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To: Henry Niman who wrote (60018)2/5/2005 1:00:08 PM
From: Snowshoe  Respond to of 74559
 
A Medical Mystery Man Bounces Back From Avian Flu

By KEITH BRADSHER
Published: February 5, 2005

HANOI, Vietnam

IT started as a mild fever and severe chills on Jan. 9 that made Nguyen Thanh Hung's teeth chatter even when his wife, a nurse, covered him with blankets.

But within two days, as the avian influenza virus took hold, his temperature soared to 106.7 degrees and peaked close to that level every day for the next five days as he struggled for life in one of this city's best hospitals. Most of his right lung collapsed, every joint ached and the far wall of his hospital room seemed to approach and recede before his eyes.

"My whole skull hurt," he said, gripping his temples for emphasis. "It felt like pieces of my skull were detaching."

What happened next is one of two medical mysteries in Mr. Hung's case that have caught the attention of flu experts as they try to decipher whether his illness will come to afflict millions of people, and possibly hundreds of millions, around the world.

Unlike most people with confirmed cases of bird flu, Mr. Hung survived, for reasons that remain unclear but may have to do with his extraordinary physical fitness. The greater mystery is how he caught the disease, with strong evidence that he acquired it from his older brother, not from poultry, in a worrisome sign that the virus may be developing the ability to pass from person to person.

The World Health Organization has confirmed 14 cases of avian influenza in Vietnam this winter. Thirteen have died. Mr. Hung, 42, is the 14th case. Three weeks after he fell sick, he is already home from the hospital, tending his beloved bonsai trees, strumming his guitar and jogging a remarkable 14 miles a day.

nytimes.com



To: Henry Niman who wrote (60018)2/5/2005 2:28:55 PM
From: smolejv@gmx.net  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 74559
 
Thanks so much. DJ



To: Henry Niman who wrote (60018)2/23/2005 1:04:40 PM
From: Maurice Winn  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 74559
 
Henry, I'm getting hopeful that humans are going to beat H5N1.

<Lubroth's view is that when administered correctly to all poultry, the avian influenza vaccine can be the best solution to preventing avian flu in chickens and may also lessen the risk of human infection by lowering levels of viral shedding.

"A partial match is good enough to protect animals from death," said Ruben O. Donis from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, Ga., "but from an ecological and public health perspective, this kind of [vaccine mismatch] tends to accelerate the evolution of the virus."

WHO's Omi avoided remarks about animal vaccination on Wednesday. Instead he emphasized improved animal husbandry and the avoidance of traditional "wet markets" where live poultry are kept in cramped cages and in close proximity to different species of waterfowl and farmed animals.

"Together with our member states... we can set out the best practices for the production, distribution, and processing and marketing of animals for food," he said.
>

There are vaccinations in the offing, albeit not all that good. There is stock management too, which is common in most countries, so the breeding zones for viruses are smaller than in the past when humans lived cheek by foul jowl with fowl giving a highly iterative environment for viral development.

Viruses have trouble getting underway in countries where stock is well-managed and if they do, we have vaccinations increasingly available.

The world is developing a global brain and when something happens, a bunch of humans act like clumps of neurons and swing into gear to figure out a solution. No longer is the world an ignorant mass of dislocated human hill billies scratching a subsistence living from a chicken run and pumpkin patch.

As you reiterate, the virus does not read media reports, or do much of anything else. It is one of the dummest living things on the planet. I'm sure that applied intelligence and genki dama can zap it with a little bit of power from all over the world, and boom, it's gone.

AIDS is still making inroads, so I'm not so optimistic as to think we are out of the woods, but it does seem to be amenable to vaccines and stock management techniques.

If Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos kill every bird they can find [and tigers too if necessary], then the propagation pathways and recombination, reassortment pool will be small and the rest of the world can supply them all the free chicken and duck they can eat, produced from well-managed, vaccinated stock.

Then those countries can develop their own modern bird farming techniques and hey presto, problem solved.

Another month or two and H5N1 will have missed its chance to cause human catastrophe this northern flu season. Another year of breathing space will be useful for humans to gather their collective wits and deal the death blow to any human version of H5N1.

Mqurice