Kamis, 06 Agustus 2015

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Sinaloa, MX

 

#10,388

 

This story has been percolating through the Spanish language press since yesterday afternoon, but thus far Mexico’s Agricultural Ministry (Secretaría de Agricultura, Ganadería, Desarrollo Rural, Pesca y Alimentación; SAGARPA)  and National Health Service, Food Safety and Food Quality (SENASICA ) websites remain silent on the reports.

 

Additionally, a quick check of both the FAO and OIE reporting systems shows no notification as of this writing.

 

While official confirmation is still lacking, the following (translated) report - issued this morning by El Siglo de Torreon - is not only the latest, but one of most detailed account that I’ve run across.

 

They slaughtered 500 thousand chickens by virus

CULIACÁN, Sinaloa.- Over half a million laying hens be sacrificed in southern Sinaloa due to infection of H5N2 avian flu that has spread in the area, announced Juan Guerra Ochoa, Secretary of Agriculture of the State.

The official said the company Sinaloa name El Rosario SPR "Egg Champion" is quarantined due to illness.

"The outbreak was detected on 21 July and 24 July, the company was in quarantine, unable to leave or enter any bird, nor products, be slaughtered 512 000 birds.

He explained that the borders of Sinaloa were closed to the import and export of products to prevent the virus from spreading, but said that there is no risk of being transferred to other farms.

"It is given a final quarantine, that the next step is the slaughter of all animals and not let anything in or out so that it will not spread to other places," he said.

Guerra Ochoa explained that the virus apparently came from the State of Jalisco, while Wednesday held a meeting with the head of Senasica, Enrique Sanchez Cruz, to address the issue.

 

Other media reports overnight include Detect bird flu outbreak in the municipality of Rosario, Sinaloa and 512 000 birds slaughtered bird flu outbreak in Sinaloa farm.  

 

While one might be tempted to assume this is a spillover of HPAI H5N2 from migratory birds, such as we’ve seen recently in the United States and Canada, these reports don’t indicate the pathogenicity (LP or HP) of the virus.

 

As Mexico has a long history of LPAI (low pathogenic) H5N2 outbreaks going back more than 20 years, this may simply be a reoccurrence of their native LPAI H5N2 virus.  We’ll have to await further details to know one way or the other.


So far this year, only two other outbreaks of avian flu have been reported by Mexican authorities to the OIE, and both of those were H7N3 (see OIE Notification On H7N3 In Chiapas Wild Birds).

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There are references in the media reports to this H5N2 virus having been imported from a farm in Jalisco, but the last outbreak reported from that state (2012-2014) was the H7N3 virus.

 

Hopefully we’ll get clarification on this from the OIE, FAO, or SAGARPA soon.



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Rabu, 05 Agustus 2015

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Credit Wikipedia

 

#10,387

 

Although bird flu  has captured most of our attention over the past year, scientists are abundantly aware of the potential for seeing novel swine-origin influenza viruses emerge as well. 

 

Just last week in Live Markets & Novel Flu Risks In The United States, we looked at some of the zoonotic exposure risks and two weeks ago in Novel (H3N2v) Flu Case Reported In Minnesota, we saw the latest reported human infection with a swine-variant virus.

 

Swine are considered excellent `mixing vessels’ for influenza, as they are susceptible to a wide variety (swine, human, avian) of flu strains, they may be co-infected by more than one virus at a time, and they not only have ample contact with other pigs, but with humans as well.

Reassortant pig[6]

Since pigs can be infected by more than one flu virus at the same time, it is possible for two viruses to swap genetic material (reassort), resulting in a new hybrid strain. 

 

The 2009 H1N1 pandemic evolved from numerous reassortments in swine over a period of years, finally jumping species when it had become well enough adapted to human physiology. 

 

Here in North America we’ve been watching the evolution of several swine variant viruses (H1N1v, H1N2v, H3N2v) over the past few years, all of which have reassorted with - and picked up the M gene segment from – the 2009 H1N1 virus (see Keeping Our Eyes On The Prize Pig)

 

All of which serves as prelude to a new study, and an accompanying editorial, published today in the Journal of Infectious Diseases that looks at the ongoing evolution of swine origin influenza viruses and the threats they pose to human health. 

 

First the abstract (slightly reformatted for readability) to the study (a preliminary PDF version of the whole study is available).

