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Dear you all,

I have heard recently that porc have diseases... It is hard to say

what kind as the authority here in China are very discreet about it.

It is said to be the porc blue ear disease, however according to

veterinaries only 5% of animal die because of this kind of disease and

the number of porc dead is far more huge than that... so they say that

it might be another fever ...classical one that kills porc... but they

also say that h5n1 can be transmitted to porc...

Why are all these porks dying???

If you have any new information about this topic please feel free to

respond.

Thanks

see u soon

Geri

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Dear All,

 

The animals most easily infected by H5N1 from birds are pigs.

 

I am not saying that there is an outbreak of flu among pigs in

China, but if what Garcia says is correct.........

 

S. Chinny Krishna

 

 

aapn [aapn ]On Behalf Of

Garcia

Wednesday, January 30, 2008 4:04 PM

aapn

Porc disease

 

 

Dear you all,

I have heard recently that porc have diseases... It is hard to say

what kind as the authority here in China are very discreet about it.

It is said to be the porc blue ear disease, however according to

veterinaries only 5% of animal die because of this kind of disease and

the number of porc dead is far more huge than that... so they say that

it might be another fever ...classical one that kills porc... but they

also say that h5n1 can be transmitted to porc...

Why are all these porks dying???

If you have any new information about this topic please feel free to

respond.

Thanks

see u soon

Geri

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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>The animals most easily infected by H5N1 from birds are pigs.

 

While this is true of many flu strains, it has not so far

been true of H5N1, which has yet to pass from pigs to pigs or other

animals. See below.

 

 

>I am not saying that there is an outbreak of flu among pigs in

>China, but if what Garcia says is correct.........

 

China has been dealing with the most virulent outbreak on

record of blue ear disease, aka porcine respiratory syndrome, for

about six months.

 

H5N1 is well worth worrying about, especially if it does

cross over into pigs in an infectious form, but so far that has not

happened.

 

Relevant overview--

 

 

AVIAN INFLUENZA, HUMAN (113): PANDEMIC PREDICTION

***********************************************

A ProMED-mail post

<http://www.promedmail.org>

ProMED-mail is a program of the

International Society for Infectious Diseases

<http://www.isid.org>

 

Wed 25 Jul 2007

Source: CIDRAP (Center for Infectious Disease Research & Policy

Academic Health Center -- University of Minnesota) News [edited]

<http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/cidrap/content/influenza/avianflu/news/jul2507seasona\

l.html>

 

 

World health experts have been working under a general assumption

that a feared reassortment between human and avian influenza viruses

-- a scenario that could spark a pandemic -- might only occur during

a short winter interval, but researchers who recently examined virus

circulation patterns warn that time frames for co-infection are wider

and sometimes unpredictable.

 

Researchers Andrew W. Park, from the Institute of Research for

Development in Montpellier, France, and Kathryn Glass, from the

Australian National University in Canberra, report their findings in

the August issue of The Lancet Infectious Diseases [Park AW, Glass K.

Dynamic patterns of avian and human influenza in east and southeast

Asia. Lancet Infect Dis 2007 Aug;7(8):543].

 

Though much is known about human influenza patterns in temperate

zones such as the United States and Australia, little is known about

the seasonality of influenza A infections in tropical and subtropical

areas in Asia, where the H5N1 virus is more common, the authors

write. Reviewing the timing of influenza A infections, as well as

that of H5N1 poultry outbreaks and human infections, could reveal

useful information for epidemiologists and pandemic planners, they add.

 

Park and Glass examined the seasonality of the H5N1 virus using data

from the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) and the World

Health Organization (WHO) from 2003 onwards as well as articles from

the literature on animal outbreaks and human cases in Hong Kong

between 1997 and 2003.

 

They investigated the seasonality of the influenza A virus by

searching for published reports of confirmed reports in east and

southeast Asia between 1996 and 2005. The researchers also looked for

changes in patterns between host range and seasonality by conducting

a literature search that covered the period from 1996 to 2006.

