pandemic, the US vaccinated thousands against one flu strain. The pandemic never materialised, but there was a flood of lawsuits from people who suffered side effects (due to problems unique to that vaccine). The debacle may even have contributed to Gerald Ford losing the 1976 presidential election. This liability issue could be avoided by stockpiling an H5N1 vaccine now and giving it to people only if a pandemic starts, but there are no plans to do this.
      Another problem with the pre-pandemic vaccine is the limited capacity of the world's flu vaccine factories: to make an H5N1 vaccine now, they would have to stop making normal flu vaccine for months or years.
      Back to top…
      ----

      9. Are there drugs that will protect us against bird flu?
      There are two classes of antivirals for flu: adamantanes, of which two are sold, and neuraminidase inhibitors, of which there are also two. There are more in both classes that are not marketed, as the low demand for flu treatment makes such drugs unprofitable.
      The H5N1 in east Asia is already resistant to adamantanes, apparently because Chinese farmers used these drugs in chicken feed. However, the virus that reached Europe and might reach Africa has swapped some genes with a non-resistant strain and is susceptible to the drugs. So a pandemic strain might be susceptible, too, at least at first.
      The neuraminidase inhibitors, Tamiflu (oseltamivir) and Relenza (zanamivir), are a better bet. Few Asian victims have been saved by Tamiflu, but that may be because treatment started late. With ordinary flu, you have to take it no more than two days after the start of symptoms to make a difference. With H5N1, you may need it even earlier. Experiments in mice also suggest that larger doses than usual will be required. Some Tamiflu-resistant H5N1 has turned up in infected people in Asia, but the mutation that gives the virus resistance also makes it poor at spreading, so resistance should be rare.
      The patent-holder, Swiss company Roche, is scaling up production, and other companies in Vietnam, Taiwan and India will soon start making it as well. But it will still be many years before the world has enough to meet the likely demand in a pandemic.
      Back to top…
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      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Become a Instant Expert in Bird Flu

        Mingus ... THANK YOU, THANK YOU !!!! for posting this wonderful resource!

        It's the best summary and yet comprehensive survey of the bird flu basics that I have seen. I believe your post will reach many of my friends and neighbors that have hitherto ignored the many less succinct articles or reports I have sent them.

        They will be receiving this link shortly, and ...hopefully, prayerfully... this info will reach their heads and jar them into action ... and save more lives.

        We each can only keep trying ... and your post is a great new resource for our efforts. Thank you again, my friend!

        Dawn
        (Sure wish we had a smiley for sending you hugs!!! )

        BTW ... Did you notice that FAQ Question#7 was not actually answered at all???




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