In the
futile shade of a stripped tree
The Unicorn tastes the calm water
Born yesterday, she remembers her peer, the Dragon
Igneous, robber of Fire, who rises up
And walks for a moment in the hazy Cloud.
Silent and solitary, she becomes wind
Heavenly Zephyr, here she is embodied
Unexpected kaleidoscope of the rising sun
In the perennial shade of the summer tree.
The Unicorn and the Dragon
Alexis d'Acqueville
Ebola, elms disappearing,
re-emerging diseases 2007-2008
Once posted here, information is purposedly
uncorrected (except for spelling mistakes), to be used later as a
raw material for a historical analysis of important events linked to
diseases. Obsolete links are updated when possible, or removed.
Topics widely covered by the mass media, such as
bird flu, are covered here in a very sketchy way. Information is
provided "as is" and reflects the perception of the daily events,
using available information in real time (using Internet forums in
China, in particular, and trying to escape rumors). There may be
contradictions from one day to a later one. In some cases links
disappear (and when this happens we unlink the sentence pointing to
the obsolete link when we are made aware of that fact): for example,
on april 23rd, 2003, an interesting link described in
details that existing treatments of SARS were inefficient and probably
dangerous. This link was cancelled out a few hours after it was
created, for unknown reasons.... We hope to understand the cause of
this unwanted censorship in the future.
The structure of our societies creates our
diseases, reminding us that epidemics are not separable from our way
of life
.
29
october 2008. A fifth case of an infection caused
by a mysterious virus in South Africa has been reported
yesterday. Preliminary analyses suggest that it could be a member of
the arenaviruses.
8
october 2008. More than a hundred persons who came into
contact with three persons who died of an unknown kind of viral
haemorrhagic fever remain under observation in Johannesburg. They all
appear to be fine. The seasonal influenza season is approaching. The
2008-2009 trivalent vaccine virus strains recommended by the WHO are
A/Brisbane/59/2007 (H1N1)-like, A/Brisbane/10/2007 (H3N2)-like, and
B/Florida/4/2006-like antigens. Luc Montagnier present in Abidjan for
the inauguration of the conference «Cissida 08», was congratulated by
president Gbagbo, who emphasized the effort of Ivory Coast in the
domain.
1
october 2008. Diseases which should be eradicated such as
leprosy surface
again in Senegal. More than 50 new cases have been recently
identified, some 30 of which in the region of Kaolack.
28
august 2008. Until
the present time avian flu has been pretty calm this year, with significant
less human cases than last year. However the virus seems to
evolve in a surprising way. An unusual strain has been found in
smuggled poultry into Vietnam. A routine investigation detected
presence of the virus in a poultry market in Benin (West Africa). In Bangaldesh
the authorities are concerned by backyard poultry farming in
conditions of very poor hygiene. Burkina Faso is taken by the
fever of biofuels, trying to develop cultivation of the
Euphorbiaceae Jatropha curcas on a large scale. The plant is
resistant to drought, and, as many of this family poisonous to insects
(and often to humans). The seed contains a high level of fatty acids
which can be used as biofuels. The danger of uncontrolled spread of
cultures is that the effect of this plant, comic from Central America,
on the environment is totally unknown. Furthermore, competition
between food crops, and crops for biofules needs to be evaluated. A
conference will be held in Kuala Lumpur in october to "celebrate" the
tenth anniversary of the discovery of the Nipah virus. This virus is
endemich in South East Asia and related viruses are present in
Australia.
14
august 2008. Cholera is endemic in many parts of the world.
In Senegal, in the region of Kaolack there are constant outbreaks. Now
the capital city of Benin, Cotonou, is affected, with more than 140
patients identified.
