Avian Influenza is known to affect especially wild and
domestic birds as well as pigs but rare cases of human infection are updated.
Since 2004 though, more than 200 confirmed cases of the avian virus in humans
have been detected and analyzed by the World Health Organization. The infection
with the A influenza virus is thought to have been done by direct contact with
sick birds or their secretions. Scientists are still searching for the method
how low and highly pathogenic viral strains might affect humans.
Health organizations all over the world continuously monitor
human cases of avian flu outbreaks although no actual man to man transmission
of the disease has been registered. The bird flu virus represents a real danger
for humans as it is able to perform mutations by combining with human types of
Influenza; this would lead to disastrous epidemics if the disease could spread
between humans.
The first cases of bird to human transmission occurred in
Hong Kong in 1997 resulting in 6 deaths after 18 persons have been infected.
About 1.5 million birds have been destroyed to annihilate the infection source.
The H5N1 type of influenza showed no direct transmission from human to human.
In 1999 in China two more cases of infection were noted when
two children became ill though the real source has not been discovered. Both
patients recovered after the infection with the low pathogenic virus H9N2.
In the State of Virginia in 2002 one person showed
serological marks of infection, after poultry farm was contaminated with the
H7N2.
Another situation of H5N1 infestation occurred in 2003 in
Hong Kong when two members of one family became ill and one of them died. They
are believed to have contacted the virus during a visit in China but the exact
source has not been established. A second family member died of a respiratory
condition but no further testing was made.
2003 in Netherlands, several cases of infection appeared in
some poultry farms; pigs and humans were also involved in the disease. 89
workers got infected With H7N7 and showed symptoms of fever, muscle aches,
conjunctivitis and cough. One person died of respiratory distress syndrome and
complications.
In 2003 one child was found to suffer from the low
pathogenic H9N2 in Hong Kong but he recovered completely. The same year in New
York a patient with respiratory symptoms was detected after tests to suffer
from H7N2 and he safely recovered in a few weeks.
In 2004 in Canada the H7N3 virus type infected a few poultry
workers in a farm epidemics but all showed easy eye infections. H5N1 occurred
in 2004 in Vietnam and Thailand when a possible human to human transmission
appeared. Further cases of human infestation with H5N1 occurred in Cambodia,
China, Indonesia, Egypt, Iraq and Turkey in 2005 after human contact with sick
dead swans. In the same countries several other cases appeared in 2006.
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