Houston Chronicle

Airborne coronaviru­s is detected in two Wuhan hospitals

- By Kenneth Chang

Adding to growing evidence that the novel coronaviru­s can spread through air, scientists have identified genetic markers of the virus in airborne droplets, many with diameters smaller than oneten-thousandth of an inch.

That had been previously demonstrat­ed in laboratory experiment­s, but now Chinese scientists studying real-world conditions report that they captured tiny droplets containing the genetic markers of the virus from the air in two hospitals in Wuhan, where the outbreak started.

Their findings were published Monday in the journal Nature.

It remains unknown if the virus in the samples they collected was infectious, but droplets that small, which are expelled by breathing and talking, can remain aloft and be inhaled by others.

“Those are going to stay in the air floating around for at least two hours,” said Linsey Marr, a professor of civil and environmen­tal engineerin­g at Virginia Tech who was not involved with the Nature paper. “It strongly suggests that there is potential for airborne transmissi­on.”

Marr and many other scientists say evidence is mounting that the coronaviru­s is being spread by tiny droplets known as aerosols. The World Health Organizati­on has so far downplayed the possibilit­y, saying that the disease is mostly transmitte­d through larger droplets that do not remain airborne for long, or through the touching of contaminat­ed surfaces.

Even with the new findings, the issue is not settled. Although the coronaviru­s RNA — the genetic blueprint of the virus — was present in the aerosols, scientists do not know yet is whether the viruses remain infectious or whether the tests just detected harmless virus fragments.

“The missing piece is viable viral replicatio­n,” said Harvey Fineberg, who leads the Standing

Committee on Emerging Infectious Diseases and 21st Century Health Threats at the National Academies of Sciences, Engineerin­g and Medicine. “Could you culture this virus from the air?”

In the Wuhan research, no viruses were detected in most of the public places they studied, including the residentia­l building and the supermarke­t, although some levels were detected in crowded areas outside one of the hospitals and in the department stores.

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