11
august 2008. Yellow fever is affecting Ivory Coast for a
couple of months. Some cases have also been found repeatedly in Brazil
for more than six months now.The suspected cases of bird flu in
Indonesia have been a false ala
8
august 2008. The impact of H5N1
avian flu has been significantly lower this year as compared to 2006
and 2007. However, resurgence of outbreaks in Nigeria and in
Indonesia, where 13 persons may have symptoms of the disease, show
that we should not lower our guard. Dengue fever is developing in
South East Asia, in Thailand and Myanmar in particular.
23
july 2008. The world demographic explosion is a time bomb
that will explode faster than the climage change. In this context it
becomes most important to monitor plant and animal diseases as a
variety of crops and farmed animals might be affected. We already know
how domestic species may be almost eradicated: the Passe-Crassane pear
is almost never seen again (the pear trees were killed by the bacteria
Erwinia amylovora), the edible oyster (Ostrea edulis),
that was a treat on gastronomic tables is now small and rare
(and an unknown disease appears to be spreading in other oyster
species in France), and of course elm trees completely disappeared
from Western Europe killed by a fungus carried by an insect. A new
fungal disease, caused by the dangerous pathogen Phytophthora
kernoviae begins to spread in UK. Starting from Cornwall in
2003, it now reached Wales and Scotland. It may destroy rhododendrons
and the European oak and beech trees. It cousin, Phytophthora
ramosum, has killed many of the oak trees in the Rocky
Mountains, in the USA. In this context it is probably important that
some Genetically Modified Organisms
are used to mitigate propagation of diseases and pests. Burkina Faso
has recently collaborated with industry to create cotton GMOs from
local varieties, and the government has authorized planting new areas
with the variety as it requires much less pesticides and provides a
better yield, preserving the environment while providing better
revenues to farmers.
22
july 2008. Multidrug resistant tuberculosis is of great
concern, as reminded by the WHO. Among the 150,000 persons affected by
the disease 1% have access to the costly treatment, and one expects
that each of these person will contaminate 5 to 10 persons per year.
It is not difficult to see that this may become of considerable
importance in the near future. Tuberculosis is a major cause of
mortality in many countries and a
recent study suggests that restrictions by the IMF has led to
lower health care and spread of tuberculosis in Eastern Europe,
emphasising the role of politics in the spread of diseases.
11
july 2008. At a time when one reports a case of Marburg
fever in Netherlands in a person who recently stayed in Uganda, the
mode of association of the infamous Ebola virus with an antibody of a
survivor of the disease is established. This is a first step (which
required a huge amount of work, as is was extremely difficult to
crystallize proteins of the viral envelope with relevant molecules) to
understand how this virus, which codes for only seven proteins, can
have such an impact, evading the host defences.
1
july 2008.The Hong Kong Health authorities progress towards
complete ban of selling live poultry in open markets. From july 2nd
the new rules impose that every animal that has not been sold a day
will be culled in the evening, so that no live animals can be taken
back once it has gone to open markets. This rule will probably go
against the local culture of eating only animals that are slaughtered
immediately before cooking. This practice has long been a complex
issue in Hong Kong and Southern China.
25
june 2008. Four
fatal cases of haemorrhagic viral disease have been diagnosed in
central Congo-Kinshasa. Avian flu reappears in Pakistan, while more
fatal cases have been identified in Indonesia.
15
june 2008. Possible outbreaks of
viral diseases, in particular caused by the West Nile virus, are
forseen as an unexpected consequence of the subprime crisis. In some
parts of the USA owners abandoned their homes as they skipped out on
their spiralling debts, leaving behind pools that became paradise for
mosquitoe larvae. This points out (swimming) pools as likely home for
insect vectors of dangerous diseases world-wide.Hong Kong has
slaughtered all its live chickens except in well-kept breeding
facilities to stop the spread of an H5N1 avian outbreak from still
unknown origin, at a moment when disastrous floods affect China,
Guangdong in particular.
