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Bird flu can produce other diseases
The bird flu virus can produce a deadly encephalitis, diarrhoea and other symptoms that do not look like the classic respiratory disease, an international team of doctors said on Friday.
They reported on the cases of a 9-year-old girl and her 4-year-old brother who died of encephalitis, a swelling of the brain case, in southern Vietnam one year ago.
The childrens' deaths were a mystery until the researchers went back and checked samples from the boy and found avian influenza virus.
"These cases suggest that the clinical spectrum of influenza H5N1 is wider than previously thought, and therefore they have important implications for the clinical and public health responses to avian influenza," the researchers wrote in this week's issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.
"The finding came in late 2004 after we tested several hundred samples," said Dr. Tran Tinh Hien, the deputy head of the Ho Chi Minh City Hospital for Tropical Diseases and one of the study's authors.
The finding was part of a research program between Britain's Oxford University and several hospitals in Vietnam to look into serious tropical diseases there, including the cause of encephalitis in the south, he said.
Hien noted that influenza viruses in general were known to cause encephalitis and can damage the respiratory, nervous and digestive systems as well as the heart, kidney and liver.
"But we have not found encephalitis among the patients who died recently from bird flu in Vietnam," Hien told Reuters.
It is not clear how the children became infected.
"At the time of the children's illnesses, the family owned apparently healthy fighting cocks. Many chickens and ducks were present in the hamlet and canal during early 2004, but none were ill," the researchers wrote.
"Only if the incubation period was unusually long could sister-to-brother transmission be implicated," they wrote.
"Nevertheless, the isolation of virus from a rectal specimen is a major source of concern, since it highlights a potential route of human-to-human transmission, especially in combination with crowded living conditions and diarrhoea."
What the World Health Organization fears most is that the virus could mingle with either human or pig influenza viruses, for instance by infecting a person who also had human flu, and acquire the ability to pass easily between people.
Such a new strain could kill tens of millions of people.
Bird flu has killed 80 percent of people diagnosed with the infection, so far claiming the lives of 45 people -- 32 Vietnamese, 12 Thais and one Cambodian.
Flu experts say some people may not become fatally ill with the infection, so it is difficult to calculate a true mortality rate.
Vietnam said it may slaughter poultry in its big cities in another tough action in the war against the poultry virus that has spread to more than half its 64 provinces and cities since re-emerging in December and killed 13 people in recent weeks. However, the virus had caused no new infections in poultry in nine of the affected provinces over the last three weeks, officials said. |
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