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GoldGoldGold
04-25-2009, 09:24 AM
Winnipeg, CDC labs link Mexican-US swine flu cases, pandemic alert may rise

Fri, 2009-04-24 21:23.

By: Helen Branswell, THE CANADIAN PRESS

http://www.cfrb.com/news/14/917938

TORONTO - Further evidence emerged Friday that there is person-to-person spread of a new flu virus to which many people may have little or no immunity - key ingredients for the development of a flu pandemic.

But international authorities, including those at the World Health Organization, were not ready to say that is what the world is watching.

Still, the WHO signalled it will convene a meeting of experts - likely by teleconference - who will advise Director General Margaret Chan on whether to raise the pandemic alert level from the current phase 3 to 4 or beyond. Phase 6 is a pandemic. There is little doubt among influenza experts the alert phase will rise as a result of that meeting.

Laboratories in Canada and the United States confirmed Friday that large outbreaks of unusual respiratory illnesses in Mexico are caused by swine flu viruses closely related to those that infected eight people in California and Texas.

The WHO said Friday that so far, no cases have been reported from other countries. In Canada, authorities said while public health officials continue to investigate cases of illness in people returning from Mexico, nothing has yet turned up.

"There's no confirmed cases in Canada," said Dr. David Butler-Jones, Canada's chief public health officer, adding that at this time there is no reason to defer travel to Mexico.

U.S. officials also said they would not tell Americans to avoid travel to Mexico at this point.

Canada's National Microbiology Laboratory in Winnipeg tested a variety of samples sent by Mexican authorities earlier this week because the Mexicans were having problems diagnosing what was behind the large spike of illness.

"We're working very closely with the Mexicans and the Americans and continuing to provide technical support," Butler-Jones said.

Mexican officials said 68 people have died of flu and the new swine flu strain had been confirmed in 20 of those deaths. More than 1,000 people nationwide were sick from the suspected flu. In Mexico City, authorities closed schools, museums, libraries and movie theatres Friday to try to limit spread.

In contrast, only one of the American cases was hospitalized and that person had other medical conditions.

The Winnipeg lab found 16 samples containing the unusual influenza A H1N1 virus that American authorities discovered last week in California and again this week in Texas.

Butler-Jones said Canada was on the alert after the Americans notified the World Health Organization of the swine flu infections on April 17. When Mexico then sought help diagnosing an unusual respiratory illness, he said it was hard not to think there might be a link.

"The spidey senses did go off," Butler-Jones said in an interview.

The acting head of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control, Dr. Richard Besser, said the CDC's labs also confirmed seven cases in 14 samples sent from Mexico, and that early analysis of the viruses suggested they are very similar to those responsible for the American infections.

Besser revealed the U.S. case count has risen to eight, with discovery of an additional infection in a child living in San Diego. The child has recovered.

Besser said the CDC is hearing from the public that they are concerned, adding: "We are worried as well."

"Our concern has grown since yesterday in light of what we've learned since then," he said during a news teleconference.

Heightened anxiety was also apparent among WHO officials in Geneva. The organization activated its 24-hour emergency operations centre Friday. Both Canada and the U.S. have activated theirs as well.

It wasn't clear when a decision would be taken on raising the pandemic alert level, though experts expect events to move quickly in the coming days.

"We're very concerned. And this is why we're running our operations centre 24 hours a day and why the DG (director general) is moving to call the emergency committee.... It all indicates the very high level of our concern," said Gregory Hartl, a spokesperson for the organization.

The H1N1 viruses responsible for the cases are made up predominantly of swine flu genes. Though human H1N1 viruses have been circulating for decades, it is not clear how much protection previous infection with them would confer against a swine flu virus and in particular this swine flu virus, which looks unlike any experts have seen before.

Flu viruses from an animal source - whether pigs, birds or other mammals - have the potential to cause pandemics because they are generally so different from human viruses that people have little or no immunity to them.

Widespread illness would be expected to occur if the viruses take off and become a pandemic strain. But the severity of the illness caused depends on the virus, and at present these viruses seem to be causing symptoms similar to regular seasonal flu, said Dr. Allison McGeer, an infectious diseases expert at Toronto's Mount Sinai Hospital.