4
june 2008. A team of the Department of Microbiology at the
University of Hong Kong, headed by Pr KY Yuen (former
co-director of the HKU-Pasteur Research Centre from its creation in
2000 to 2003) has shown using mice that a treatment combining
antivirals with two non-steroidian anti-inflammatory drugs
considerably decreased the fatal outcome of the deadly influenza virus
H5N1. This is particularly interesting in view of the past results
obtained in Hong Kong during the SARS episode, where a treatment
combining antivirals and steroidian anti-inflammatory drugs was
probably in part the cause of the very high mortality in the
territory.
22
may 2008. Mosquitoes are the vectors a number of dangerous
diseases. They are widespread and extremely difficult to control, as
they multiply very rapidly as soon as conditions are appropriate. The
use of pesticides has been widespread, but mosquitoes tend to generate
resistant strains, and the use of pesticides also kills a considerable
number of predators, so that, after some time, the population of
mosquitoes increases again, sometimes to unprecedented levels. Other
insects are also dangerous but more limited in their spread, and in
this case biological control has been used, with considerable success.
The general way to proceed is to breed and sterilize males and release
a large number of them in the wild, so that the fecundity of the
population decreases down to a level were it leads to local
extinction. This procedure has been used to control the fairly
horrible screw-worm fly (Cochliomyia homnivorax), whose larvae
make wounds and eat the flesh of live animals. This fly has been
eradicated from the USA in 1982, and after it had appeared
accidentally in Lybia, it was eradicated from the region in 1991.
Facing a recurrent and developing epidemic of dengue fever,
transmitted by Aedes aegypti mosquitoes, Malaysia is now
preparing to fight the disease by controlling the mosquitoes with
Genetically Manipulated males of the insect that produce larvae that
die early. This approach has not yet been tested and it is difficult
to know how it will fare.
9
may 2008.For the first time there is hope that small pox
could be easily cured using
a drug instead of vaccination. While the virus was supposed to
be eradicated in the world, the fact that its sequence is available
and new DNA synthesis techniques are developing fast, it was feared
that the virus could be used
in biowarfare. The existence of an efficient drug would be a
strong deterrent to use of the virus by terrorists or rogue states.
5
may 2008. An outbreak caused by enterovirus 71 is causing
concern in China as 25 children died from the infection (the death
toll has to be placed in perspective, as China has more than 1.3
billion inhabitants). This virus is endemic in hot regions of Asia
where is regularly causes severe outbreaks.
18
april 2008. A common mechanism appears to account for the
extensive lung destruction triggered by highly infectious viruses such
as the SARS coronavirus, the H5N1 fmu virus and other letal
respiratory viruses. Penninger and his colleagues in Austria,
coordinating a work developed world-wide, found that the response
causing extreme reaction is mediated by a receptor on lung cells that
initiate the innate immune response, TLR-4. These authors unraveled
the complete cascade of events responsible for the letal response,
showing that oxidation of the detergent (oil surfactant) that smoothes
up the surface of the alveolae activate the receptor and cause an
extreme inflammatory response. This observation is extremely important
as it will permit a very precise targeting of this process to prevent
the extreme reaction that destroys the lungs. Penninger and his
colleagues have created the company Apeiron
Biologics (based on
Anaximander's concept of Απειρον) to apply these discoveries to
new treatments.
11
april 2008. A new coronavirus, belonging to the same group
as that causing SARS has been discovered
in a Beluga whale. Dengue fever is still spreading in Rio de
Janeiro, where 79 persons died and more than 75,000 persons have been
infected by the mosquito-borne virus.
1
april 2008. The
situation of last month outbreaks of avian flu has been summarized at
the OIE web site.
Most of the outbreaks come from fowl trade. In some cases however,
such as the one in Canada, migrating birds are the carriers of the
virus. Data from Indonesia keep being missing, placing this country in
a worrying situation. In the East of the USA bats are dying off by the
thousands. The disease is not yet understood. It is a matter of great
concern both because of the role of bats as efficient predators of
insect vectors (mosquitoes in particular) and of crop pests, but also
because these animals are sentries motitoring possible emergence of
diseases in humans. Chiropters (the animal family of bats) are indeed
cousins of Primates (nothing to do with Rodents!)