 

 

Evolutionary dynamics of influenza A viruses in US exhibition swine

Martha I. Nelson1, David E. Wentworth2,, Suman R. Das2, Srinand Sreevatsan3, Mary L. Killian4, Jacqueline M. Nolting5, Richard D. Slemons5 and Andrew S. Bowman5,*

 

Abstract

The role of exhibition swine in influenza A virus (IAVs) transmission was recently demonstrated by over 300 human infections of H3N2v viruses while attending agricultural fairs. Through active IAV surveillance in US exhibition swine and whole-genome sequencing of 380 isolates, we demonstrate that exhibition swine are actively involved in the evolution of IAVs, including zoonotic strains.

  • First, frequent introduction of IAVs from commercial swine populations provides new genetic diversity in exhibition pigs each year locally.
  • Second, genomic reassortment between viruses co-circulating in exhibition swine increases viral diversity.
  • Third, viral migration between exhibition swine in neighboring states demonstrates that movements of exhibition pigs contributes to the spread of genetic diversity.

The unexpected frequency of viral exchange between commercial and exhibition swine raises questions about the understudied interface between these populations. Overall, the complexity of viral evolution in exhibition swine indicates novel viruses are likely to continually re-emerge, presenting threats to humans.

(Continue . . . )

 

JID also published an accompanying editorial by Tiana Baranovich and Justin Bahl  called  Influenza A Virus diversity and transmission in exhibition swine (full text available) that warns `The manners in which these H3N2v viruses have become established in exhibition swine suggest that exhibition swine should be considered a unique reservoir for influenza viruses with pandemic potential’

 

For more on swine-origin influenza viruses and the potential threats they pose, you may wish to revisit:

 

EID Journal: Influenza A Viruses of Human Origin in Swine, Brazil
USDA IAV-S Surveillance Program Detects Novel H3N1 In US Swine
Study: Reassortants of H1N1pdm & Swine H1 & H3 Viruses in Japan
EID Journal: H3N2v Swine To Human Transmission At Agricultural Fairs – 2012

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# 10,386

 

Although Korea was an outlier event, in the short history of MERS in the Middle East, summers have been generally pretty quiet (see ECDC chart below).  Cases tend to pick up a bit in the fall and winter, and peak in the spring.

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Credit ECDC RRA Report


We do continue to see a trickle of case reports out of Saudi Arabia this summer, with the 12th case reported from the Riyadh region in just over two weeks.  While details have been scant, the indications are that much of this uptick in cases has been due to a combination of both community and hospital exposures.

 

Unlike many of those cases, however, today’s entry is not listed as a contact of a known case.

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While many MERS cases have pretty well defined exposure risks (nosocomial, family contact, camels, etc.), often there is no readily apparent source of infection, which has led to speculation that mildly symptomatic cases may be flying under the surveillance radar, and spreading the virus in the community.

 

In November of 2013, we looked at a study published in The Lancet Infectious Diseases, that attempted to quantify the likely extent of transmission of the MERS virus in the Middle East. (Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus: quantification of the extent of the epidemic, surveillance biases, and transmissibility).

 

They calculated  that for every case identified, there are likely 5 to 10 that go undetected.

 

More recently, last April in the Lancet’s Presence of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus antibodies in Saudi Arabia: a nationwide, cross-sectional, serological study  by Drosten & Memish et al., researchers found MERS antibodies in 15 of 10009 serum samples analyzed from across Saudi Arabia.  They wrote:

 

Seroprevalence of MERS-CoV antibodies was significantly higher in camel-exposed individuals than in the general population. By simple multiplication, a projected 44 951 (95% CI 26 971–71 922) individuals older than 15 years might be seropositive for MERS-CoV in Saudi Arabia. These individuals might be the source of infection for patients with confirmed MERS who had no previous exposure to camels.

 

While a plausible source for some of these unexplained sporadic community infections, we are still badly hampered by the lack of a well mounted case control study out of Saudi Arabia. Last May, in WHO EMRO: Scientific Meeting Reviews MERS Progress & Knowledge Gaps we examined many of the deficits remaining in our understanding of this disease.

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#10,385

 

Although pandemics and disease outbreaks like MERS and Ebola tend to grab the headlines, there is arguably no greater threat to public health today than the inexorable rise in antibiotic resistant bacteria around the globe.  The CDC estimates that – in the United States alone – at least 23,000 people die each year due to antibiotic resistant infections.

 

In 2012 - less than 75 years after the first modern antibiotics were rolled out - World Health Director-General Margaret Chan expressed the dire warning that the World Faces A `Post-Antibiotic Era’, one where a minor scrape could prove deadly, and where many elective surgeries would simply be too risky with out prophylactic antibiotics.


