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Archive Number 20090425.1557
Published Date 25-APR-2009
Subject PRO/AH/EDR> Influenza A (H1N1) virus, human - N America (02)
INFLUENZA A (H1N1) VIRUS, HUMAN - NORTH AMERICA (02)
***********************************************************
A ProMED-mail post
<http://www.promedmail.org>
ProMED-mail is a program of the
International Society for Infectious Diseases
<http://www.isid.org>

Update:
[1] and [2] Strain identity
[3] Pandemic warning
[4] Outbreak in NY ?

******
[1] Strain identity
Date: Fri 24 Apr 2009
Source: CIDRAP News [edited]
<http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/cidrap/content/influenza/panflu/news/apr2409swine.html>


Labs confirm same swine flu in deadly Mexican outbreaks
-------------------------------------------------------
Samples from a deadly respiratory illness outbreak in Mexico match swine 
influenza isolates from patients in the United States who had milder 
illnesses, an official from the US Centers for Disease Control and 
Prevention (CDC) said today [24 Apr 2009], fueling speculation that the 
World Health Organization (WHO) could be on the verge of raising the global 
pandemic alert level. Richard Besser, MD, CDC's acting director, told 
reporters today during a press teleconference that the development is 
worrisome. "Our concern has grown since yesterday, based on what we've 
learned," he said. "We do not know if this will lead to the next pandemic, 
but our scientists are monitoring it and take the threat very seriously."

The swine flu A/H1N1 strain has been confirmed in one more US citizen, a 
child from San Diego who has recovered, raising the total number of US 
cases to 8, Besser said. The virus contains gene segments from 4 different 
influenza types: North American swine, North American avian, human, and 
Eurasian swine.

WHO said today that Mexican officials have reported 3 separate events. In 
the Federal District, the number of cases rose steadily through April, and 
as of yesterday, more than 854 cases of pneumonia, 59 of them fatal, had 
been reported in Mexico City. The illness outbreak in Mexico City prompted 
the country's health minister, Jose Cordova, to cancel classes in Mexico 
City today and advise students and adults to avoid crowded public places 
and large events, Bloomberg News reported. Mexican officials also reported 
24 cases with 3 deaths from an influenza-like illness in San Luis Potosi, 
in the central part of the country, and 4 cases with no deaths in Mexicali, 
near the US border, WHO reported.

The virus in Mexico has primarily struck otherwise healthy young adults, 
WHO said, which is a departure from seasonal influenza, which typically 
affects the very young and very old. CDC's laboratory analyzed 14 samples 
from severely ill Mexican patients and found that 7 of them had the same 
swine flu mix as the virus that infected the US patients. Besser called the 
analysis preliminary, however, and said that CDC doesn't yet have enough 
information to draw conclusions. "We still don't have enough information 
about the extent of the spread or the illness spectrum." WHO said today 
that Canada's national laboratory has confirmed swine flu A/H1N1 in 18 
isolates from Mexican patients, 12 of which were genetically identical to 
the swine flu viruses from California.

WHO and CDC both said they were sending representatives to Mexico to assist 
local authorities, and WHO said it has alerted its Global Alert and 
Response Network. Besser said that WHO will likely convene an expert panel 
to discuss raising the pandemic alert level from 3 (human infection with 
new influenza subtype with only rare human-to-human spread) to 4 (small 
clusters with localized human-to-human transmission). He said the experts 
will consider 3 factors: the novelty of the virus, disease severity, and 
how easily transmission of the virus is sustained. Global health officials 
might consider a containment strategy such as dispatching antiviral 
medications to affected parts of Mexico in an attempt to stop the spread of 
the virus, but Besser said that such a measure might not work, because 
there are signs that the virus has already spread from human to human over 
long distances. "A focused, well defined area is not something we've seen 
here," he said. CDC officials have said the swine flu A/H1N1 virus is 
susceptible to the newer antivirals oseltamivir (Tamiflu) and zanamivir 
(Relenza), but not the older ones, amantadine and rimantadine. Jeff 
McLaughlin, a spokesman for GlaxoSmithKline, the maker of Relenza, told 
CIDRAP News that the company is watching the swine flu developments 
closely. Terry Hurley, a spokesman for Roche, which produces Tamiflu, said 
its "rapid response stockpile" is on 24-hour standby, as usual, for 
deployment to WHO, which has not yet requested it.