28
march 2008. The World Health Organisation hoped that
poliomyelitis would be eradicated early in the 2000s. Unfortunately,
cases keep reappearing. A young boy in Douala, Cameroon, has just been
diagnosed with the disease. The global situation with H5N1 influenza
keeps being similar
to that during the past year with Indonesia, Egypt and Vietnam
again a matter of concern. The number of multidrug resistant patients
keeps increasing in former Soviet Union republics and in South Africa.
Simultaneously it appears that the Beijing strain, recognized for some
time as very dangerous, is particularly so for some patients with a
particular genetic setup as, in their case, the disease tends to
spread to the brain, causing fatal meningitis.
27
march 2008. Six
years ago investigators reported that aquatic insects could be
vectors for the nightmarish but painless Buruli ulcer, caused by
a kin of the tuberculosis and leprosy agent, Mycobacterium
ulcerans. Last year some of these investigators further reported
that the saliva of
aquatic insects of the family Naucoridae which transmitted the
disease could also have a protective effect. A recent
epidemiological study shows that water striders are indeed
contaminated by the bacteria as live
bacteria could be cultivated from contaminated water striders (Gerris).
These insect predators can bite animals, including humans and
therefore transmit the disease.
20
march 2008. An international symposium between Fudan
University in Shanghai, the CNCBD
and EFBIC made a general summary of the situation of infectious
diseases in the world, with special emphasis on the cooperation
between Europe and China in the fight against this serious menace for
mankind. One of the major differences between the form of the
influenza virus which is highly pathogenic for birds and for mammals
is that it displays a replication phase within the nucleus of the
cell, despite the fact that it is an RNA virus. This explains why
mutations which could make it responsible for a pandemy are likely to
involve the replicase of the virus on surface residues which interact
with the host protein importin. The latter indeed transfers the
replication system from the cytoplasm to the nucleus, where rapid
replication occurs.
13
march 2008. After the death of a child in relation with a
disease that might have been influenza the
Health authorities in Hong Kong decided to close some primary
schools. There is no indication at this time that this may be
related to anything like SARS or H5N1 flu.
2
march 2008. Retrospective studies of global epidemics are
unfortunately very rare. When the
Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome
rapidly contaminated people all over the world, panick spread rapidly.
But a global reaction of heath authorities everywhere contained the
epidemic extremely rapidly, a remarkable feat in itself. Perhaps for
this reason there has not been many retrospective studies to monitor
the way this success was obtained. In particular, death rates in
different countries were widely different (about half in China as
compared to Hong Kong), and this deserves an in-depth analysis,
especially as we cannot assume that no new pandemic will develop any
time. Analysis of what happened in the second wave of SARS infection
in Toronto is revealing: it now appears that lack of understanding of
the role of collective behaviour at hospitals rapidly spread the virus
again. Staff meal in common helped the virus spread in a hospital
there in 2003. Let us hope that more retrospective analyses will help
us understand the weak points of our behaviour, as H5N1 still lingers
in many countries.
27
february 2008. Are viruses alive? To this question a deep
analysis of what life is gives a negative answer. This is particularly
important at the time when Symplectic (Synthetic) Biology aims at
reconstructing life. The cell is organised in a way similar to that of
a computer that would make computers, made of a machine and of a
program. Viruses are pieces of program in a casing that allows them to
be inserted in the cell machine. And the metaphor of computer viruses
makes us understand how they can spread and circumvent the defenses of
the cell-machine whether at the level of the hardware or the
software.With this image the evolution of the H5N1 flu virus becomes
fairly clear: it can develop well in humans, but fortunately, until
now, it is not able to propagate easily from person to person. It
keeps evolving however, exploring all kinds of variations, and the
risk is that it could find a way to multiply in the upper respiratory
track of humans. This depends considerably on the number of infected
persons. While for several years now the
average number of infections is fairly constant, it may be on
the rise this year. A woman died from the disease in the Guangdong
province in China, but this corresponds to such a low statistical
number that it is not yet really worrying. However the presence of new
cases in Egypt, in Vietnam and in Indonesia shows that the disease is
far from under control. A young girl has been bitten by a rabid dog in
a city east of Paris, in an unexpected case of the disease which has
been under control in France for many years.
