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Disease May Change To An Even Deadlier Form
Independent (UK) ^ | 4-6-2003 | Charles Arthur

Posted on 04/05/2003 3:43:57 PM PST by blam

Disease may change to an even deadlier form

Sars resembles the fatal flu virus of 1918

By Charles Arthur, Science Editor
06 April 2003

Reinhard Kurth, the head of the German government's Robert Koch Institute, was not exactly encouraging on Friday night. A vaccine for Sars could be developed, he said – but it would take three to five years.

Experts worldwide are still struggling to identify precisely what is causing the illness, and how it is transmitted. Some can already see light at the end of the tunnel. "To me, the epidemic is almost certainly over," said Osman David Mansoor, a World Health Organisation (WHO) scientist who is working closely with health authorities in Singapore. "But there is always a lag time for infections. While we are speaking there may be a whole other lot of infections going on."

The possibility is that Sars will die out after failing to transmit itself, before any cure beyond acute medical care can be devised. But the lurking fear is still that it might find a way to revive itself, like the Spanish flu epidemic which spread throughout the world from a military camp in Kansas in 1918 – carried by US troops to Europe, and then spread to the Far East. Millions of people were infected; millions died. And now, we have air travel to hasten the spread of any new disease.

The similarities with the 1918 flu pandemic are quite striking – once you allow for some of the differences that medical advances have made. True, the mortality rate among those infected with Sars peaked at around 4 per cent, and doctors are getting better at treating it. The 1918 influenza strain at times killed 28 per cent of those infected, but its overall mortality rate was 2.5 per cent.

Medical experts at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta, Georgia, are still puzzling over exactly how Sars progresses. Some think that it is a single "coronavirus" – a superstrong version of the common cold. But others are suggesting that Sars is a pair of viruses, one of which lowers the body's defences while the other takes advantage and causes the rapid descent into pneumonia.

Mostly, those studying the disease have found out what it is not. "In a matter of a day and a half, we'd ruled out 100 infectious agents that might have been the cause of this outbreak," says Dr Frank Plummer, director of the National Microbiology Laboratory (NML) in Winnipeg, Canada, one of the countries that has been seriously affected by infected travellers arriving from Hong Kong.

Tests have been devised to test for the coronavirus: you can have it, yet not have Sars. And some of the people who have had Sars do not have any trace of the coronavirus, although officials at the CDC say it is a 90 per cent match. Early hopes that a simple antibody test would allow for quick testing of passengers stepping off aircraft have been dashed by the NML.

One link with the 1918 flu strain is the potential source of the disease. The theory is that last time, the presence near the First World War trenches of pigs and chickens used to feed the troops allowed potentially dangerous viruses to mutate and move back and forth between the humans and animals, until finally a swine flu virus mutated sufficiently to reinfect humans, who had no resistance to it.

As with Sars, it was not the flu as such that was the killer, but the pneumonia that developed rapidly with it. One group of women was said to have stayed up late to play bridge; the next morning three of the four were dead. So far, no such tales have emerged with Sars. But the lights will be burning long into the night in the laboratories around the world until the infection rate begins to fall.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: change; deadlier; disease; form; fud; may; sars
"Disease may change to an even deadlier form"...But, then it may not. (Scare headline)
1 posted on 04/05/2003 3:43:57 PM PST by blam
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To: blam

2 posted on 04/05/2003 3:55:10 PM PST by BenLurkin (Remember the 507th!)
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To: BenLurkin

3 posted on 04/05/2003 3:56:55 PM PST by BenLurkin (Remember the 507th!)
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To: blam
I think we'll have a vaccine in a year.

To control this spread until then transportaion between hotzones and the rest of the world has to be stopped no matter what the cost. Also all imports from that area must be disinfected prior to shipping and also again upon arrival. This will be economically unfortunate for Hong Kong and other hot zones but it is needed.

Will someone please ping the government for action.
4 posted on 04/05/2003 6:53:17 PM PST by Domestic Church (AMDG...HOPE)
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To: Domestic Church
The governments won't get serious until it's to late.
5 posted on 04/05/2003 7:02:59 PM PST by blam
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To: blam

FUD Alert!


6 posted on 04/05/2003 7:03:42 PM PST by Timesink (When was the last time YOU remembered we're on Code Orange?)
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To: blam
Tests have been devised to test for the coronavirus: you can have it, yet not have Sars. And some of the people who have had Sars do not have any trace of the coronavirus, although officials at the CDC say it is a 90 per cent match. Early hopes that a simple antibody test would allow for quick testing of passengers stepping off aircraft have been dashed by the NML.

Hey, if it was accurate enough for AIDS...

7 posted on 04/05/2003 7:04:46 PM PST by Timesink (When was the last time YOU remembered we're on Code Orange?)
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To: Domestic Church
Note that the article provides not a single piece of evidence to support the author's claim. Not ONE.

It's BS, meant to scare people into buying a few extra papers. And it's the same paper that's home to Robert Fisk, so you know they're not known for accuracy.

8 posted on 04/05/2003 7:07:29 PM PST by Timesink (When was the last time YOU remembered we're on Code Orange?)
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To: blam
That's my fear too but I've got to have some hope. Bush has let the military manage this imminent victory and I hope he uses his medical advisors well on this problem too. Of course in the back of my mind there is the nagging thought of the EPA having a population control agenda.
9 posted on 04/05/2003 7:08:15 PM PST by Domestic Church (AMDG...)
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To: Timesink
"It's BS, meant to scare people into buying a few extra papers. And it's the same paper that's home to Robert Fisk, so you know they're not known for accuracy."

(Ahem) That's why I coined the phrase, I report, you decide.

10 posted on 04/05/2003 7:37:23 PM PST by blam
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