"What I'm feeling best about is that it does not seem to be a terrible illness. And if this is going to go (pandemic), then it's going to be at least to some degree manageable," she said, noting that even though Mexico is reporting deaths, there are no reports yet that hospitals there are being overwhelmed.

Testing has shown the viruses are resistant to two old flu drugs, amantadine and rimantadine, but are susceptible to the flu antivirals, Tamiflu and Relenza, which are in many national emergency stockpiles, including Canada's.

As would be expected in the early hours of a major disease outbreak, there was a lot of confusion about the scope of the problem and the number of confirmed and suspected cases.

Of the cases found in California and Texas, only one travelled recently to Mexico and most have had no contact with each other. None have reported exposures to pigs.

Besser said based on the pattern so far, it seems that there may have been a number of generations of person-to-person spread involved. He said that and the multiple locations of the outbreak make it unlikely that an effort to snuff out the virus could be mounted.

The WHO has planned for some time to try to extinguish an emerging pandemic virus at source, something modelling exercises suggest might be workable under the right circumstances. Hartl said late Friday the option of trying to contain the outbreak before it could trigger a pandemic is still on the table at the WHO.

Both the WHO and the CDC are sending staff to Mexico to help authorities there get a better handle on the scope of the problem.

Mexican authorities were reporting three separate events in different parts of the country. The earliest report of an uptick of influenza-like illness dates to March 18, the WHO said in a release posted on its website.

In the U.S., the ages of cases range from children to 54 years. It has been reported that in Mexico the majority of cases are young, previously healthy adults in their mid 20s to mid 40s.

kelee877
04-25-2009, 09:29 AM
I have to find where I read it...WHO is having a teleconference call today to decide if they should raise the level..we should know later today or tomorrow...unless they keep it hush hush..


teehee covering all my basis...I,ll go hunt for the artical that says they are having this call today....

or if someone else can post would be greatly appreciated...

louise
04-25-2009, 10:31 AM
We, in Winnipeg have the 1918 flu in our:shock: lab! And all the other diseases that one can think of!

GoldGoldGold
04-25-2009, 01:25 PM
Cornwall man treated for mystery illness in Ottawa

Health officials looking for links to Mexico outbreak

By Mohammed Adam and Lee Greenberg, The Ottawa CitizenApril 24, 2009

http://www.ottawacitizen.com/Health/Cornwall+treated+mystery+illness/1527693/story.html

OTTAWA - A Cornwall Crown attorney who returned from Mexico with a mysterious illness is believed to be one of a handful of people in Ontario who may be linked to an outbreak that is confounding health authorities, provincial officials say.

Guy Simard, 47, was airlifted to The Ottawa Hospital in late March and admitted into the intensive care unit, a hospital official said Thursday. Simard spent 11 nights in hospital before being released April 9.

Ontario officials confirm they have been warned to be on the lookout for unusual illnesses in Canadians returning from Mexico.

The outbreak has Canadian public health officials scrambling to discover the nature of the deadly flu-like illness that has already killed 20 people in Mexico and has left that country’s medical authorities without any answers.

According to Dr. Danielle Grondin, the acting assistant deputy minister for infectious diseases, what is known so far of the the mysterious illness — often called severe respiratory illness (SRI) — is that it strikes healthy people aged 25-44 years and quickly worsens. The outbreak is confined largely to the south and central parts of Mexico, and of the 137 people who have been struck by the unknown virus, 20 have died. Very little is known about the virus or how it spreads, but it is being described in Mexican media as SARS-like.

Grondin, however, said that the description is wrong. From what is known by Canadian authorities so far, it does not appear to be a SARS-like outbreak, she said. She hopes that 51 samples from Mexico that are now being tested at the infectious diseases laboratory in Winnipeg will soon provide some important clues.

Grondin said Canadian authorities are doing everything to help Mexico get to the bottom of the outbreak.

