Guest guest Posted May 4, 2009 Report Share Posted May 4, 2009 http://www.upi.com/news/issueoftheday/2009/05/04/Swine-flu-HIV-could-devastate-h\ uman-race/UPI-43071241461493/ Swine flu-HIV could devastate human race By MARTIN SIEFFPublished: May 4, 2009 at 2:24 PM WASHINGTON, May 4 (UPI) -- The global swine flu threat is receding, but it could return in a far more deadly form in the fall. The warning was given Monday by Dr. Margaret Chan, head of the 193-nation World Health Organization, in an interview with the Financial Times of London. Chan warned that the swine flu virus known as H1N1 that caused the Mexico City-centered outbreak could return in the fall as a far more dangerous mutation. After last week's warnings, school closings across the United States and the near shuttering of Mexico City, the current outbreak seems to have peaked. The WHO said Monday there were 985 confirmed cases of H1N1 spread over 20 countries. There have been 25 confirmed deaths. As of Monday there were 286 reported cases of swine flu in 36 U.S. states. Both U.S. and Mexican authorities expressed confidence that the spread of the disease was slowing down. The World Health Organization said the higher number of reports of cases from Mexico -- 590 -- comes from testing of previously gathered samples. The four strands of the swine flu virus come from pigs, humans and birds. Experts believe that the virus mutated into its current form in the bodies of pigs. Health authorities are particularly worried that the capability to mutate already exhibited by the virus could eventually let it combine with the human immunodeficiency virus, which causes AIDS. That could cause a lethally dangerous global health problem on a comparable scale to the 1918 Spanish influenza epidemic that eventually infected more than 500 million people -- more than one-quarter of the human race -- and killed 10 percent of them. That death toll of 50 million was more than five times the total fatalities of World War I. The epidemic killed more Americans than died in World War I and World II combined. Canadian health officials said Sunday they have confirmed that the H1N1 swine flu virus had, in at least one case, leaped back into a herd of 200 pigs. That raised the possibility it could mutate again in pigs and move back into the human population. Chan told the Financial Times that, given the potential scale of the possible threat, the World Health Organization did not overreact to the swine flu threat. While the number of new cases hasn't grown as fast as expected, Chan said the disease could return in a few months in a much more lethal strain. She also said she would rather be over-prepared than have to answer questions about why the World Health Organization didn't take sufficient action. The reaction of the U.S. government headed by President Barack Obama and Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano was measured, restrained and less tough than that of the 27-nation European Union or of nations like China in closing cross-border traffic or imposing comprehensive screening. The Chinese government was horrified at the possibility that swine flu could spread among its 1.3 billion people, almost 20 percent of the human race. Its emergency measures, however, have infuriated the Mexican government and led to a major diplomatic row between the two nations. Mexican travelers were quarantined in hotels, and the Mexican ambassador to China was not allowed to meet with one group he tried to visit. The anger of the Mexican government at the Chinese measures, however, has obscured the real possibility that the global impact of swine flu has been limited precisely because of the swift measures that were taken globally to contain it. The global swine flu crisis recalls the so-called millennium bug, which was supposed to crash computers around the world as the machines' internal clocks turned over Jan. 1, 2000. That didn't happen, but some experts said that was because the precautions taken helped prevent the problem. Some said there wasn't a problem to begin with. The whole controversy revolved around a negative proposition that couldn't be proved. Skeptics are already arguing that the global fever over swine flu should fall into the same category. However, human history is filled with little-known but horrifying examples of global pandemics from diseases like Spanish flu, cholera, syphilis or bubonic plague that swept the world, killing hundreds of millions of people, destroying civilizations and reshaping the demographic patterns of the planet. In a modern world of unprecedented population scale and social mobility, Chan's caution therefore appears completely justified. The alternative is to risk a biological disaster that could eventually prove more devastating than a thermonuclear war. © 2009 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 5, 2009 Report Share Posted May 5, 2009 " Of course the question is if the HIV portion would remain active and behave and the pure form does. I know it has combined with tuberculosis, but I don't know if HIV remains fully active or if some of the DNA is simply there. " There could be any one of a number of mutations. I can think of three off the top of my head: 1) Something that is the flu, but which cannot be killed because the flu virus takes on the tenacity of the HIV virus. 2) Something that starts with the flu, but then manifests itself as AIDS years down the road. 3) Something that is HIV, but happens in the same space of time as the flu virus. In other words, someone would get all symptoms of AIDS in an eight day period and die at the end of that time. In this particular case, an " AIDS cocktail " would harly have time to take effect. Administrator Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 5, 2009 Report Share Posted May 5, 2009 said, " If they become commonplace, we will have lost the advantage of most of a century of medical advancement because we will be back to square one against communicable diseases. " From the biomedical standpoint, this has already happened. The research that I work on is back at square one, we are back to the research and development of new antibiotics which are not like any already marketed. said, " If HIV becomes airborne, we've pretty well had it and it will be because of our medical/political intervention. " True, we would be in some deep trouble if most any virus that is spread through bodily fluids were to become airborne. Now, to stay positive, the likelihood of this occurring is slim. Most mutations or genetic rearrangements or genetic exchanges that virus and bacteria go through are lethal to the bacteria or virus. And even the ones that are not, the chances of them happening in a productive manner are not in the bugs favor. This absolutely does not mean that we should slow things down research wise. Especially since now that we got ourselves into the predicament with these drug resistant bacteria, we need to find a way to get out without the annihilation part. says, " We could rediscover penicillin maybe, but it would be useless. " I find this very interesting that you bring that up. From my standpoint in research it would seem as though phasing out current drugs and phasing in new ones and then switching back to drugs such as penicillin seems promising. Most bugs lose their resistance after a small number of generations, so theoretically penicillin could work again but we need to knock it out of the market for a few years first. To do that we need a replacement for the time. All in all, the swine flu as it is right now (again from a medical/biomedical standpoint) is not the problem that is plaguing doctors. What the doctors are worried about is the idea that the next years flu tends to take on the last main virus from the previous season. That means that this autumns flu could bring the swine flu characteristics back only worse (or it might not be as bad). Viruses are very unpredictable and their mutations tend to make them hard to deal with, so I guess while the companies are working on the next batch of vaccines, we hold tight to our optimism. ~HK Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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