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Severe immune response kills SARS victims
NewScientist.com news service ^ | May 3, 2003 | Robert Walgate

Posted on 05/02/2003 8:39:46 AM PDT by CathyRyan

An excessive immune reaction appears to be the fatal factor in patients who die of SARS, according to medical data from Hong Kong. The best estimate of the fatality rate of SARS is rising steadily and so understanding how the disease causes death is critical to finding the best treatments.

Scientists have also discovered that the SARS virus can remain viable for at least 24 hours after being deposited in a droplet on a plastic surface - a simulation, for example, of an infected person coughing on to the wall of a lift.

The new information was revealed by Klaus Stöhr, the World Health Organization's chief scientist for SARS in a briefing earlier this week. "In the first week or so of disease the virus is replicating mainly in the upper respiratory tract, causing high fever and dry cough. But in the second week we see an over-reaction of the immune response, and in 20 per cent of cases that leads to very severe disease."

Mark Salter, WHO's coordinator for the clinical management of SARS, told New Scientist that this excessive response seems to be destroying the alveoli, the tiny sacs at the end of the lung tubing where the oxygen is absorbed. It is like stripping all the leaves from a tree, he says, making breathing extremely difficult.

"The immune response develops, but then continues growing unchecked" says Salter. "You then get cytokines, tumour necrosis factor and so on released not just at the virally infected cells they are supposed to kill, but throughout the tissue". This also happens in other diseases but the mechanism is not entirely understood, and certainly not in the case of SARS, he says.

Flare up

Nevertheless the observation significantly strengthens the basis on which doctors can select the treatments given to patients. In particular, it suggests the use of corticosteroids, alongside other drugs that reduce the viral load such as interferon.

Corticosteroids suppress the immune system and are normally used against asthma, rheumatoid arthritis and in transplant patients to reduce the risk of rejection.

Their use does raise the risk of further infection, but Hong Kong hospitals are claiming success with combinations of the antiviral ribavirin and pulsed steroids, says Salter: "And once steroids are stopped, they see a flare up of the condition suggesting there is a significant immune component to the disease."

. The issue of how long the virus survives outside the body was also raised by Stöhr. Some scientists have argued that long survival could explain unusual cases of transmission in Hong Kong and Canada.

In a study in Germany reported by Stöhr, the virus was dropped in liquid on to a plastic surface, the drop was dried, and examined after 24 hours. "There were 10,000 virus units per millitre before, and after 24 hours there were 1000 - and that was viable viruses."


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: ards; autoimmune; death; fatalfactor; fipv; flareup; nopanic; sars; virussurvives
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To: riri
Admitted tin foil time, but is the durability something that could have been "added"?

A 'contagion' that is only visible using an electron microscope and you're hypothesizing that some back-woods labs in China 'cooked' this contagion up?

SINCE you brought it up - one must assume that you have some knowledge on how this might be done -

- care to share this with us?

It wasn't until 1935 that a virus was actually identified and by 1939 a virus could be seen for the first time using the newly developed electron microscope.
From: http://www.scienceandyou.org/articles/edit_05.shtml
41 posted on 05/03/2003 8:36:35 AM PDT by _Jim (Guangdong doctor linked as source of SARS in China: http://www.biomedcentral.com/news/20030320/09/)
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To: EternalHope
Reminds us all how deep that river in Egypt really is.

LOL!

YOU brought it up -da nile that is- and with SARS on the decline EVERYWHERE except in China ...

A couple of WEEKS ago there were rumors abounding about how TERRIBLE a world-wide contagion this would be. Now, it's only in China ...

Good work by our medical profession - don't you think?

42 posted on 05/03/2003 8:40:03 AM PDT by _Jim (Guangdong doctor linked as source of SARS in China: http://www.biomedcentral.com/news/20030320/09/)
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To: _Jim
Good work by our medical profession - don't you think?

Yes I do. Shows what good old fashioned isolation and containment can do.

So when are you going to answer the questions I asked?

43 posted on 05/03/2003 8:42:35 AM PDT by EternalHope (Boycott everything French forever.)
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To: EternalHope
It's too soon to be sure about Hong Kong.

That's the pessimist's viewpoint alright, a classic 'The glass is still half empty' complaint ...

