AVIAN FLU


★ ''For the current concern about the transmission of an avian flu to humans see Transmission and infection of H5N1.''

★ ''For the H5N1 subtype generating the concern see H5N1.''

★ ''For its current status see Global spread of H5N1.''
'Avian flu' (also "bird flu", "avian influenza", "bird influenza"), means "flu from viruses adapted to birds", but is sometimes mistakenly used to refer to both other flu subsets (such as H5N1 flu) or the viruses that cause them (such as H5N1). "Avian influenza strains are those well adapted to birds"EUROPEAN CENTRE FOR DISEASE PREVENTION AND CONTROL. Chapter Two : Avian Influenza by Timm C. Harder and Ortrud Werner from excellent free on-line Book called ''Influenza Report 2006'' which is a medical textbook that provides a comprehensive overview of epidemic and pandemic influenza.[1][2][3][4][5]
"Bird flu" is a phrase similar to "Swine flu", "Dog flu", "Horse flu", or "Human flu" in that it refers to an illness caused by any of many different strains of flu viruses such that the strain in question has adapted to the host. "Avian flu" differs in being named after an entire vertebrate class with 8,800–10,200 species. All known avian flu viruses belong to the species of virus called ''Influenza A virus''. All subtypes (but not all strains of all subtypes) of Influenza A virus are adapted to birds, which is why for many purposes avian flu virus ''is'' the Influenza A virus (note that the "A" does ''not'' stand for "avian").
Adaptation is sometimes partial or multiple so a flu virus strain can be partially adapted to a species or adapted to more than one species. Flu pandemic viruses are human adapted and also bird adapted. Being adapted to one species does not mean another species can not catch it; nor does it mean it can not adapt to another species.
Genetic factors in distinguishing between "human flu viruses" and "avian flu viruses" include:
:'PB2': (RNA polymerase): Amino acid (or residue) position 627 in the PB2 protein encoded by the PB2 RNA gene. Until H5N1, all known avian influenza viruses had a Glu at position 627, while all human influenza viruses had a lysine.
:'HA': (hemagglutinin): Avian influenza HA bind alpha 2-3 sialic acid receptors while human influenza HA bind alpha 2-6 sialic acid receptors. Swine influenza viruses have the ability to bind both types of sialic acid receptors.
The HA changes have not yet occurred in any sequenced H5N1 virus - even ones from humans that died from it and the PB2 changes don't stop it from being a flu virus adapted to birds (the definition of "avian flu virus").
Pandemic flu viruses have some avian flu virus genes and usually some human flu virus genes. Both the H2N2 and H3N2 pandemic strains contained genes from avian influenza viruses. The new subtypes arose in pigs coinfected with avian and human viruses and were soon transferred to humans. Swine were considered the original "intermediate host" for influenza, because they supported reassortment of divergent subtypes. However, other hosts appear capable of similar coinfection (e.g., many poultry species), and direct transmission of avian viruses to humans is possible. The Spanish flu virus strain may have been transmitted directly from birds to humans.[6]
In spite of their pandemic connection, avian influenza viruses are noninfectious for most species. When they are infectious they are usually asymptomatic, so the carrier does not have any disease from it. Thus while infected with an avian flu virus, the animal doesn't have a "flu". Typically, when illness (called "flu") from an avian flu virus ''does'' occur, it is the result of an avian flu virus strain adapted to one species spreading to another species (usually from one bird species to another bird species). So far as is known, the most common result of this is an illness so minor as to be not worth noticing (and thus little studied). But with the domestication of chickens and turkeys, humans have created species subtypes (domesticated poultry) that can catch an avian flu virus adapted to waterfowl and have it rapidly mutate into a form that kills in days over 90% of an entire flock and spread to other flocks and kill 90% of ''them'' and can only be stopped by killing every domestic bird in the area. Until H5N1 infected humans in the 1990s, this was the only reason avian flu was considered important. Since then, avian flu viruses have been intensively studied; resulting in changes in what is believed about flu pandemics, changes in poultry farming, changes in flu vaccination research, and changes in flu pandemic planning.
H5N1 has evolved into a flu virus strain that infects more species than any previously known flu virus strain, is deadlier than any previously known flu virus strain, and continues to evolve becoming both more widespread and more deadly causing a leading expert on avian flu to publish an article titled "The world is teetering on the edge of a pandemic that could kill a large fraction of the human population" in ''American Scientist''. He called for adequate resources to fight what he sees as a major world threat to possibly billions of lives.
Since the article was written, the world community has spent billions of dollars fighting this threat with limited success.