We’ve looked at this growing threat dozens of times over the years, but a few highlights include:

 

WHO: Survey & Analysis On Global Response To Antimicrobial Resistance

CDC: Improving Antibiotic Prescribing Practices In Hospitals

The Lancet: Antibiotic Resistance - The Need For Global Solutions

UK CMO: Antimicrobial Resistance Poses `Catastrophic Threat’

CDC HAN Advisory: Increase In CRE Reports In The United States

 

While the number and variety of antibiotic resistant organisms continues to grow, among the most dangerous are MRSA, MDR-TB, resistant gonorrhea, NDM-1 (and other NDMs), and a growing list of Carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CREs) like K. pneumoniae.

 

Much of this medical nightmare has been brought on by the misuse, and over reliance on, antibiotics over the years (see CDC: Improving Antibiotic Prescribing Practices In Hospitals).  And one of the deadly side effects has been the rise in difficult to control  C. difficile infections, which carries with it a high mortality rate.

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Yesterday the CDC released a major Vital Signs report that contains modeling showing the likely impact of CRE and C. difficile infections over the next 5 years, under a variety of control scenarios.  While too lengthy to post here, I’ve some excerpts and links for you to explore.

 

Our first stop is a CDC Press release on the mathematical modeling on the growth of resistant C. dif.

 

CDC modeling projects growth of drug-resistant infections and C. difficile

Improved infection control and antibiotic prescribing could save 37,000 lives over five years

Embargoed Until: Tuesday, August 4, 2015, 3:30 p.m. ET
Contact:
Media Relations
(404) 639-3286

The latest CDC Vital Signs includes mathematical modeling that projects increases in drug-resistant infections and Clostridium difficile (C. difficile) without immediate, nationwide improvements in infection control and antibiotic prescribing.

The promising news is that CDC modeling projects that a coordinated approach—that is, health care facilities and health departments in an area working together—could prevent up to 70 percent of life-threatening carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE) infections over five years. Additional estimates show that national infection control and antibiotic stewardship efforts led by federal agencies, health care facilities, and public health departments could prevent 619,000 antibiotic-resistant and C. difficile infections and save 37,000 lives over five years.

Antibiotic-resistant germs, those that no longer respond to the drugs designed to kill them, cause more than 2 million illnesses and at least 23,000 deaths each year in the United States. C. difficile caused close to half a million illnesses in 2011, and an estimated 15,000 deaths a year are directly attributable to C. difficile infections.

The report recommends the following coordinated, two-part approach to turn this data into action that prevents illness and saves lives:

  1. Public health departments track and alert health care facilities to drug-resistant germ outbreaks in their area and the threat of germs coming from other facilities, and
  2. Health care facilities work together and with public health authorities to implement shared infection control actions to stop the spread of antibiotic-resistant germs and C. difficile between facilities.

Antibiotic resistant infections in health care settings are a growing threat in the United States, killing thousands and thousands of people each year,” said CDC Director Tom Frieden, M.D., M.P.H. “We can dramatically reduce these infections if health care facilities, nursing homes, and public health departments work together to improve antibiotic use and infection control so patients are protected.”

The Vital Signs report shows that C. difficile and drug-resistant bacteria—like CRE, MRSA (methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus), and resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa—spread inside of and between health care facilities when appropriate infection control actions are not in place and patients transfer from one health care facility to another for care. These infections can lead to serious health complications, including sepsis or death. Even facilities following recommended infection control and antibiotic use practices are at risk when they receive patients who carry these germs from other health care facilities.

(Continue . . .)


The full Vital Signs report can be accessed at the link below:

 

Making Health Care Safer

Stop Spread of Antibiotic Resistance

Overview

We're at a tipping point: an increasing number of germs no longer respond to the drugs designed to kill them. Inappropriate prescribing of antibiotics and lack of infection control actions can contribute to drug resistance and put patients at risk for deadly diarrhea (caused by C. difficile). Even if one facility is following recommended infection controls, germs can be spread inside of and between health care facilities when patients are transferred from one health care facility to another without appropriate actions to stop spread. Lack of coordination between facilities can put patients at increased risk. Now more than ever is the time for public health authorities and health care facilities to work together, sharing experiences and connecting patient safety efforts happening across the state.

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(Continue . . . .)

Selasa, 04 Agustus 2015

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CREDIT ECDC:   Yellow Areas = Recent Introduction Of Aedes Albopictus



# 10,384

 

Although one doesn’t traditionally think of vector-borne diseases like Malaria, Leishmaniasis, Crimea-Congo Hemorrhagic Fever, and Malaria as being serious public health concerns for Europe, increasingly the arthropod vectors (mosquitoes, ticks, sand flies) for these diseases are showing up and establishing themselves  across the region. 

 

In 2007, Europe got a major wake-up call when a rare, tropical virus called Chikungunya arrived (via a traveler returning from India) in the province of Ravenna, in the northeast of Italy. While the virus isn't normally found in Europe, the vector, the Aedes mosquito, is (see It's A Smaller World After All).