14
february 2008. Meningitis has reached an epidemic level in
Burkina Faso.The H5N1 virus makes a second victim in Vietnam. In this
context the situation of Taiwan, which is home for many migrating
birds coming from several Asian countries, is remarkable: until now no
case of avian flu has been found, whether in birds or in humans.
7
february 2008. In the debate
about GMOs the role of natural invadors is usually forgotten. Nature
is most oftent more dangerous that artifice. A new web site,
DAISIE, recapitulating invadors that begin to plague Europe has been
launched recently. Among the dangerous invading species are several
vectors for emerging diseases, which will become important with global
warming. The food chain might also be poisoned.
1
february 2008. Indonesia bears the heaviest toll to avian
flu (101
persons died from the disease) while the virus keeps spreading
in West Bengal, where the government does not succeed in slaughtering
animals around contaminated farms and the disease is also present in
the neighbouring Bengladesh. Several persons have been quarantined, in
the event that they might have been infected. An imported case of
chikungunya has been recorded in Hong Kong.
23
january 2008. The outbreak of bird flu in West Bengal in
India is not under control and the WHO is concerned, considering the
situation as serious. A patient died of the disease in Vietnam, and a
new outbreak appears in Indonesia. Singapore is affected by
chikungunya, with patients apparently infected locally.
18
january 2008. Meningitis, which affects Sahel every year,
has already reached an alert
level in a county in Burkina Faso.
10
january 2008. The H5N1 avian influenza virus has not yet
crossed the barrier from birds to humans. This is why isolated
infections do not spread. It is generally admitted that this is due to
the fact that the virus hemagglutinin, which allows it to stick to
cells and thus permit the virus to enter them, recognized complex
charged carbohydrates at the surface of the receptor, and that the
structure of these differs in and in humans. A study published in Nature
Biotechnology gives a detailed description of the properties of
this association. This could be used as a new way to construct drugs
that will interfere with the process, as well as allow investigators
to monitor the changes in the virus and predict early whether risks of
human to human contamination is increasing.
9
january 2008. A
patient died of bubonic plague in Madagascar. This reminds us
that this deadly disease is still endemic in this large island as well
as in many other regions of
the world. Human plague episodes usually appears after dead
rodents have been seen in the environment, and fleas try to find a new
host, infecting humans. Brazil is issuing an international alert about
yellow fever after two persons died of the disease in Brasilia.
2
january 2008. Tuberculosis remains a matter of concern as
more than 2 billion humans have been infected by the bacteria,
fortunately most often without symptoms. The extremely drug-resistant
strains that slowly propagate are carefully monitored. USA today
reported that a 30-years passenger of a flight from India, who is
infected by a resistant form of the disease is treated in California
and passengers of the same flight have been asked to contact medical
doctors.On the front of bird flu the situation is stable,
except in Egypt where one witnessed four deaths in less than a week.
The authorities there began to vaccinate fowl against the virus.
21
december 2007. The epidemic of Rift Valley fever is still
present in Sudan and health authorities are concerned by the large
animal markets that form to mark the end of the year, as possible
sources of spread of the disease. In the same region locusts
are forming swarms sometimes square kilometers wide, that move
from Africa's horn to neighbouring countries, including Kenya,
destroying cultures.Avian flu is present at two places in Benin (West
Africa) where systematic slaughtering of fowl is underway.
19
december 2007. The Democratic Republic of Congo has closed
its frontier with Uganda from fear of the spread of an Ebola fever
outbreak developing there. Several tradesmen having recently come back
from Uganda have been quarantined.
