skylee Posted July 23, 2005 at 03:31 PM Report Posted July 23, 2005 at 03:31 PM For those of you who are very health-concerned -> Deaths of unknown cause reported in Sichuan 護中心跟進四川死因未明病例 《新華網》今天報道,四川省資陽市在6月24日至7月21日期間,陸續發生不明原因疾病死亡病例。四川省資陽市第1、2、3人民醫院陸續收治了20例不明原因疾病,包括19男1女,年齡介乎30 – 70歲。 二十病例九人死亡 病人發病初期,均出現高熱、乏力,伴噁心、嘔吐;9人經搶救無效死亡,1人出院,其餘10人仍在住院治療中。 根據現場流行病學調查,病人發病前均宰殺過患病的豬羊,病人家屬密切接觸者中無人發病,沒有發現傳染現象。初步懷疑與直接接觸病、死豬羊有關,確切的病因還需進一步查明。 防護中心證實,已接獲國家生部通知,四川出現有關的病例;並正與生部保持緊密聯絡,監察情況的發展。 Quote
trevelyan Posted July 23, 2005 at 05:39 PM Report Posted July 23, 2005 at 05:39 PM Thanks for the heads up. Quote
gato Posted July 25, 2005 at 06:44 AM Report Posted July 25, 2005 at 06:44 AM http://nytimes.com/2005/07/25/international/asia/25china.html China Bird-Flu Scare Ends By THE NEW YORK TIMES Published: July 25, 2005 BEIJING, Monday, July 25 - Chinese and international health officials said Monday that they believed that the mysterious deaths of at least 17 farmers in western China were caused by a bacterial infection in pigs and not, as initially feared, by a new outbreak of the deadly avian influenza. The spate of deaths and illnesses began about four weeks ago in southwestern Sichuan Province. The state news media have reported at least 17 deaths; 41 patients have been hospitalized. Many of the dead were farmers who had recently slaughtered sick pigs or sheep, raising concerns about avian influenza, which also can be spread through pigs. But Robert Dietz, a spokesman for the World Health Organization, said doctors in Sichuan had identified streptococcus suis, a bacteria carried by pigs that can spread to humans, as the cause of the illnesses. Quote
skylee Posted August 4, 2005 at 12:01 AM Author Report Posted August 4, 2005 at 12:01 AM And update -> http://www.chp.gov.hk/view_content.asp?lang=en&info_id=3734 The Centre for Health Protection (CHP) of the Department of Health has been updated by the Ministry of Health (MOH) today (August 2) about the latest situation concerning cases of Streptococcus suis infection in Sichuan. According to the MOH, as of noon today, the total number of people affected was 205. Forty-two of the reports were laboratory confirmed cases. Among the patients, 37 died and 18 were discharged. Quote
gato Posted August 5, 2005 at 02:48 PM Report Posted August 5, 2005 at 02:48 PM http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/05/health/05pig.html? U.N. Urges China to Do More Tests on Pig Disease in Humans By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN Published: August 5, 2005 The World Health Organization urged China yesterday to conduct more tests to clarify perplexing aspects of the largest outbreak in humans of a bacterial pig disease, including the reason the death rate among patients has been unusually high. China has reported that the disease, caused by Streptococcus suis bacteria, infected 206 people in Sichuan Province from June 24 through July 21. Of these, 38 - or nearly 1 in 5 - died and 18 are critically ill. Most cases have occurred among adult male farmers who have had close contact with diseased pigs or have eaten uncooked pig products. The bacteria are commonly found where pigs are raised. Animals without symptoms carry the bacteria in their tonsils and noses. Sichuan has one of the largest pig populations in China, and news organizations have reported a concurrent outbreak among pigs there. There was no evidence that China, which came under fire for concealing the outbreak of SARS, sudden acute respiratory syndrome, in 2002 and 2003, was hiding information about the Streptococcus suis outbreak. Health officials say more tests are needed to determine why the Sichuan outbreak is so large and the death rate so high. Among the questions infectious disease specialists have raised is whether Streptococcus suis has mutated to become more virulent. No evidence suggests that the bacteria have become resistant to antibiotics. Scientists say China should search for other factors that might explain the high death rate. Another unusual feature of the outbreak is that many patients have had bleeding under the skin and some have had toxic shock syndrome. Quote