 

All it took was one infected person to arrive with the virus, and the chain of transmission began, ultimately infecting nearly 300 people.

 

Since then, we’ve seen a procession of studies suggesting that Europe is increasingly becoming a suitable environment for many of these vector borne diseases to spread. In 2010 the journal Eurosurveillance devoted an entire issue to The Threat Of Vector Borne Diseases, with perhaps the biggest threat outlined in Yellow fever and dengue: a threat to Europe? by P Reiter (excerpt below).

 

The history of dengue and yellow fever in Europe is evidence that conditions are already suitable for transmission. The establishment of Ae. albopictus has made this possible, and the possibility will increase as the species expands northwards, or if Ae. aegypti is re-established.

 

In 2011, in ECDC: Local Malaria Acquisition In Greece we saw more reasons for concern with the return of a scourge that had – due to diligent mosquito control measures over the past 50 years – been all but eliminated across Europe.


While southern Europe has always been slightly vulnerable, just last October, in WHO: Locally Acquired Chikungunya In France, we saw another example of autochthonous transmission of a formerly tropical disease, this time in a Central European nation.

 

In 2012 the ECDC released a cautionary report on the Status & Importance Of Invasive Mosquito Breeds In Europe and last summer they announced a new joint ECDC-EFSA project called  “VectorNet”.  A network for sharing data on the geographic distribution of arthropod vectors capable of  transmitting human and animal diseases.

 

Today the ECDC has published a series of updated maps showing the distribution of a variety of mosquito, tick, and sandfly species capable of transmitting diseases.  As you will see as you examine the maps, some of these vectors are making substantial inroads across parts of Europe.

 

 

Vector maps: New information on ticks in Europe. Invasive mosquitoes in new areas in southern Europe

04 Aug 2015

​New information on the geographical distribution of ticks and invasive mosquitoes in Europe is made available through the latest vector maps. The maps, which are updated quarterly, show the latest data on the geographical distribution of tick, phlebotomines and exotic mosquito species in Europe, as of July 2015.

What’s new in the tick maps?
New information on the geographical distribution (presence/absence) has been added to the Dermacentor reticulatus, Hyalomma marginatum, Ixides ricinus maps:

  • Dermacentor reticulatus: updated information about 61 administrative units, mainly in Germany, France and Spain. 
  • Hyalomma marginatum: updated information about 35 administrative units, primarily in Romania. 
  • Ixodes ricinus: updated information about 366 administrative units, mainly in Finland, Germany and Poland.

In addition, the new maps show the presence of tick species in Europe in greater detail. The maps on Hyalomma marginatum - a tick species which can transmit serious diseases such as Crimean-Congo haemorrhagic fever (CCHF), now distinguish between introduction and establishment: a new category ‘introduced’ describes the presence of imported ticks and indicates that the species has been found but there is no evidence that it has become established locally.

New areas with invasive mosquitoes in southern Europe
Two invasive mosquito species, important disease vectors, have been found in new areas in southern Europe:

  • The mosquito species Aedes albopictus, a potential vector of dengue and chikungunya, is now present in new areas in northern and southern Spain, along the Mediterranean coast. 
  • The new maps show that Aedes koreicus, a mosquito that can transmit Japanese encephalitis, has been introduced around the Black Sea, while there is no evidence yet of the establishment of the species.

The maps are the outcome of the collaborative work of VectorNet and are based on collecting existing data by the network members.  VectorNet is a joint initiative of the European Food Safety Agency (EFSA) and the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC), that started in May 2014. The project supports the collection of data on vectors, related to both animal and human health.

See and download latest maps on vector distribution (updated July 2015):

(Continue . . . )

 

 

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It is narrated on the authority of Amirul Mu’minin, Abu Hafs ‘Umar bin al-Khattab, radiyallahu ‘anhu, who said: I heard the Messenger of Allah, sallallahu ‘alayhi wasallam, say: “Actions are (judged) by motives (niyyah) , so each man will have what he intended. Thus, he whose migration (hijrah) was to Allah and His Messenger, his migration is to Allah and His Messenger; but he whose migration was for some worldly thing he might gain, or for a wife he might marry, his migration is to that for which he migrated.” [Al-Bukhari & Muslim]

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About History

The urgent of reading history is that we become aware of his past life, progress and destruction of a nation, understand the wisdom behind the nation's history, feel the love, angry, sad, all within the scope of history. Because history is an art. Art is beauty. So people who do not know history, its own history, at least then he would not know the beauty of the wheel of life that applies to every person.

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