The threat from the swine flu virus serves as a reminder for individuals 
and businesses to think about their own level of preparedness, Besser said. 
"This is a time for people to be thinking about that teachable moment." So 
far, federal officials have not changed their travel recommendations to 
California, Texas, or Mexico, though they have issued an advisory about the 
increased health risk in certain parts of Mexico, urging travelers to take 
standard precautions such hand washing, staying home when sick, and using 
good coughing and sneezing hygiene.

[byline: Lisa Schnirring]

-- 
communicated by:
ProMED-mail
<promed@promedmail.org>

[The "swine" influenza A(H1N1) virus associated with current outbreaks of 
respiratory illness in the southern region of the USA and in Mexico appears 
to be a complex reassortant containing genome components from avian, human, 
and swine virus sources. Such a virus is unique and it is too early to 
conclude that this virus has originated in swine.

According to the CDC website (<http://www.cdc.gov/swineflu/>) swine 
influenza (swine flu) is a respiratory disease of pigs caused by type A 
influenza viruses that regularly cause outbreaks of influenza among pigs. 
Swine flu viruses do not normally infect humans; however, human infections 
with swine flu do occur, and cases of human-to-human spread of swine flu 
viruses has been documented. From December 2005 through February 2009, a 
total of 12 human infections with swine influenza were reported from 10 
states in the United States. Since March 2009, a number of confirmed human 
cases of the new strain of swine influenza A (H1N1) virus infection in 
California, Texas, and Mexico have been identified.

Whatever the origin of the current outbreak virus it is likely that the 
designation swine influenza virus will stick. - Mod.CP]

******
[2] Strain identity
Date: Fri 24 Apr 2009
Source: CBC News [abbreviated and edited]
<http://www.cbc.ca/health/story/2009/04/24/health-flu-mexico090424.html>


Canadian lab confirms human swine flu cases in Mexico
-----------------------------------------------------
"Today we have received results which confirm that the virus is human swine 
influenza," Leona Aglukkaq told a press conference in Ottawa, Ontario, 
Canada. A handful of cases of flu-like illness in Canadian residents who 
recently returned from Mexico are being monitored; however, "there have 
been no confirmed cases of human swine influenza yet" here, said Dr David 
Butler-Jones, Canada's chief public health officer.

Mexico sent 51 specimens for testing to Canada's National Microbiology 
Laboratory on Wednesday [21 Apr 2009]. 16 positives of swine flu were found 
among the samples. Mexican health minister Jose Angel Cordova said on 
Friday that 20 people were killed in the outbreak and 1004 were infected 
throughout the country, prompting WHO to convene an emergency meeting on 
Saturday. Officials closed schools, museums and libraries in Mexico City on 
Friday to limit spread of the virus.

Dr Rich Besser, acting head of the US Centers for Disease Control (CDC), 
said early analysis of Mexican samples of the virus showed it is very 
similar to those responsible for 8 American cases, one confirmed on Friday. 
All the US victims have recovered. Canada is working with Mexican and US 
health officials to confirm that the virus in both countries is linked and 
is in fact a new strain of influenza A H1N1 human swine virus, he added.

"This is an interesting virus. It's a brand new virus, not only to humans 
but to the world," said Dr Frank Plummer, scientific director of the 
Winnipeg lab. "About 80 per cent of the virus is highly related to a North 
American body [?] of swine flu that's been around for a number of years, 
but about 20 per cent of it comes from an Eurasian variety of swine flu 1st 
seen in Thailand, so it's recombined [re-assorted ?] to create something 
totally new. How it did that, where it did it, when it did it, I don't 
think we know yet."

CDC said the current strain of swine flu includes genetic material from 4 
sources: North American swine influenza viruses, North American avian 
influenza viruses, human influenza virus, and swine influenza viruses found 
in Asia and Europe -- a new combination that has not been recognized 
anywhere in the world before. There appears to be human-to-human spread in 
both the US and Mexico over a wide geographic area at this point, but 
investigators are still checking for direct contact with swine.

WHO spokesperson Gregory Hartl said the agency needs to determine whether 
the outbreaks constitute an international public health threat. Hartl also 
said 12 of 18 samples taken from victims in Mexico showed the virus had a 
genetic structure identical to that of the virus found in California 
earlier this week. But he said the agency needs more information before it 
changes its pandemic alert level, which currently stands at 3 on a scale of 
one to 6. The virus was 1st reported earlier this week as US health 
officials scrambled to deal with the diagnoses of 7 people with the 
never-before-seen strain in Texas and California. The states share a border 
with Mexico not far from a town where 2 deaths were reported.