laolee Posted August 5, 2005 at 06:11 PM Report Posted August 5, 2005 at 06:11 PM One radio talk show I listen to, featuring John Loftus, reported that it was a variant / mutation of the Ebola virus. This site also links it with Ebola, though I know nothing about the site and the founder may be a crackpot for all I know: http://www.recombinomics.com/News/07300501/Ebola_Recombinant.html http://www.recombinomics.com/News/07190501/Boxun_Ebola_Strains.html Still, there's mainstream articles like this appearing: (jump to the end, if it's too long) China bug - Is it Ebola-like bird flu? By Andy Ho July 28, 2005 The Straits Times CHINA's official Xinhua news agency confirmed this week earlier wire reports about the mysterious deaths of 27 farmers in several villages around the cities of Ziyang and Neijiang in Sichuan province. Another 41 people in Sichuan have also fallen seriously ill. All victims had been exposed to swine and developed high fever, fatigue, nausea, vomiting, and 'became comatose later with bruises under the skin', according to Xinhua. The provincial health authorities insist that 'the disease is absolutely not Sars, anthrax or bird flu'. Instead, they ascribed the outbreak to a common swine bug called streptococcus suis. Based on information from the Chinese, the World Health Organisation (WHO) agrees that the symptoms 'seem consistent with' the diagnosis. Could the WHO be wrong? Are the provincial authorities prevaricating? But, first, what is this bug and why are these Sichuan cases less likely to be it? According to The Merck Veterinary Manual, this is a bacterium that lives in the noses, throats, guts and genitalia of pigs. Thus, farmers exposed to droplets of swine saliva, as well as slaughterhouse workers, butchers, and cooks who have open wounds who handle pork and pig innards could become infected. Yet, despite its prevalence in pigs - up to 15 per cent of a herd could be carriers - human cases are rare as only one out of a total of 35 serotypes of the bacterium causes serious infections in people. In humans, the bug invades the membranes covering the brain and spinal cord causing meningitis, with severe headaches, high fever, vomiting, confusion, stiff neck, loss of hearing and coma. There can also be bleeding from blood vessels beneath the skin, and the patient can go into toxic shock, with damage to the heart. Sounds like the mysterious illness in Sichuan? Note, however, that most cases have been reported in northern Europe and southern Asia, where intensive swine management practices are used, perhaps at least on the scale seen in the Pulau Bulan farm that supplies Singapore with about 6,500 pigs every week, according to the AVA. That does not sound like rural China. Human cases have been seen in Singapore too, but they are very rare. In fact, until this Chinese claim, less than 150 human cases have been reported worldwide. A total of 68 patients in Sichuan sounds unlikely for various other reasons too. First, the bacterium is easily treated in pigs with penicillin. Though it can survive for long periods, it is also easily destroyed with soaps and dilute disinfectants. Secondly, the high mortality also makes the cause somewhat less likely to be bacterial in origin, as bacterial infections are rarely as lethal. Thirdly, the bug seems to spread between herds not only through the introduction of apparently healthy carrier pigs but also by flies, which can travel up to 2km between farms on their own. If flies got on to vehicles, they could go farther. Carcasses of dead pigs could also transport the bacteria. But up to 75 villages are affected in Sichuan. These are clustered around 40 townships in different counties, which represent large geographical distances. This suggests the possibility of transmission by migratory birds. Quite apart from the fear that pigs, which often carry the human flu virus, could contract bird flu and act as a 'blender' to speed up the process of its mutation, several facts suggest that the mysterious illness sounds a lot like influenza, some scientists believe. Far-fetched? In December 1979, the British Medical Journal published a letter from an army physician that had laid undiscovered in a trunk in Detroit for 60 years. In the 1918 letter, the doctor who was attending to soldiers in Boston during the devastating pandemic that year described in graphic detail how they were dying from the flu: 'Two hours after admission they have the mahogany spots over the cheek bones and a few hours later you can begin to see the cyanosis extending from the ears and spreading all over the face, until it is hard to distinguish the colored man from the white. 