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THAILAND [Uttaradit] - Suspected human cases of bf

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  • THAILAND [Uttaradit] - Suspected human cases of bf

    AVIAN INFLUENZA SUSPECTED AFTER TWO DINE ON DOVES
    July 23, 2006 (The Nation)

    Two cases of suspected bird flu in humans have been found in Uttaradit, one of the seven provinces declared a "red zone" by the Department of Livestock Development (DLD), a local health official said yesterday.

    A 67-year-old man and his 35-year-old son-in-law were recently admitted to Uttaradit Provincial Hospital. They had developed symptoms similar to those caused by the bird-flu virus after eating spotted doves, said Dr Boonrieng Chuchaisaengrat, head of the provincial health office.

    The men were transferred from Tha Pla District Hospital on Friday and detained at the provincial hospital, said Boonrieng.

    Blood samples were collected from the two patients and sent for testing at the Northern Medical Science Centre in Pitsanulok. The results were expected in a few days, he added.

    Panom Meesiriphan, chief of the province's livestock office, insisted that although there had been suspicious deaths of poultry in many districts, there had been no confirmed case of the H5N1 virus.

    Despite declaring seven provinces bird-flu "red zones" the DLD's director-general Yukol Limlamthong said Thailand had not been hit by an outbreak of the virus.

    "The red zone means the area has a high risk of becoming an infected area, but it does not mean that it is already infected," said Yukol.

    Besides Uttaradit, the other six red-zone provinces are Sukhothai, Pichit, Pitsanulok, Suphanburi, Nakhon Pathom and Kanchanaburi.

    When the country recorded the first cases of bird flu between January and May 2004, the DLD used the term "red zone" to define the provinces that were hit by the virus.

    The DLD's new definition of "red zone" has confused some medical practitioners. A source at the Disease Control Division said that for some doctors "red zone" meant an infected area. "Medical doctors believe the H5N1 virus has already arrived in Thailand, but no one wants to confirm it," said the source, who asked not to be named.

    On Friday a leading virologist from Siriraj Hospital, Professor Prasert Thongcharoen, expressed doubt about the accuracy of official reports on bird flu. He said that in his experience when livestock officials said "no" it meant "yes".

    Source: www.nationmultimedia.com/2006/07/23/national/national_30009355.php

  • #2
    Re: THAILAND - Suspected human cases of bf in Uttaradit

    Excellent reference thread


    http://www.flutrackers.com/forum/showthread.php?t=7678

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: THAILAND - Suspected human cases of bf in Uttaradit

      UTTARADIT, along with PHICHIT, is one of the seven provinces declared a bird flu "red zone".

      ***

      WILDFOWL HUNTER, SON-IN-LAW SUSPECTED BIRD FLU CASES IN UTTARADIT
      July 23, 2006 (TNA)

      Uttaradit -- A hunter in a rural area of Thailand's northern Uttaradit province and a man who feasted on wildfowl with him are in hospital here, suspected of having contracted bird flu.

      Medical authorities at Uttaradit Provincial Hospital admiited both men for tests as the two are suspected of having contracted avian influenza.

      Provincial Chief Medical Officer Dr. Boonriang Chuchaisaengrat said further test results from a medical science laboratory in Phitsanulok by Monday will be able to establish whether a 67-year-old hunter and
      his 35-year old son-in-law from Ruamjit subdistrict of Thapla district contracted bird flu or not.

      The two were admitted to hospital for flu-like symptoms. Both had contact with a bird from the wild, as the father-in-law, a hunter, shot an unidentified species of wild bird and cooked it to share with his son-in-law. Afterwards both fell ill.

      Source: http://etna.mcot.net/query.php?nid=23541

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      • #4
        Re: THAILAND - Suspected human cases of bf in Uttaradit

        This makes Uttaradit the sixth province to be reporting suspected human cases of the red alert disease this month after Sukhothia, Phichit, Nakhon Sawan, Uthai Thani, and Nakhon Ratchasima..

