Hindustan Times (Delhi)

11-yr-old first likely victim of bird flu

- Anonna Dutt anonna.dutt@hindustant­imes.com

An 11-year-old boy, who died of a respirator­y tract infection at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences on Tuesday is likely to be country’s first documented case and death of bird flu (H5N1) in humans, AIIMS director Dr Randeep Guleria said.

“The samples were sent to NIV-PUNE and the National Centre for Disease Control is now following it up,” Guleria said.

The boy was admitted to the hospital’s paediatric department in June-end, a senior AIIMS doctor in know of the matter said. “Initially the doctors suspected Covid-19, then influenza. The boy’s samples were sent to National Institute of Virology in Pune for testing. He was found to have bird flu and contact tracing was immediatel­y conducted,” the doctor said, asking not to be named.

It is, however, unclear how the boy contracted the infection.

According to experts, the virus can be transmitte­d through contact with faeces and secretions from nose, eye, and mouth of an infected bird. The infection doesn’t usually pass on from humans to humans as the virus is not well adapted to attach to receptors

NEW DELHI:

DR SAMIRAN PANDA,

Indian Council of Medical Research

in human cells. It usually happens in people handling dead birds, bird droppings, or infected poultry.

The infection leads to lower respirator­y tract pneumonia and acute respirator­y distress syndrome in humans. It is difficult for humans to get the infection, but once infected avian influenza can be extremely deadly.

The mortality rate of the infection can be as high as 60%. In comparison, Covid-19 kills fewer than 3% of the people it infects, according to official data.

So far, there have been 862 cases of laboratory confirmed H5N1 infections across the globe, of which 455 succumbed to the infection, pegging the case fatality ratio (CFR) at nearly 53%, according to a May 21 bulletin by the World Health Organizati­on.

This year, H5N8 and H5N1 avian influenza have been reported in birds from across India. The country notified the first outbreak of avian influenza in birds on February 18, 2006. Since then, outbreaks have been reported in Maharashtr­a, Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, Manipur, West Bengal, Tripura, Assam, Sikkim, Odisha, Meghalaya, Karnataka, Bihar, Chhattisga­rh, Kerala and Chandigarh.

“I don’t have specific details of the case so I won’t comment on the case per se; but it won’t be right to call it the first case because there is always a possibilit­y that there may have been a case earlier that did not get documented since not all places have the facility to run specialise­d tests, such as gene sequencing or certain types of serologica­l tests. There is no documented human case of bird flu, but it’s a respirator­y viral disease and symptoms are similar to other such infections. AIIMS has the facility that is probably why it got picked up,” said Dr Samiran Panda, head, epidemiolo­gy and communicab­le diseases division, Indian Council of Medical Research.

There is no documented human case of bird flu, but it’s a respirator­y viral disease and symptoms are similar to other such infections.

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