'It is only a matter of a few hours then until death comes and it is simply a struggle for air until they suffocate.' (Cyanosis is a bluish or purplish tinge to the skin.) Note that reports described the Sichuan patients as having skin that turned very dark. Some H5N1 bird flu variants can produce bleeding under the skin. The index case in Thailand's human cases of bird flu this year was initially misdiagnosed as dengue hemorrhagic fever because of that bleeding. What about the meningitis seen in Sichuan? The H5N1, in fact, already has genes that can attack the brain. According to recent papers in Virology and The Journal Of Virology separately, this ability is seen in H5N1 samples isolated in 2001 and 2002 from poultry and birds in Hong Kong, and from a bird flu patient who died in the ex-colony in February 2003. Thus, it is very possible for any H5N1 circulating in mainland China to have this (neurotropic) characteristic. Supposing it was bird flu in Sichuan, where could it have come from? Probably from Qinghai province, just north-west of Sichuan. There, a major outbreak of bird flu occurred in April at a nature reserve, where 8,000 birds across five species - and also some mammals - died. Only in May would the Chinese authorities own up to it. Now the weather has turned cold early at Qinghai, so birds there may have already started migrating out. Indeed, in June, China reported two outbreaks in birds at Tacheng city in Xinjiang province, which lies northwest of Qinghai. This week, there were wire reports about outbreaks in the Primorie and Chany Lake reserves in Russia, where more than 500 birds have died. Here is the cause for concern. When it first happened in Qinghai, an Internet daily called Boxun.com reported the outbreak, which the authorities denied. Human cases and fatalities, involving six tourists and 121 locals, were also detailed. Then, 17 of 19 Boxun reporters involved were jailed. In May, China reported to the international authorities that there had indeed been an outbreak among birds in Qinghai but denied any human cases. Yet, it effectively hindered the WHO authorities from investigating the outbreak. Indeed, the 1.3 billion strong nation has never reported any human cases of bird flu that, since 2003, has killed at least 57 people in Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia and, now, Indonesia. The Chinese have also never reported any outbreak in Sichuan - among poultry or people. But outbreaks in Shantou, Hunan and Yunnan were not reported either. However, we know these did occur. A paper published in July in the journal Nature detailed the genomics of H5N1 isolated in samples taken in 2005 from Qinghai and Guangdong as well as Hunan and Yunnan. Dr Guan Yi, a University of Hong Kong scientist, told the media that, soon after the Nature paper was published, the mainland authorities accused him of stealing state secrets. So China considers H5N1 a state secret - the Qinghai isolates have been shown to be very virulent - perhaps because people have already been infected? If so, we have much to fear. The city of Ziyang where patients are dying lies close to Chengdu, the provincial capital which is 250km south-east of Qinghai. Should human cases emerge among Chengdu's 10 million people - it has an international airport - bird flu could spread even faster. China may not be alone in under-reporting H5N1. In India, where pigeons died en masse on one occasion in 2004, the blood of poultry workers collected in 2002 shows antibodies to H5N1. Officially, though, India has no H5N1. This month's first human cases in Indonesia, with two deaths, may be linked to trips made to India and Hong Kong. Alas, this stonewalling can kill as the H5N1 acquires more lethal genes - like Ebola genes. Although it has never been officially seen outside Africa, the intrepid Boxun.com reported last April an Ebola outbreak in Shenzen, next to Hong Kong, which the authorities denied. Now, Boxun sources tell them that the Sichuan outbreak is the rapidly evolving Ebola SZ-77 strain which can infect birds, so it may be tied to bird flu at Qinghai. Incredible? Pittsburgh-based genomics expert Henry Niman told The Straits Times he has noticed a gene in H5N1 'that is an exact match for an Ebola gene. So it is possible that a dual infection in birds or people may be leading to a new H5N1 - or a new Ebola virus.' Yes, a swap between bird flu and ebola viruses can happen. Dr Niman said: 'They just need to be in the same host cell.' Let's hope this has not really happened yet. Otherwise, we could all be in the same boat, a rapidly leaking one at that.. Quote
gato Posted August 5, 2005 at 06:55 PM Report Posted August 5, 2005 at 06:55 PM Boxun.com is an activist website. You have to read its reports with some skepticism. Quote
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