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        • #5
          Re: THAILAND - Suspected human cases of bf in Uttaradit

          things seem to be heating up again.

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          • #6
            Streptopelia chinensis

            Originally posted by Lyro
            They had developed symptoms similar to those caused by the bird-flu virus after eating spotted doves....
            Streptopelia chinensis:



            Migratory bird? Not a migratory bird?
            ...when you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth. - Sherlock Holmes

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            • #7
              Re: THAILAND - Suspected human cases of bf in Uttaradit

              This makes Uttaradit the sixth province to be reporting suspected human cases of the red alert disease this month after Sukhothia, Phichit, Nakhon Sawan, Uthai Thani, and Nakhon Ratchasima..
              do you happen to have info as to the order and time line of towns affected? As I posted on curevents last night, i still think it suspicious that the towns listed are following one another down the rail lines. uttaradit is, so far, the last one down the rail line of those that are listed. john barry's statement on the 1918 pandemic about the human cases following rail lines across the country was my first thought. thanks ~T

              link to rail map:
              Last edited by sharon sanders; May 4, 2024, 04:23 PM.

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              • #8
                Re: THAILAND - Suspected human cases of bf in Uttaradit

                This makes Uttaradit the sixth province to be reporting suspected human cases of the red alert disease this month after Sukhothia, Phichit, Nakhon Sawan, Uthai Thani, and Nakhon Ratchasima..
                Have any one these case been conformed?
                Last edited by sharon sanders; May 4, 2024, 04:23 PM.

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                • #9
                  Re: THAILAND - Suspected human cases of bf in Uttaradit

                  No, Dr. Niman, none of these suspected cases have been confirmed. To my knowledge, none of them have died either. tsalagiT, I will post a human timeline per your request later, as we get more info on the situation there. Right now, info is very fragmentary. All they say, apart from the "officially suspected" cases, is that they have scores of people with high fever in the central counties-that they're very worried about.

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                  • #10
                    Re: THAILAND - Suspected human cases of bf in Uttaradit

                    Two suspected cases yesterday in Uttaradit, and 3 suspected cases today in Phichit. Not looking good here folks......

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      BF in countries neighbouring Thailand !

                      http://etna.mcot.net/query.php?nid=23580
                      Thailand bans poultry imports to prevent new bird flu outbreak
                      BANGKOK, July 24 (TNA) - Thailand has banned poultry imports from neighbouring countries to prevent a new outbreak of bird flu.

                      Agriculture and Cooperatives Minister Khunying Sudarat Keyuraphan said on Monday that the ministry had ordered a total ban on importing poultry from any neighbouring country to prevent the outbreak of bird flu.


                      The ban was imposed after some neighbouring countries sent dead fowl samples for laboratory tests in Thailand and some samples tested positive for the virus.

                      Khunying Sudarat affirmed that no outbreak had been reported in areas where many fowls died of unknown causes, and some weakened and became vulnerable to bird flu virus.

                      The minister, however, admitted the presence of bird flu after an absence of nearly a year.

                      Khunying Sudarat announced that tests conducted on samples of dead fighting cocks and domestic fowls in Bangmoonnak District of the northern Phichit Province were positive.

                      The laboratory technicians have not yet been able to identify which strain it is.

                      The fighting cocks and domestic fowl sickened and died.

                      The lab test showed that they died of bird flu after Thailand had not confirmed the presence of avain influenza for 254 days.

                      The Department of Livestock Development culled the remaining 260 chickens at the site and banned the movement of poultry within a 10-kilometre radius.

                      Until now, there has been no report of bird flu patients in the area where the chickens died.

                      Avian influenza outbreaks occurred in 14 locations in Phichit in 2004 and three locations last year.

                      Meanwhile, Thailand's public health establishment breathed a collective sigh of relief Monday as laboatory tests confirmed that no new cases of H5N1 bird flu virus has been transmitted to humans in recent months.