Nowhere, not even in China, can you point to 'exponential growth' in the number of cases. Were THAT to be seen I would change my tune immediately.

44 posted on 05/03/2003 8:45:19 AM PDT by _Jim (Guangdong doctor linked as source of SARS in China: http://www.biomedcentral.com/news/20030320/09/)
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To: _Jim
no, that is where you and I differ. I don't claim to be omnipotent.

As anyone who has ever been in love knows, as time passes the desire to change the beloved becomes irresistable. In the old days virologists changed their viruses like Mendel altered his peas, selecting and breeding for characteristics that were useful and interesting. It was a long and messy process. Molecular biology revoltinized this in the 1970's. Suddenly, a virus was less like a hardbound book and more like a three ring binder: The power to cut and paste genes aenabled virologiststo remove pages og genetic information and replace thwem with others. The implications for vaccine research were tremendous.

excerpted from Big Shot by Patricia Thomas

45 posted on 05/03/2003 8:50:43 AM PDT by riri
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To: riri
typos mine. Flame me on those too, if it makes you feel more wordly or manly or whatever your trip is.
46 posted on 05/03/2003 8:51:45 AM PDT by riri
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To: RadioAstronomer
Ping
47 posted on 05/03/2003 8:58:33 AM PDT by Aracelis
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To: _Jim
First of all I was responding to post #10. Second I said May be.
48 posted on 05/03/2003 8:59:35 AM PDT by CathyRyan
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To: EternalHope
So when are you going to answer the questions I asked?

MY overall view of this situation is on a different plane than yours - therefore the questions you pose based are based 'from that plane' either a) do not have the relevancy (as I see it) or b) are posed in such a nature that prohibits an acceptable answer *outside* 'that other plane'.

I also think that you don't consider a variety of other factors, factors such as the necessary control of the civilian population to prevent en masse exodus from, say Beijing, into the other parts of the country. It *is* requisite that some controls be exercised on the people - be it outright quarantine *OR* voluntary restriction to their own neighborhoods, towns, villages and even, in the case of student populations - their dormitories. This 'voluntary' cooperation can be elicited in a variety of ways, including the use of the press (media) in their country ... to wit, some of the 'hopeful' messages referring to vaccines that may be available in the near future for SARS, and this is not an idle 'hope' as opposed to the spread of ill-informed gossip that must be prevalent on the streets of China right about now ...

49 posted on 05/03/2003 9:02:34 AM PDT by _Jim (Guangdong doctor linked as source of SARS in China: http://www.biomedcentral.com/news/20030320/09/)
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To: riri
Are you suggesting this complicated, studied, technical process is underway now in climate controlled, fully-equipped facilities in the back-woods of China?

Kind af a 'secret too big to keep' don't you think?

50 posted on 05/03/2003 9:09:26 AM PDT by _Jim (Guangdong doctor linked as source of SARS in China: http://www.biomedcentral.com/news/20030320/09/)
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To: CathyRyan
The topic of sars seems to be slowing. I wonder if people are getting burnt out on it?

I'm still reading what gets posted on FR about it but I'm beginning to think it's not going to be that much of a disease when all the facts come out. It seems to me to be a fairly serious cold or flu and mostly hospital associated ----like many are. Lots of patients get sick in hospitals from the other patients ---and so do the employees.

51 posted on 05/03/2003 9:15:06 AM PDT by FITZ
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To: _Jim
No, I actually I don't. I really don't know if this in bio engineered or natural. Actually, I don't think it matters much now. It is out, it is about and we have to find a way to deal with it.

I found it troubling that it survives for such a long period of time outside a host. If I were going to play around with bugs, that may be one characteristic I would factor in.

As aristeides, politely pointed out there are corona viruses that live outside for longer periods.

I guess I don't understand your cantankerous attitude. If you feel you are on such a higher plane, surely there a purely scientific boards where you can go and be among others that can stimulate your mind. Us morons, here on Free Republic, must bore an intellectual giant such as yourself.