Contents
H5N1
Illustrative examples of correct usage
Illustrative examples of imprecise usage
See also
Sources and notes
Further reading

H5N1


Main articles: H5N1, H5N1 flu

As of 2007, "avian flu" is being commonly used to refer to infection from a particular subtype of Influenza A virus, H5N1, which can cause severe illness in humans who are infected. Currently, this strain is transmitted by contact with infected birds, and has been transmitted from one person to another only in a few cases. H5N1 flu is therefore not pandemic now and is not currently capable of causing a pandemic. Only if H5N1 mutates into a form that can be readily transmitted from one person to another could it cause a pandemic.
On August 22, 2007, an Indonesian woman, 28, chicken trader was the 2nd person to die of bird flu on Bali, raising the death toll in the nation due to the disease to 84 (after 4 days of hospitalization). Tests in 2 local laboratories was positive for the H5N1 strain of the disease. 194 people — the majority of them in Indonesia died since 2003, according to the World Health Organization. [7]

Illustrative examples of correct usage


Swans can carry highly pathogenic avian H5N1 and other avian flu viruses

In technical contexts, correct usage of terms is necessary because precise distinctions are the essence of the communication.

★ "Avian influenza strains are those well adapted to birds"

★ "An outbreak of influenza A (H5N1), also known as 'avian flu' or 'bird flu,' has been reported in several countries throughout Asia."[8]

★ "Avian influenza virus usually refers to influenza A viruses found chiefly in birds, but infections can occur in humans."[9]

★ "Of the few avian influenza viruses that have crossed the species barrier to infect humans, H5N1 has caused the largest number of cases of severe disease and death in humans. Unlike normal seasonal influenza, where infection causes only mild respiratory symptoms in most people, the disease caused by H5N1 follows an unusually aggressive clinical course, with rapid deterioration and high fatality." Seasonal influenza is human flu.[10]

★ "avian influenza HA bind alpha 2-3 sialic acid receptors while human influenza HA bind alpha 2-6 sialic acid receptors. Swine influenza viruses have the ability to bind both types of sialic acid receptors."[11]

★ Sometimes a virus contains both avian adapted genes and human adapted genes. Both the H2N2 and H3N2 pandemic strains contained avian flu virus RNA segments. "While the pandemic human influenza viruses of 1957 (H2N2) and 1968 (H3N2) clearly arose through reassortment between human and avian viruses, the influenza virus causing the 'Spanish flu' in 1918 appears to be entirely derived from an avian source (Belshe 2005)."

Illustrative examples of imprecise usage


In nontechnical contexts, imprecise usage of terms is typical when discussing complex things.

★ "A 1,000 square mile quarantine zone to combat an outbreak of bird flu was lifted in Scotland today - despite the spread of a similar disease south of the border." Here "bird flu" is used to mean "Asian lineage HPAI A(H5N1) flu" (which is a bird flu) and contrasted with flu from an avian adapted strain of H7N3 (which is also a bird flu).[12]

See also


;Timeline data on avian flu:

★ Timeline data on avian flu can be found at the article on the causative agent species called ''Influenza A virus''.

★ Timeline data on the global spread of the strain that is the current pandemic concern (called Asian lineage HPAI A(H5N1)) can be found at Global spread of H5N1.

★ Timeline data on creation of a flu vaccine for H5N1 can be found at H5N1 clinical trials.
;Subtypes of the causative agent species of avian flu include:

H1N1

H1N2

H2N2

H3N2

H3N8

H5N1

H5N2

H5N3

H5N8

H5N9

H5N8

H7N1

H7N2

H7N3

H7N4

H7N7

H9N2

H10N7
;Information concerning research about it can be found at:

Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research

OIE/FAO Network of Expertise on Avian Influenza

Flu research

Flu vaccine

H5N1 genetic structure

ICEID

Influenza Genome Sequencing Project

Influenza pandemic

Cytokine storm

International Partnership on Avian and Pandemic Influenza

National Influenza Centers

Pandemic Preparedness and Response Act

Reporting disease cases

Transmission and infection of H5N1

Sources and notes


1. Large-scale sequencing of human influenza reveals the dynamic nature of viral genome evolution Nature magazine presents a summary of what has been discovered in the Influenza Genome Sequencing Project.
2. Full HTML text of Avian Influenza A (H5N1) Infection in Humans by The Writing Committee of the World Health Organization (WHO) Consultation on Human Influenza A/H5 in the September 29, 2005 New England Journal of Medicine
3. The Threat of Pandemic Influenza: Are We Ready? Workshop Summary (2005) Full text of online book by INSTITUTE OF MEDICINE OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMIES
4. Here is the tree showing evolution by antigenic drift since 2002 that created dozens of highly pathogenic varieties of the Z genotype of avian flu virus H5N1, some of which are increasingly adapted to mammals.
5. Evolutionary characterization of the six internal genes of H5N1 human influenza A virus
6. Chapter Two : Avian Influenza by Timm C. Harder and Ortrud Werner from excellent free on-line Book called ''Influenza Report 2006'' which is a medical textbook that provides a comprehensive overview of epidemic and pandemic influenza.''
7. ITH, Bird flu kills Balinese woman, raises death toll to 84
8. OSHA
9. CDC Avian Influenza (Bird Flu)
10. WHO Avian influenza frequently asked questions
11. Greninger Paper (PDF)
12. News ''Avian flu quarantine zone lifted'' published May 1 2006.