As a precaution, public health authorities, family physicians and hospitals across the country have been placed on high alert to look for any unusual flu-like symptoms in patients. The government’s pandemic surveillance alert has been increased to a state of high vigilance. The federal government, however, has not as yet issued a travel ban to Mexico but is warning prospective Canadian travellers to be vigilant and take precautions against flu.

“There is no evidence as of now that the illness in Mexico is an illness like SARS,” Grondin said.

“It is serious in Mexico, but nothing in Canada. At this point, there are no clusters of SRI in Canada. There are no health concerns for Canadians.”

Dr. Arlene King, who leads the Centre for Immunization and Respiratory Infectious Diseases at the Public Health Agency of Canada, said her organization just learned about the severe respiratory outbreak in the “last couple of days.”

“There are pneumonia outbreaks, probably of an unknown origin at this point in time, occurring in Mexico,” King told a news conference Thursday, where she was named the province’s new chief medical officer of health.

“A number of different clusters have occurred over the last month or so … and these have obviously created concern related to their potential to get larger and to spread outside Mexico.”

According to reports, Guy Simard’s illness was considered life-threatening at one point. He was attached to a ventilator and received at least one blood transfusion, according to the Cornwall Standard-Freeholder.

On Thursday, the province’s acting chief medical officer of health, Dr. David Williams, said Simard’s case is one of about 10 being looked at for links with a severe respiratory outbreak in Mexico.

“We haven’t ruled it out and we haven’t ruled it in either. It’s still (under) investigation,” he told reporters Thursday.

“It starts off as a respiratory illness and it just gets worse and worse. It’s quite severe. We’re not talking just a mild issue.”

Grondin told reporters in Ottawa that it is unlikely that the illness of the patient treated at The Ottawa Hospital is related to the Mexican outbreak, but she said the situation is being monitored closely.

Ottawa Hospital spokeswoman Allison Neill said that hospital staff were unaware of the unusual nature of Simard’s illness when he was admitted in late March.

“We would only learn that this week,” she said.

“Even with this patient coming in from Cornwall and us not knowing what was going on … all the proper protection and procedures were in place at that point. Our professionals have no real concerns.”

Simard was released in “good condition” on April 9. He has still not returned to his duties in the Crown attorney’s office. He reportedly may suffer permanent lung damage due to the illness. An e-mail to Simard’s work account was not returned Thursday.

Neill says The Ottawa Hospital hasn’t seen any other patients with similar conditions.

“We’ve not seen any other activity in any other patients or staff,” she said.

Pressed by reporters in Ottawa on why the federal government is allowing Canadians to travel to a country where 20 normally healthy people have died suddenly from an unknown disease, Grondin said it is not up public health authorities to tell Canadians where to travel. She said the information public health authorities have so far doesn’t warrant a travel ban. She those intending to travel to Mexico should make sure they’ve had their flu vaccine and take other precautions, such as washing their hands. They should also see their doctor if they have a cough that also includes sneezing.

But Grondin said the travel advisory could change, depending on the results of the tests being done in Winnipeg.

“At this stage, it is not for us to close borders. We don’t want to generate undue scare,” she said.

Scared and Soiled
04-25-2009, 03:55 PM
I knew when they built the lab, that I was always going to have a warm and fuzzy feeling living here (or are those the symtoms?). :razz:

PrairieMoon
04-25-2009, 04:11 PM
My brother is virologist who has specialized in pig diseases.
Just got off the phone with him...he is concerned, stated,
"I always thought an influenza virus originating from pigs would
be much worse than the avian viruses everyone else is worried about...we'll find out."

He's waiting to here from his "friends" from various agencies.
However, he doesn't really think CDC will know anything
definative till the middle of the week.

BTW, the rapid Influenza A & B antigen tests take about 20
minutes to perform. We even do this in my small hospital.
What will take time is viral sequencing (those are his words!).

Interesting, he was just finishing up on a grant proposal that
he pretty sure will now get well funded: "The spread of infuenza
virus in Hudderite colonies between humans, turkeys and pigs"!

Packy, he's heading your way for a meeting of virology minds on
Monday. You may hear stuff in your local news.