                      No deaths have occurred since February last year and no new human bird flu cases have been found in Thailand over the past year and a half, a senior Public Health Ministry official confirmed here Monday.

                      Director-General of the Department of Disease Control Dr. Thawat Suntrajarn said, according to laboratory tests, patients who were previously reported to have bird flu-like symtoms in many provinces had all been proven to be bird-flu free.

                      "The patients, including two men in Phichit, were all found not having contracted avian flu, but a strain of human influenza," he told journalists.

                      Dr. Thawat said, however, that more public health workers would be sent to Phichit to help control the situation following an official report from the Department of Livestock Development that chickens in Bangmoonnak District were found to have contracted the H5N1 virus. (TNA)--E009, E004, E002

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                      • #12
                        Re: THAILAND - Suspected human cases of bf in Uttaradit

                        So, it's finally gradually being confirmed. It is in at least 50 provinces of the country, in the neighboring countries, it is infecting people in a very widespread manner, it is basically a terrible situation.

                        If you're interested in my opinion of the origin of it, I think it most likely to be a combination (or recombination) of strains flying up from the Indonesian province of northern Sumatra up the Malaysian peninsula--which has had it's fair share of suspected human (and confirmed poultry) infections. The strains arriving from Indonesia therefore could be quite different from those we have seen before--it will be very interesting to see what they are. They most likely also possess the Indonesian ability to infect people more easily than other strains--which is why the situation in Thailand is so bad. The other source of widespread bird flu is Myanmar. Myanmar had confirmed bird flu in the northern half in March. The southern half, which is very close to provinces like Phichit, had numerous rumored outbreaks mentioned briefly in news reports but never substantiated. Then there was a report saying that there were over 100 outbreaks throughout the country. Then there was silence--except that every few days the country begs the world for bird flu assistance though claiming that it's problems are over. Ever since, there have been pockets of Myanmar with many dying or sick children blamed on dengue. I suspect that the outbreaks in Myanmar have spread across the border into Thailand and the other neighboring countries (which Thailand is blocking imports from after testing their birds--which means basically Laos and Cambodia--because they're the only other poor countries that can't test much themselves) and that the origin of those Myanmar outbreaks may have been Chilika Lake in eastern India. Chilika Lake likely inherited birds from Qinghai Lake, then had a massive die-off (blamed on a random bacteria), and then started spreading birds back into east Asia.

                        http://www.thestatesman.net/page.new...ss=1&id=112917
                        Infection caused death of Chilka birds

                        Press Trust of India
                        Mumbai, April 13: Scientific tests have confirmed that bacterial infection was the reason for the death of more than 2,000 migratory birds since January at Nalabana bird sanctuary in the Chilika Lake, according to Bombay Natural History Society ornithologists.
                        ?In January, Nalabana Bird Sancutuary witnessed the death of 2,000 migratory birds of 30 species and the scientists have discovered that bacterial infection was the reason for the deaths and not poisoning,? Dr S Balachandran of BNHS said here today.
                        ?Today, 13 birds were found dead,? Dr Balachandran added.
                        In January, the birds were dying at the rate of 40 50 per day while in February, and March the death count came down drastically.
                        However, on 7 April about eight birds of five species were found dead and five sick birds were spotted unable to fly, BNHS team, which is monitoring these migratory birds, said in a communication today.
                        Various laboratories, including that of West Bengal?s Government Institute of Animal Health and Veterinary Biologicals Research and Training, confirmed the infection due to the bacteria ? Pasteurella haemolytica, Dr Balachandran said.
                        Indian Veterinary Research Institute, Izat Nagar, Uttar Pradesh and Bhubaneswar Forensic laboratory also confirmed the bacterial infection and pathological examinations showed generalised septicemia, he said.
                        Nalabana sanctuary is an island in Chilika lake (19 square km) and 95 per cent of the birds on the island are migratory, Dr Balachandran said adding that the unique feature of the island is that it is in submerged condition throughout the year except from November to April.

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