Intellasia.net
 
 
 Services  Tenders BizFind Jobs Archive Search Contact  Tiếng Việt
Updated: 24 Apr, 2010 - 9:51:09 AM (GMT+7:00) RSS feed to Intellasia Vietnam News RSS Feed  Video Feeds
Intellasia News Online « back
Email this article Send to a friend     Printer friendly page Printer friendly   
 
  Stocks & Securities
 
  Business
 
  Finance
 
  Economy
 
  Property
 
  Resources
 
  Infrastructure
 
  Info-tech
 
  Agriculture
 
  Governance
 
  Legal News
 
  Society
  Health
 
  Regional
 
Hanoi
Click for Hanoi, Viet Nam Forecast
 
HCM City (Saigon)
Click for Ho Chi Minh, Viet Nam Forecast
 
Da Nang
Click for Da Nang, Viet Nam Forecast
 
forecasts-click images
 
 
HK reports swine-pandemic flu reassortant
01-MAR-2010 Intellasia | CIDRAP News
1 Mar, 2010 - 7:00:00 AM
Free newsletter - click here
 
A laboratory at Hong Kong University (HKU) detected a reassortant made up of a swine influenza virus and the pandemic H1N1 virus in a sample obtained from a slaughterhouse pig as part of a surveillance programme, officials announced today.

It is the first reported reassortant between the two types of viruses. The virus was detected in a pig that was imported from the Chinese mainland, which has been notified about the finding, Hong Kong's agriculture department said in a statement. It was detected during HKU's regular influenza surveillance.

The agriculture department said in statement that the finding doesn't pose a public health risk or present any food-safety issues.

Dr Malik Peiris, a microbiology professor who heads HKU's surveillance programme, said in the statement that the finding isn't unexpected, likely occurs worldwide, and was only detected in Hong Kong because of intensive surveillance. He said futher tests are under way to further characterise the virus.

A spokesman for Hong Kong's Centre for Health Protection, however, said that preliminary findings suggest the reassorant is sensitive to oseltamivir (Tamiflu).

So far the new virus has not turned up in surveillance of human flu specimens obtained from Hong Kong residents.

Hong Kong's Food and Environment Hygiene Department said it would step up inspection of imported live pigs and is reminding those who work with pigs to observe good hygiene and to wear appropriate masks and protective gear while working. It said about a third of those involved with pig farming and slaughtering have received the pandemic H1N1 vaccine.

A spokesman for Hong Kong's Centre for Food Safety reiterated recommendations from global health and agriculture bodies that pork and pork products that are handled and cooked properly are safe to eat.

Rodney B. Baker, DVM, president of the American Association of Swine Veterinarians and senior clinician in Iowa State University's College of Veterinary Medicine in Ames, told CIDRAP News that it's not clear from the Hong Kong government statement how HKU researchers determined the reassortant, what gene is involved, or what the identity of the swine virus is.

"Reassortment is always a possibility, so finding this virus or similar viruses in Asia is not surprising," he said.

So far, analysis of swine and pandemic H1N1 viruses have revealed that genetic components of the pandemic H1N1 virus, which likely originated somewhere in Asia, were not present in swine influenza viruses before the pandemic, Baker said.

Baker said China produces 600 million to 800 million pigs each year and that most swine are not kept in biosecure buildings, as they are in the United States. He added that all pigs entering Hong Kong come from mainland China, representing a tiny portion of Asia's total pig production. Despite the intensive surveillance in Hong Kong, very little swine surveillance is conducted throughout the rest of Asia.

The pandemic H1N1 virus has not emerged in North American pig industries, Baker said.

In the United States, swine surveillance suffers from a lack of food-animal research money, experts have said. Currently, most swine surveillance is conducted by a few dedicated groups at Iowa State University, the University of Minnesota, and St Jude's Children's Research Hospital.

Baker said experts knew within a few days after the novel H1N1 virus was identified that it was not a North American swine virus, which he said the media did not fully report, making consumers wary and contributing to the financial losses that pork producers experienced after the pandemic virus emerged.

When the virus was first detected last spring, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the National Animal Disease centre in Ames had just launched a small swine surveillance collaboration. Last June the US Department of Agriculture announced plans for a pilot programme in swine aimed at detecting new influenza strains.

http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/cidrap/content/influenza/swineflu/news/feb2610swine.html






    © Copyright 2009 by Intellasia.net

    Top of Page


 
Burma's top military leader in India for talks
Korea's current account hits one-year high
Philippines overstocked with rice: government
Apple's iPhone 4 costs up to S$630 in Singapore
Oil hovers around $77 in Asia
LME eyes Taiwan warehouse, port says by end-2011
Japan's JFE to buy $1b stake in JSW Steel
BOJ's Kamezaki says Japan recovery not yet strong
'Malaysia in the forefront of Islamic banking'
Japan, China agree to speed up gas fields talks
Burma junta hands out road contracts to cronies
HK exports increase more than estimated 26.7pct, eighth monthly gain
Vietnam Banking and Finance
Advertising
 
Intellasia News Services
© 2009 All Rights Reserved
privacy policy : terms of use : contact