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PANDEMIC ALERT LEVEL
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Tracking the next pandemic: Avian Flu Talk

"Marburg Fever a Global Threat"

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Albert View Drop Down
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    Posted: August 22 2007 at 4:22pm
Originally posted by Hotair Hotair wrote:

It could take 1 catatrophic event to unite everyone just to survive.
 
Makes sense.. 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Hotair Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 22 2007 at 4:13pm
Or a huge meteorite hitting the earth. I was just talking at lunch with my friend today about divisions,religuos and otherwise that afffect us on earth. It could take 1 catatrophic event to unite everyone just to survive.
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Originally posted by jdljr1 jdljr1 wrote:

     Thanks, Boondocker. A few of us in this group have been warning for some time now that the Great Pandemic when it comes need not be an influenza at all. And there is a theory that the Black Death was not bubonic plague, but an airborne hemorragic fever virus, though this is a minority theory. John L.
 
I completely agree that our expectations are seldom realized. It's like watching the weather report, really. Although I do know one thing. There are around 6 Billion of us living on only 1/4 of the Earth's surface and highly congested. A cull by nature is inevitable, whether by HIV, Marburg, Influenza, or some previously overlooked and newly evolving strain of something ludicrous like genital herpes. Life is stranger than fiction.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote jdljr1 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 22 2007 at 11:45am
     Thanks, Boondocker. A few of us in this group have been warning for some time now that the Great Pandemic when it comes need not be an influenza at all. And there is a theory that the Black Death was not bubonic plague, but an airborne hemorragic fever virus, though this is a minority theory. John L.
John L
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http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/80376.php
 
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Marburg Fever A Global Threat, Bats Could be Involved

22 Aug 2007   < ="return printPage()" = value="Click to Print">

Marburg hemorrhagic fever, a serious and often fatal disease that produces sudden bleeding and high fever, is caused by a virus that is related to the one that causes Ebola hemorrhagic fever. The World Health Organization says the virus poses a threat to global public health and in the meantime scientists think bats could be spreading the virus.

Uganda is the latest African country to be hit by outbreaks of the Marburg virus. Results of laboratory tests on blood samples from the Ugandan capital Kampala and Kamwenge, in the west of the country, taken from a mine worker who died from the disease in July and one of his close contacts during his illness, have come back positive for the Marburg virus.

Other people who came into contact with the miner are being kept under observation but are not thought to be infected.

The tests were carried out by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, in Atlanta, USA.

According to the World Health Organization (WHO) an international team of experts from the WHO, CDC, Médecins sans Frontières , Uganda Virus Research Institute (UVRI), African Field Epidemiology Network (AFENET) and local non governmental organizations (NGOs) are helping the Ugandan Health Ministry to increase surveillance, trace contact, control infection, manage logistics and other procedures necessary to contain the oubreak successfully.

US and Ugandan scientists are also carrying out ecological studies of the mines and surrounding area to trace the hosts and methods by which the virus is transmitted in the natural environment.

One possibility is bats. About 5 million bats live near the mine where the infected miner worked. Scientists from the CDC, the WHO and National Institute of Communicable Diseases in South Africa have also been searching lead and gold mines in the area.

Meanwhile in the Democratic Republic of Congo (next to Uganda), and its neighbour, Gabon, US and Gabonese scientists have captured over 1,000 bats in caves and found that some of them were infected with the Marburg virus. The infected bats are from one species of fruit bat that is common across sub-Saharan Africa and is called Rousettus aegypticus.

According to the WHO, Marburg and Ebola are the "most virulent pathogens known to infect humans". Both are rare, but when outbreaks occur the fatality rate is very high, 80 and 90 per cent in some cases.

An outbreak of Marburg hemorrhagic fever in Angola in 2004, killed around 300 people. The epicentre of the outbreak was Uige Province and the source was never found.

Finding the infected fruit bats is a big step toward understanding how the virus behaves in the wild.

Early symptoms of Marburg hemorrhagic fever include stomach ache, diarrhea and vomiting, followed by loss of blood. An infected human can pass it to another through blood or bodily fluids. At present there is no antidote and infected people have to be kept in strict isolation to contain the outbreak.
 
Wouldn't it be ironic if the H5N1 infected birds and Marburg bats mingled and swapped something catastrophic for us all? CDC workers in the field issued not only with PPE and filtered air units, but with tennis rackets.
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