Hartl said health officials are dealing with 3 separate events in Mexico, 
with most of the cases in and around the capital, Mexico City. Most of the 
cases have occurred in healthy young adults, he added. "Because these cases 
are not happening in the very old or the very young, which is normal with 
seasonal influenza, this is an unusual event and a cause for heightened 
concern," Hartl said in an interview from WHO headquarters in Geneva. It is 
also rare to see such high flu activity so late in the season, he said. 
"The end of April, especially in a place like Mexico, you would think that 
we would see quite a steep decline," said Hartl.

On Thursday [23 Apr 2009], Canadian health officials issued advice warning 
travellers who have recently returned from Mexico to be on alert for 
flu-like symptoms that could be connected to the illness.

-- 
communicated by:
Steven McAuley
Medical student
University of Otago
Dunedin, New Zealand
<sbmcauley@gmail.com>

******
[3] Pandemic warning
Date: Sat 25 Apr 2009
Source: MSNBC [edited]
<http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/30398682>


Health officials prepare for swine flu "pandemic"
-------------------------------------------------
A new swine flu strain that has killed as many as 68 people and sickened 
more than 1000 across Mexico has "pandemic potential," the WHO chief said 
on Saturday [25 Apr 2009], and it may be too late to contain the sudden 
outbreak. CDC has stepped up surveillance across the United States. "We are 
worried," said CDC's Dr Anne Schuchat. "We don't think we can contain the 
spread of this virus," said Schuchat, interim deputy director for the 
Science and Public Health Program. "We are likely to find it in many other 
places." Because cases have been detected in California, Texas, and in 
several sites in Mexico, officials now must work to detect infections and 
reduce their severity, if possible. "It's time to prepare, time to think 
ahead and to be prepared for some uncertainty," she told reporters in a 
telephone briefing on Saturday.

Two dozen new suspected cases were reported Saturday [25 Apr 2009] in 
Mexico City alone. Schools were closed and all public events suspended in 
the capital until further notice -- including more than 500 concerts and 
other gatherings in the metropolis of 20 million. A hot line fielded 2366 
calls in its 1st hours from frightened city residents who suspected they 
might have the disease. Soldiers and health workers handed out masks at 
subway stops, and hospitals dealt with crowds of people seeking help.

WHO's director-general, Margaret Chan, said the outbreak of the 
never-before-seen virus is a very serious situation and has "pandemic 
potential". But she said it is still too early to tell if it would become a 
pandemic. "The situation is evolving quickly," Chan said in a telephone 
news conference in Geneva. "A new disease is by definition poorly 
understood. "This virus is a mix of human, pig, and bird strains that 
prompted the WHO to meet Saturday to consider declaring an international 
public health emergency -- a step that could lead to travel advisories, 
trade restrictions and border closures. Spokesman Gregory Hartl said a 
decision would not be made on Saturday.

Scientists have warned for years about the potential for a pandemic from 
viruses that mix genetic material from humans and animals. Another reason 
to worry is that authorities said the dead so far don't include vulnerable 
infants and elderly. The Spanish flu pandemic, which killed at least 40 
million people worldwide in 1918-19, also 1st struck otherwise healthy 
young adults. This swine flu and regular flu can have similar symptoms -- 
mostly fever, cough, and sore throat, though some of the US victims who 
recovered also experienced vomiting and diarrhea. But unlike with regular 
flu, humans don't have natural immunity to a virus that includes animal 
genes -- and new vaccines can take months to bring into use.

But experts at WHO and CDC say the nature of this outbreak may make 
containment impossible. Already, more than 1000 people have been infected 
in as many as 14 of Mexico's 32 states, according to daily newspaper El 
Universal. Tests show 20 people have died of the swine flu, and 48 other 
deaths were probably due to the same strain.

CDC and Canadian health officials were studying samples sent from Mexico, 
and airports around the world were screening passengers from Mexico for 
symptoms of the new flu strain, saying they may quarantine passengers. But 
CDC officials dismissed the idea of trying that in the United States. They 
noted there had been no direct contact between the cases in the San Diego 
and San Antonio areas, suggesting the virus had already spread from one 
geographic area through other undiagnosed people. "Anything that would be 
about containing it right now would purely be a political move," said 
Michael Osterholm, a University of Minnesota pandemic expert.