17
december 2007. Avian flu appeared for the first time
apparently in North-West Pakistan, where it killed two persons.
Several more persons may be infected. A case has also been identified
in Myanmar.
13
december 2007. Emerging diseases come either from variations
in the population of microbes infecting a given host, or from change
of host, possibly via discovery of a vector. In this context, a
study published by scientists working in Australia, and showing
that Mycobacterium ulcerans, the dangerous pathogen of the
frightening Buruli
ulcer is present in mosquitoes opens new avenues for research
and shows that propagation of diseases may take unexpected routes.
8
december 2007. The Hong Kong's Centre for Health Protection
has received notification from the mainland's Ministry of Health that
the recent cases of infection of a son and his father by bird flu in
mainland Jiangsu province may have witnessed a human to human
transmission raising concern of the WHO about a possible new stage of
the spread of the disease. The disease also appears to be present for
the first time in Benin, in West Africa.
1
december 2007. A new Ebola haemorrhagic fever virus appears
to have been discovered in Uganda in an outbreak that affected more
than 50 people, according to the Centre of Diseases Control in Atlanta
(USA).
19
november 2007. Data derived from the HapMap project of the
Human Genome analysis begins to provide insight about the way humans
evolve. The "Out of Africa" scenario gains more and more support as
new data accumulates. In addition it begins to be possible to tell
positive selection from the bulk of the evolution. Association to
diseases seems, as could be predicted, to have a strong impact. Indeed
the Yoruba sample of the human genome shows that there is a specific
alteration of a gene that codes for a component affecting the receptor
of the Lassa fever virus. In the same way, the fair complexion of
Europeans is under selective pressure, as was postulated from the need
of capturing enough light to assimilate calcium.
16
november 2007. While emphasis is placed on the H5N1
avian influenza virus — with a second possible outbreak in a farm in
UK — many other viruses of this family infect animals and humans. An
epidemic caused by a H3N8 virus is infecting horses in China and in
Mongolia according to the World Organisation for Animal Health. This
kind of event should be monitored closely as the passage through
another mammal may well precede a human epidemic. In this respect it
is most important to identify as early as possible influenza episodes
affecting pigs.
11
november 2007. Plague is endemic in Madagascar, and it
appears to
surface again as pulmonary plague. In Sudan, the WHO informs
that Rift Valley Fever has killed more than 80 persons.
10
november 2007. To be prepared for human emerging diseases
we need to study, monitor (and control) animal diseases. While mass
media no longer focus on bird flu and its dangerous H5N1 virus, the
background level of the disease in birds remains dangerous. Human
cases keep appearing in Indonesia where a 91st person died, and a new
case has recently affected Vietnam. In a less publicized domain the
animal disease caused by the blue tongue virus (catarrhal fever) is
invading Europe in a scenario that shows that we do not know how
to control correctly vector-borne diseases. The virus is a member of
the Reoviridae family, and is transmitted by biting midges (Diptera
family), in particular Culicoides imicola. First discovered in
South Africa, until 1998 the disease was thought to be accidental in
Europe. Since then it kept increasing its extent from the South, and
it now goes North as far as UK, Germany and the Netherlands. It can
now be considered as endemic in Europe.
29
october 2007. Floods that affect many tropical and
subtropical regions in the world increase the risk of leptospirosis,
caused by Leptospira interrogans bacteria. The disease, which
manifests as an hemorrhagic hepatitis (jaundice) is frequently fatal.
Several patients are treated at a hospital in Somotillo town in
Nicaragua in what appears to be an epidemic of the disease, with more
than 200 people affected. In this context the discovery of a protein
coded by the bacteria that has a major role in pathogenicity is a promising
discovery that could lead to a vaccine.
