Guest guest Posted March 23, 2006 Report Share Posted March 23, 2006 99 & cc_year & #160; & #187; & #160; " +cc_months[today.getMonth()]+ " " +today.getDate()+ " & #160; & #187; & #160; " +cc_year); //--> Thursday » March 23 » 2006 Bird flu infection too deep to spread easily, studies say SHARON KIRKEY CanWest News Service Thursday, March 23, 2006 Bird flu might never get the traction it needs to touch off a feared pandemic, suggests a sudden rush of studies that show why the disease doesn't spread easily from human to human. The disease - which scientists have suggested could mutate into a strain that could become highly infectious and capable of killing many millions of people - appears to lodge in an unusual part of the human respiratory tract, a part where we don't normally develop flu infections unless they're serious, two teams of researchers are reporting today. Using human tissue samples, scientists have found that the H5N1 bird flu that has reached three continents prefers to latch onto and invade only cells deep down in the lungs. As a result, it can't be spread by sneezing and coughing, they say. That's unlike human flu, which infects cells in the nose, the sinuses, the throat, trachea and bronchi - the main air passages to the lungs. The finding appears to solve a medical riddle: Why have there been so few confirmed human cases of bird flu, even in countries with massive outbreaks in chicken and ducks? So far, H5N1 bird flu has infected at least 183 people in eight countries, killing 103 of them. The vast majority came from close contact with infected birds. Five young people who died from bird flu in Azerbaijan might have fallen sick after plucking feathers from the carcasses of swans that had been dead, but not buried, for weeks, the World Health Organization says. " Our findings provide a rational explanation for why H5N1 viruses rarely infect and spread from human to human although they can replicate efficiently in the lungs, " University of Wisconsin-Madison researchers report today in the journal Nature. " No one knows whether the virus will evolve into a pandemic strain, but flu viruses constantly change, " Yoshihiro Kawaoka, the group's leader, said in a press release issued with the study. " Certainly multiple mutations need to be accumulated for the H5N1 virus to become a pandemic strain. " He said samples taken from people infected with bird flu can be searched for molecular markers that can warn if the virus is changing into a human strain. A Dutch group is reporting similar findings in a study published online by the journal Science. If H5N1 bird flu is ever to become a human strain capable of unleashing a global pandemic, it would have to acquire the ability to reproduce in the upper respiratory tract, where it could be easily spread via virus-infected droplets that are coughed or sneezed. That might be happening: The H5N1 bird flu that caused an outbreak in humans in Vietnam in 2003 and 2004 was different from the 1997 strain that hit Hong Kong. Some of the 2004 versions had mutations that allowed binding to receptors, or molecules on the surface of cells, higher up in the airways. " Those mutations were also seen in some of the kids who died in Turkey, " said Earl Brown, a University of Ottawa virologist who has been tracking the evolution of H5N1 viruses. Four children died in an outbreak in Turkey in January. Luckily, those viruses were buried with the people they killed. It was already known that bird flu and human flu bind to different receptors on the cells in the body, like a key fitting into a lock. If a virus can't get into a cell, it can't churn out copies and infect other cells. " What's new and what's interesting is that they looked at where those receptors are distributed throughout the respiratory tract, " said Offit, chief of infectious diseases at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and an adviser to the U.S. government on vaccine policy. The Dutch team found H5N1 virus attached abundantly to cells lining the alveoli, the microscopic air sacs deep within the lungs, and the bronchioles, tiny tube-shaped ducts connected to the alveoli. The higher up the respiratory tract, the fewer receptors there were for bird flu. That means " no matter how hard you cough, you're not getting (bird flu) virus that is that far down up into your trachea, " Offit said. skirkey@... © The Gazette (Montreal) 2006 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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