 

After comparing the data, they found that human H5N1 cases generally

coincide with poultry infections, though human cases sometimes occur

before or shortly after poultry outbreaks. A review of H5N1 isolates

taken from aquatic and terrestrial poultry in mainland China from

July 2000 to January 2004 showed that a greater percentage of birds

were positive for the virus during winter months.

 

Similarly, the researchers found that the presence of H5N1 in

isolates from birds in live poultry markets in China showed a winter

pattern, but a number of outbreaks extended into summer months,

suggesting that risks are not confined to winter.

 

Surveillance data from the Pacific basin from 1954 to 1988 show a

marked variation in human influenza A activity, the authors say. They

found that while consistent seasonality of viral activity between

December and March occurs in Japan, patterns were not uniform across

the rest of the region.

 

" Periods of moderate to high activity typically last longer in

tropical and subtropical regions than in temperate regions, and they

occur more frequently than once a year, " Park and Glass write. " It is

not prudent to assume there is a short period of risk of reassortment. "

 

More influenza surveillance in east and southeast Asia would be

useful, especially where H5N1 has been confirmed, they added.

 

The existence of new host populations in which the H5N1 virus is

endemic raises the pandemic flu risk to humans, especially when there

is close contact between people and the infected animals, the

researchers point out.

 

Between 2003 and 2005, the H5N1 virus was found in several new host

species, they report, including tigers, leopards, pigs, raptors, and

domestic cats. But they say the greatest concerns are (1) the

frequency with which the virus is found in domestic ducks, because

the ducks have close contact with people, and (2) isolation of the

virus from pigs in China and Indonesia, because receptors in their

respiratory tracts make coinfection with human and avian strains and

thus generation of reassortant strains possible.

 

Though a review of the H5N1 viral circulation data suggest some

seasonal factors, outbreak patterns also appear to be affected by

interventions such as culling, the authors report. Migration and

movement of birds are also thought to play a role.

 

" Looking to the future, the suggestion that H5N1 virus has become

endemic in ducks is of great concern, " the researchers write. Poultry

culls have successfully contained the spread of the disease in many

instances, but if the virus is endemic in some species, culling might

not be practical, and animal health officials may need to focus on

vaccination and intensive surveillance to contain the virus, they say.

 

Awareness of the seasonal risk of both human disease and viral

reassortment can help health officials design control measures to

help prevent an emerging pandemic strain, the authors conclude.

 

--

Communicated by:

ProMED-mail Rapporteur Mary Marshall

 

[Park and Glass show that outbreaks of seasonal human influenza in

tropical and sub-tropical zones of Asia are temporarily less

constrained than those in temperate zones (Australia, Europe and

North America). Hence, there may be greater opportunity for

interaction between human and avian viruses than previously assumed,

and the opportunity for generation of potentially pandemic viruses

does not necessarily decline during the summer months.

 

However, it should be remembered that opportunity for reassortment is

not the single determining factor in the generation of reassortants

with pandemic potential. The reassortant virus must possess a

phenotype that will endow it with some selective advantage. As these

authors hint, a greater hazard may be the increasing prevalence in

Asia of the H5N1 virus in flocks of domestic ducks. - Mod.CP]

 

[see also:

2005

----

Avian influenza, human - East Asia (111): pandemic preparedness 20050804.2264]

............................................cp/msp/dk

 

--

Merritt Clifton

Editor, ANIMAL PEOPLE

P.O. Box 960

Clinton, WA 98236

 

Telephone: 360-579-2505

Fax: 360-579-2575

E-mail: anmlpepl

Web: www.animalpeoplenews.org

 

[ANIMAL PEOPLE is the leading independent newspaper providing

original investigative coverage of animal protection worldwide,

founded in 1992. Our readership of 30,000-plus includes the

decision-makers at more than 10,000 animal protection organizations.

We have no alignment or affiliation with any other entity. $24/year;

for free sample, send address.]

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