Mexican President Felipe Calderon said his government only discovered the 
nature of the virus late on Thursday, with the help of international 
laboratories. "We are doing everything necessary," he said in a brief 
statement. But the government had said for days that its growing flu 
caseload was nothing unusual, so the sudden turnaround angered many who 
wonder if Mexico missed an opportunity to contain the outbreak.

Across Mexico's capital, residents reacted with fatalism and confusion, 
anger, and mounting fear at the idea that their city may be ground zero for 
a global epidemic. Authorities urged people to stay home if they feel sick 
and to avoid shaking hands or kissing people on the cheeks.

-- 
communicated by:
Charles H Calisher, PhD
Professor, Arthropod-borne and Infectious Diseases Laboratory
Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Pathology
3195 Rampart Rd, Delivery Code 1690, Foothills Campus
Fort Collins, CO 80523-1690
College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences
Colorado State University
<calisher@cybersafe.net>

******
[4] Suspected outbreak in New York
Date: Fri 24 Apr 2009
Source: WCBS TV News [edited]
<http://wcbstv.com/health/swine.flu.nyc.2.994071.html>


Possible swine flu outbreak at NYC prep school
----------------------------------------------
New York City health officials say that about 75 students at a Queens high 
school have fallen ill with flu-like symptoms and testing is under way to 
rule out the strain of swine flu that has killed dozens in Mexico. The 
Health Department's Dr Don Weiss said on Friday [24 Apr 2009] that a team 
of agency doctors and investigators were dispatched to the private St 
Francis Preparatory School the previous day after students reported fever, 
sore throat, cough, aches, and pains. No one has been hospitalized.

The handful of sick students who remained at the school were tested for a 
variety of flu strains. If they're found to have a known human strain that 
would rule out swine flu. Results could take several days. In the meantime, 
the school says it's postponing an evening event and sanitizing the 
building over the weekend.

Mexican authorities said 60 people may have died from a swine flu virus in 
Mexico, and world health officials worry it could unleash a global flu 
epidemic. Mexico City closed schools, museums, libraries, and state-run 
theaters across the metropolis on Friday in hopes of containing the 
outbreak that has sickened more than 900. The US Centers for Disease 
Control and Prevention (CDC) said tests show some of the Mexico victims 
died from the same new strain of swine flu that sickened 8 people in Texas 
and California. It's a frightening new strain that combines genetic 
material from pigs, birds and humans.

WHO was looking closely at the 60 deaths -- most of them in or near 
Mexico's capital. It wasn't yet clear what flu they died from, but 
spokesman Thomas Abraham said "We are very, very concerned. We have what 
appears to be a novel virus and it has spread from human to human," he 
said. "It's all hands on deck at the moment."

WHO raised its internal alert system on Friday, preparing to divert more 
money and personnel to dealing with the outbreak. President Felipe Calderon 
cancelled a trip and met with his Cabinet to coordinate Mexico's response. 
The government has 500 000 flu vaccines and planned to administer them to 
health workers, the highest risk group. There are no vaccines available for 
the general public in Mexico, and authorities urged people to avoid 
hospitals unless they had a medical emergency, since hospitals are centers 
of infection. Some Mexican residents have started wearing blue surgical 
masks for extra protection, reports CBS News correspondent Adrienne Bard. 
The federal health minister has warned people not to go near anyone with a 
respiratory infection and to avoid kissing -- a traditional Mexican greeting.

-- 
communicated by:
ProMED-mail rapporteur Mary Marshall

[If infection by the novel swine flu virus is confirmed, it will represent 
a dramatic extension of the range of the outbreak virus from the southern 
states and Mexico to the north east of the United States. There is no 
reason to conclude at present, however, that this is anything other than an 
outbreak of seasonal influenza virus infection (or for that matter another 
common respiratory virus). - Mod.CP]

[see also:
Influenza A (H1N1) virus, swine, human - N America 20090425.1552
Acute respiratory disease - Mexico, swine virus susp 20090424.1546
Influenza A (H1N1) virus, swine, human - USA (02): (CA, TX) 20090424.1541
Influenza A (H1N1) virus, swine, human - USA: (CA) 20090422.1516
Influenza A (H1N1) virus, swine, human - Spain 20090220.0715
2008
---
Influenza A (H1N1) virus, swine, human - USA (TX) 20081125.3715
2007
---
Influenza A (H2N3) virus, swine - USA 20071219.4079
2006
---
Influenza, swine, human - USA (IA): November 2006 20070108.0077]

....................cp/ejp/sh


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