Chattanooga Times Free Press

Bird flu: Scientists find mutations, insist threat is still low at present

- BY MIKE STOBBE

NEW YORK — A man in Chile is infected with a bird flu that has concerning mutations, but the threat to people from the virus remains low, U.S. health officials said Friday.

Past animal studies suggest the mutations could cause the virus to be more harmful or spread more easily, health officials said. But they also said there is no evidence the mutations would make it easier for it to take root in a person’s upper lungs — a developmen­t that would raise concerns about spread among people.

The mutations do not change public health officials’ assessment of the overall risk to people from the H5N1 virus, which “continues to be low,” said Vivien Dugan of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The mutations, which have appeared only in the one hospitaliz­ed patient, may have occurred after the man got sick, CDC officials said. There’s no evidence the mutated virus spread to other people, mixed with other flu viruses, or developed the ability to fight off current medicines or evade vaccines, agency officials said.

Such genetic changes have been seen in past bird flu infections.

“Neverthele­ss, it’s important to continue to look carefully at every instance of human infection,” Dugan said. “We need to remain vigilant for changes that would make these viruses more dangerous to people.”

That type of flu, called Type A H5N1, was first identified as a threat to people during a 1997 outbreak in Hong Kong, when visitors to live poultry markets caught it.

Sporadic outbreaks have followed, and more than 450 people have died in the past two decades from bird flu infections, according to the World Health Organizati­on. The vast majority of infected people got it directly from birds.

As bird flu hits other species, however, scientists fear the virus could evolve to spread more easily among people. And it has been spreading widely, to birds and animals in scores of countries.

In the U.S., it has recently been detected in wild birds in every state, as well as in commercial poultry operations and backyard flocks across the country. Since the beginning of last year, tens of millions of chickens have died of the virus or been killed to stop outbreaks from spreading, one of the reasons cited for soaring U.S. egg prices.

 ?? AP PHOTO/GUADALUPE PARDO ?? On Nov. 30, municipal workers collect dead pelicans on Santa Maria beach in Lima, Peru.
AP PHOTO/GUADALUPE PARDO On Nov. 30, municipal workers collect dead pelicans on Santa Maria beach in Lima, Peru.

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