Posted on 04/11/2003 8:47:04 AM PDT by CathyRyan
The mystery virus which has claimed the lives of more than 100 people around the world is a mutant form of the common cold, say experts.
Tests on samples taken from patients with severe acute respiratory syndrome (Sars) suggest it is a new type of corona virus, which normally causes the common cold.
It has so far infected at least 3,000 people worldwide and killed 106, according to the World Health Organization.
Scientists have suggested the virus, for which there is no known cure, is here to stay and may never be eradicated in some regions.
International scientists
These latest tests - the most authortative yet - were carried out by a team of international scientists from eight countries, including Germany and the United States.
Their analysis has found that it is not consistent with any other known virus. Genetic tests showed it was "only distantly related" to known corona viruses.
Preliminary results suggest it has never before been seen in some countries, including the US.
The findings, published on the New England Journal of Medicine website, come as the WHO renews its efforts to stop the virus from spreading.
More of its investigators arrived in China, where it first emerged, on Friday to try to gain a better understanding of the disease and draw up better strategies to fight it.
The Chinese government has claimed the outbreak is under control. However, that has been disputed.
Zhong Nanshan, director of the Guangzhou Institute of Respiratory Diseases in Guangdong province, said it was better to describe the illness as "contained".
Nineteen new cases of the illness were reported in the province on Friday.
Figures from the WHO and Chinese Ministry of Health show that more than 1,300 people have been infected with the virus across the country. It has so far claimed the lives of 58 people.
The virus has hit foreign nationals living in China. Two Americans and five other foreigners in Shanghai have been hospitalised with possible Sars, according to government officials and the US Consulate.
Chinese state media reports that nationals from Finland, Canada, Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan have come down with Sars.
A Finnish official with the International Labour Organisation, Pekka Aro, died of the virus.
On Thursday, friends of a US citizen who died from Sars claimed he had been wheeled, already dead, into an ambulance and sent from Beijing to Hong Kong because China's authorities did not want to report that another foreigner had died of the virus in the city.
The US government is recommending that Americans defer non-essential travel to China.
In Hong Kong, officials have said people exposed to Sars will be barred from leaving, amid fears that residents are spreading the disease overseas.
It reported two more deaths and 61 new cases of the virus on Friday - a sharp rise over recent days. The total number of deaths in Hong Kong from Sars now stands at 32.
Officials in Singapore, where nine people have died and 140 have been infected, have now reported seven new cases.
Police there say they are looking for a Chinese woman who escaped from quarantine earlier this week after showing symptoms of Sars.
Indonesia and the Philippines each reported their first cases of the virus on Friday.
Malaysia is continuing to block entry of visitors from China and Hong Kong, despite protests from tour operators who fear it will batter the tourism industry.
|
|
|
FreeRepublic , LLC PO BOX 9771 FRESNO, CA 93794
|
It is in the breaking news sidebar! |
The odds of any of us getting it at some point seem very high, it seems.
"Super-spreaders", who survive the disease but are highly infectious, are one possibility. A young Singaporean woman is now believed to be linked to virtually all of that country's 130 cases.
New information has also emerged from the investigation of the Amoy Gardens housing complex in Hong Kong, where 200 resident caught SARS. The virus was found in basins and toilets, say officials, suggesting the virus travelled through the clogged sewage system. Malik Pieris, head of virology at the University of Hong Kong, also reports that tests show the virus can survive in faeces.
I believe Legionarres Disease was known to spread through plumbing also.
That said, I really, really don't want to get this.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.