The Free Press Journal

Why you need to be beware of dust in times of pandemic

According to a study, not just expiratory droplets, but airborne viruses can also spread through dust, fibres and other microscopi­c particles

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Influenza viruses can spread through the air on dust, fibres and other microscopi­c particles, and not just expiratory droplets, according to a study published on Tuesday that has implicatio­ns for the novel coronaviru­s transmissi­on.

“It’s really shocking to most virologist­s and epidemiolo­gists that airborne dust, rather than expiratory droplets, can carry influenza virus capable of infecting animals,” said Professor William Ristenpart from the University of California, Davis in the US.

“The implicit assumption is always that airborne transmissi­on occurs because of respirator­y droplets emitted by coughing, sneezing, or talking,” Ristenpart said.

The researcher­s, including those from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mt. Sinai, noted that transmissi­on via dust opens up whole new areas of investigat­ion, and has profound implicatio­ns for how we interpret laboratory experiment­s as well as epidemiolo­gical investigat­ions of outbreaks.

Influenza virus is thought to spread by several different routes, including in droplets exhaled from the respirator­y tract or on secondary objects such as door handles or used tissues, the researcher­s wrote in the journal Nature Communicat­ions.

These secondary objects are called fomites, yet little is known about which routes are the most important, they noted. The answer may be different for different strains of influenza virus or for other respirator­y viruses, including coronaviru­ses such as SARS-CoV2, according to the researcher­s.

In the new study, the researcher­s looked at whether tiny, non-respirator­y particles they call “aerosolise­d fomites” could carry influenza virus between guinea pigs.

Using an automated particle sizer to count airborne particles, they found that uninfected guinea pigs give off spikes of up to 1,000 particles per second as they move around the cage.

Particles given off by the animals’ breathing were at a constant, much lower rate, according to the researcher­s. Immune guinea pigs with influenza virus painted on their fur could transmit the virus through the air to other, susceptibl­e guinea pigs, showing that the virus did not have to come directly from the respirator­y tract to be infectious, they said.

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