10
october 2007. The World Health Organisation predicts that a
serious epidemic of meningitis may spread in the Sahelian regions
after the floods that plagued the sub-Sahara belt. The local
governments stockpile the vaccine. Nigeria
is apparently affected by a very rare accident related to the live
polyomyelitis vaccine. It is known that in very rare cases (1 in
several million vaccinations) the virus can revert to a pathogenic
form. While this is unfortunate (and shows that before the disease is
eradicated one needs to do more research on vaccination) it has to be
compared to the number of paralytic cases that have been prevented by
vaccination: the figure is of the order of 10,000 prevented paralytic
cases for one accident. This accident is particularly unwelcome as it
is due to the fact that the vaccination coverage of the
population in northern Nigeria has been halted locally because
of rumors stating that the vaccine was in fact a conspiracy to
sterilize women. Had the children been vaccinated one would have
witnessed only at most a handful of cases of the disease, whereas
several tens of children are affected at present.
7
october 2007. Emerging diseases are, by definition,
difficult to predict. However we possess, when monitoring the fate of
animal diseases, some ideas of scenarios that may happen in humans, or
propagate from animals to humans. Domestic animals, pets in
particular, can certainly be a reservoir for new diseases. And we
should probably be concerned by diseases such as the recent of a
canine coronavirus that killed pups in Bari in 2005. Interestingly
some features of the virus were quite similar to those found in the
SARS virus, and show that there can be a considerable shift of the
tropism of the virus (from the respiratory tract to the gut and vice
versa) in this class of viruses.
5
october 2007. A
new case of Marburg haemorrhagic fever appears in Uganda.
Cholera, which is expanding in many African countries, has crossed the
border between Iraq and Iran, according to the WHO.
1
october 2007. Many of the unfortunately familiar diseases
have reached top levels this year. Dengue fever is steadily spreading
in Latin America, and it could reach its level of 2002 before the end
of the year. The disease is also spreading in South-East Asia, and it
has reached the Fujian province in China. Cholera is present in all
places where access to clean water is difficult. There is an outbreak
in Iraq, which has already contaminated almost 3,000 people. In
Sahelian West Africa, the recent floods have resulted in large
contamination of drinking water, and one may fear multiplication of
water-borne diseases. This is illustrated in Bangladesh.
19
september 2007. A fairly large outbreak of avian flu is
developing aqmong ducks in the city of Guangzhou (Canton) in China,
while the company Sanofi Pasteur releases information about the
success of a flu vaccine that appears to work at extremely low doses.
A mild form of the disease (H5N2 virus) appears in Portugal. The
outbreak of Ebola fever may not be completely under control in the
region of Kampungu in Congo-Kinsasha. The
Dhaka Hospital saw record numbers of patients coming through its
doors in August 2007 due to crisis flooding in Bangladesh. On
the front of food resources: swarms of locusts are moving South West
of Yemen. They may cross to he Horn of Africa.
12
september 2007. A
new case of foot and mouth disease has been found in the same
district as the original one in UK.
11
september 2007. A new outbreak of Ebola fever affects
southeastern Congo, where
apparently more than 100 persons have died since late august.
The disease should be easy to contain if people refrain from touching
patients or corpses (this is difficult in a region where the custom is
to wash cadavers before burying them). A study by the Institut de
Recherche pour le Développement (IRD) has convincingly established
that the related Marburg fever virus is a frequent host of fruit bats.
transmission to humans can be expected as these animals are
phylogenetically related to primates.
10
september 2007. The final report of Health and Safety
Executive on the foot-and-mouth outbreak in UK has appeared. It shows
that, most probably, the way waste was treated from the Pirbright site
did not follow proper safety rules, and that work in progress
associated to heavy rain was probably the cause for the dissemination
of the virus in the environment. Strong recommendations are proposed
to remedy this unfortunate situation, at the site and elsewhere in the
world.
6
september 2007. At least 150 persons have been infected by
chikungunya in the Emilia-Romagna province in Italy. Plenty of the
mosquito vector Aedes albopictus is unfortunately on the wing
there.