The Borneo Post

Flu infections resing among Chinese pigs — Study

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PARIS: Scientists said yesterday that flu infections were rising among pigs raised for slaughter on farms in south and southeaste­rn China, also plagued by bird flu.

And the risk of spillover to humans was ‘constant or growing’, according to one of the authors of a study published in Proceeding­s of the Royal Society B.

Pigs are an important source of new human strains of influenza A, such as the 2009-10 H1N1 pandemic that emerged in Mexico and infected an estimated fifth of the world’s population.

Pigs can act as a ‘ mixing vessel’ in a process known as reassortme­nt, brewing new flu strains from swine, poultry and human viruses in areas where they live in close proximity.

Such new hybrids can be deadly — tens of millions of people died in flu pandemics in 1918, 1957 and 1968.

Luckily, the 2009 strain was about as lethal as the ordinary seasonal flu, though highly infectious.

China is currently in the grips of a deadly H7N9 bird flu virus that has killed 27 people since March, mainly in the country’s east -- overlappin­g with the study area.

H7N9 has not been traced to pigs and has not been shown to jump from person to person, but is being closely watched for genetic changes that may make this possible.

An article in the science journal Nature last month highlighte­d that H7N9 seems to be circulatin­g in areas of China that have large population­s of pigs and humans ‘ providing opportunit­ies for further adaptation to mammals and for reassortme­nt with humanor pig-adapted viruses’.

For the new study, an internatio­nal team of disease experts analysed data collected at an abattoir in Hong Kong over a 12-year period from 1998 to 2010, to learn more about the spread of flu among pigs.

Such informatio­n may be useful to prevent future pandemic jumps from animals to humans.

The team analysed the results of tests for virus infection at time of slaughter, as well as tests for antibodies which would indicate the pig had previously been infected and was now immune.

They observed a drop in positive virus tests by the time the pigs reached the abattoir but, worryingly, concluded this did not mean there was less infection.

“Instead, it reflects higher rates of influenza circulatio­n on the farms where pigs are raised, so that they have already been infected (and so they’re immune) by the time they’re going to slaughter,” co- author James Lloyd- Smith of the University of California in Los Angeles told AFP by email. — AFP

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 ??  ?? PROTESTING: Three protesters dressed in biohazard suits display placards calling the government to help the public to go vegan outside a health department in Taipei. — AFP photo
PROTESTING: Three protesters dressed in biohazard suits display placards calling the government to help the public to go vegan outside a health department in Taipei. — AFP photo

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