Further reading


;Official - international

★ UN United Nations


★ WHO World Health Organization



The United Nation's World Health Organization's Avian Flu Facts Sheet for 2006



Epidemic and Pandemic Alert and Response Guide to WHO's H5N1 pages



Avian Influenza Resources (updated) - tracks human cases and deaths



National Influenza Pandemic Plans



WHO Collaborating Centres and Reference Laboratories Centers, names, locations, and phone numbers


FAO Avian Influenza portal Information resources, animations, videos, photos



FAO Food and Agriculture Organisation - Bi-weekly Avian Influenza Maps - tracks animal cases and deaths



FAO Bird Flu disease card



FAO Socio-Economic impact of AI Projects, Information resources

★ OIE World Organisation for Animal Health - tracks animal cases and deaths


Official outbreak reports by country


Official outbreak reports by week


Chart of outbreaks by country
;Official - United States

PandemicFlu.Gov U.S. Government's avian flu information site

USAID U.S. Agency for International Development - Avian Influenza Response

CDC Centers for Disease Control - responsible agency for avian influenza in humans in US - Facts About Avian Influenza (Bird Flu) and Avian Influenza A (H5N1) Virus

USGS - NWHC National Wildlife Health Center - responsible agency for avian influenza in animals in US

HHS U.S. Department of Health & Human Services - Pandemic Influenza Plan
;Official - United Kingdom

Exotic Animal Disease Generic Contingency Plan — DEFRA generic contingency plan for controlling and eradicating an outbreak of an exotic animal disease. PDF hosted by BBC (a government entity).

UK Influenza Pandemic Contingency Plan — NHS (a government entity). Contingency planning for an influenza pandemic. PDF hosted by BBC
;Technical

Influenza Report 2006 Online book. Research level quality information. Highly recommended.

Avian Influenza: Prevention and Control Free online scholarly book. recommended.

Large-scale sequencing of human influenza reveals the dynamic nature of viral genome evolution Nature magazine presents a summary of what has been discovered in the Influenza Genome Sequencing Project.

Links and descriptions to abstracts and full texts This bibliography of avian influenza publications was complied through the cooperative effort of the USGS National Wildlife Health Center and the Wildlife Disease Information Node.

★ Search for research publications about H5N1: Entez PubMed

Latest publications on H5N1

★ Full HTML text of Avian Influenza A (H5N1) Infection in Humans by The Writing Committee of the World Health Organization (WHO) Consultation on Human Influenza A/H5 in the September 29, 2005 New England Journal of Medicine

★ Evolutionary "Tree of Life" for H5N1:


Here is the phylogenetic tree of the influenza virus hemagglutinin gene segment. Amino acid changes in three lineages (bird, pig, human) of the influenza virus hemagglutinin protein segment HA1.


Here is the tree showing the evolution by reassortment of H5N1 from 1999 to 2004 that created the Z genotype in 2002.


Here is the tree showing evolution by antigenic drift since 2002 that created dozens of highly pathogenic varieties of the Z genotype of avian flu virus H5N1, some of which are increasingly adapted to mammals.


WHO (PDF} contains latest Evolutionary "Tree of Life" for H5N1 article ''Antigenic and genetic characteristics of H5N1 viruses and candidate H5N1 vaccine viruses developed for potential use as pre-pandemic vaccines'' published August 18 2006

Evolutionary characterization of the six internal genes of H5N1 human influenza A virus

Genome database Page links to the complete sequence of the Influenza A virus (A/Goose/Guangdong/1/96(H5N1)) genome.
;General information

Flu Wiki

FAO's map of overlapping flyways for migratory waterfowl worldwide

Google Earth updated maps of avian flu spread in poultry and humans

"Predicting the Global Spread of Avian Influenza" - from Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. An analysis of the relative contributions of migratory birds and poultry to the international spread of H5N1

Department of Health and Human Services Pandemic Planning Update A Report from Secretary Michael O. Leavitt March 13 2006This report outlines how the 3.3 billon dollar funding is being used to help achieve HHS’s five primary objectives around Pandemic Response.

WHO Avian influenza resource (updated)

Free - Pandemic Flu Preparedness Guide

CDC Facts About Avian Influenza (Bird Flu) and Avian Influenza A (H5N1) Virus

FAO information on Avian Influenza - Latest news, Disease Card, Maps, Animations

Avian Influenza (Bird Flu): Agricultural and Wildlife Considerations

Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars (text and video)

General Source of Bird Flu Information

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