52 posted on 05/03/2003 9:20:17 AM PDT by riri
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To: FITZ
I am sorry but I have to disagree with you this is more than a bad cold or flu. Medical staff do not usually do not wear jupiter suit much less get sick in the numbers that they are. Just this past week two more medical staff are sick in Canada. In China 50% of the doctors that were unprotected became infected with sars.
53 posted on 05/03/2003 9:24:28 AM PDT by CathyRyan
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To: riri
No, I actually I don't. I really don't know if this in bio engineered or natural. Actually, I don't think it matters much now. It is out, it is about and we have to find a way to deal with it.

HAVE you at all paid attention to some of the Avian Flu virues that has 'shown up' in Europe? WHY don't you have the same sort of 'tin foil take' as to their origins?

Is it *just* possible that nature develops some of all of these contagion by herself without *any* help from man?

54 posted on 05/03/2003 9:30:48 AM PDT by _Jim (Guangdong doctor linked as source of SARS in China: http://www.biomedcentral.com/news/20030320/09/)
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To: _Jim
Is it *just* possible that nature develops some of all of these contagion by herself without *any* help from man?

Absolutely.

55 posted on 05/03/2003 9:33:56 AM PDT by riri
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To: FITZ
Lots of patients get sick in hospitals from the other patients ---and so do the employees.

There are even recorded cases of Legionnaires Disease caused by hot water distribution systems in hospitals ...

56 posted on 05/03/2003 9:34:14 AM PDT by _Jim (Guangdong doctor linked as source of SARS in China: http://www.biomedcentral.com/news/20030320/09/)
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To: _Jim
I guess what you are saying is that on your "plane" your ideas make sense, but not on mine. Very oriental, but I suppose it could explain the difference in conclusions.

I agree (generally) with your comments about "other factors". However, I see them as necessary only because the front line defenses in China failed, letting SARS loose into the general population.

Your general comments about Chinese back woods technology are ridiculous. Any nation that can build nuclear weapons can also handle bio-engineering. The Chinese were not that far behind Canada in sequencing the SARS genome. If you are trying to defend China against charges of an escaped man-made virus, then you need a better argument.
57 posted on 05/03/2003 9:39:44 AM PDT by EternalHope (Boycott everything French forever.)
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To: EternalHope
Any nation that can build nuclear weapons can also handle bio-engineering.

YOU overlook my point - you DON'T build these facilities out of 'vapor' - it takes PEOPLE and BUILDINGS and LAB EQUIPMENT and INFRASTRUCTURE (electric utilites to the building, roads for the lab workers and water and sewage service) -

- SOMEWHERE (if the 'tin foil' theories are correct) THESE facilities exist and the *people* in the area *know* about it. Think about the buildings, the factories in YOUR area - for the most part you *know* what these places produce - how much more so do you think the intelligence agencies *know* these things (THEY can track shipment of critical 'gear' from manufactures as would be USED in such labs) -

- PLUS, a LOT of this automated, sophisticated 'lab gear' requires constant maintenance (Field Service) and this service comes from the competent service personnel direct from the factory - follow the trail of personnel and you're 'one up' on what-is-where ...

(And YOU only thought your office's Xerox copier had factory service and support!)

58 posted on 05/03/2003 9:50:40 AM PDT by _Jim (Guangdong doctor linked as source of SARS in China: http://www.biomedcentral.com/news/20030320/09/)
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To: _Jim
No more far fetched than having state of the art, top secret ,stealth aircraft flying out of the desert in Nevada....

The facility is where you put it.

59 posted on 05/03/2003 9:53:15 AM PDT by Smokin' Joe
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To: riri
"Why is this virus so durable? Are other corona viruses this durable and capable of living for such long periods of time?"

I think I read somewhere perhaps here:

http://www-micro.msb.le.ac.uk/3035/Coronaviruses.html#SARS

that some coronaviruses don't have the rapid mutiplication that we see in flu cases and some common colds...it takes longer to get established in the body and perhaps that also has something to do with the longevity of it in the body. Have you ever noticed that some colds stick around longer(for 3 or 4 weeks) than others? Maybe they are the coronaviruses. This past winter seemed to have a bumper crop . I have a feeling some younger folks and those with over active immune systems will incubate this SARS a little longer.
60 posted on 05/03/2003 9:57:06 AM PDT by Domestic Church (AMDG...Anyone have a job for me up at the north pole? I scrub floors and do windows.)
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