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Vaccine Effective Against Avian Flu

Posted by Zonk on Fri Jan 27, 2006 12:52 PM
from the ahh-science-is-there-anything-you-can't-do? dept.
FiReaNGeL writes "Researchers announced they have genetically engineered an avian flu vaccine from the critical components of the deadly H5N1 virus that completely protected mice and chickens from infection. This virus has thus far killed 80 people, devastated bird populations in Southeast Asia and Europe and caused for billions in damage through the world." Here's hoping it works on us, too.
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  • Virus Fund, let's do it. (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Ckwop (707653) * <Simon.Johnson@gmail.com> on Friday January 27 2006, @12:54PM (#14580481) Homepage

    Why vacinate just the chickens? While it would have to mutate in order to pass between humans it seems plausible (to a laymen in this field) that a vacine that protects against bird-flu might also offer some protection against the mutent.

    This break-through is just what we've needed: A fast way to make a lot of flu vaccines. The question now is, do we now have enough time to take a side swipe at bird-flu before it makes the transition to a human form? At any rate, even if it does make the transition, I do believe this would be the last major flu pandemic.

    The next time people will not be so complacent. The billions the first-world nations have just pledged to fight Avian Flu will be pledged much more quickly. In fact, I think the UN will have a fund to tackle these kinds of nightmares and the money will be released immediately on discovery of a virus that is deadly to humans. Couple this with the fact we'll have better ways to sythentise vaccines. These new methods will hopefully deliver a suitable product on the order of days rather than months.

    It makes sense for us to set-up such a fund. For a start, the economic loss caused by bird flu will run in to trillions. So let's do it! Whether you're black or white, Palestinian or Israeli, Christian or Muslim this virus effects us all equally. Surely, even the most hardened tax-cutting Republican in the universe will agree that it's sensible to stump up money for this fund.

    Simon

    • For a start, the economic loss caused by bird flu will run in to trillions.

      Really? Where'd you get that information? Anyways, for the rest of your post I agree with you completely.
    • Great. Another "fund" (a.k.a. more taxation/debt) to combat something that may never come to pass. We can't even pay for all the government we got now. Why go looking for more things to throw money at? Given China's population density, along with their

    • Only 80 deaths. That is not statisticaly signifigant in any size population.

      Not only do we not need an Avian Flu specific fund, the money already dedicated to the purpose was too much. There are litteraly thousands of more deadly illnesses out there, cu

      • Re:Virus Fund, let's do it. (Score:5, Interesting)

        by (negative video) (792072) <me&teco-xaco,com> on Friday January 27 2006, @03:18PM (#14582426)
        Only 80 deaths. That is not statisticaly signifigant in any size population.
        The significance is that the manner of death was wholly unexpected. Young, strong people virtually never die from sudden lung inflammation. Tuberculosis, yes. Bacterial pneumonia, yes. But their own immune system just suddenly deciding to burn their lungs to the ground? Never happens.
        There are litteraly thousands of more deadly illnesses out there, currently active, and currently transmitible between humans.
        True, but most of them are either difficult to transmit (HIV, hepatitis A, rabies), are virulent and have obvious symptoms so that quarantine can be effective (ebola), or produce lasting immunity (bacterial meningitis, cholera).

        Influenza, however, combines most of the worst things into a single virus. It is an RNA virus, so it mutates rapidly. It has a tiny genome, providing a minimal target for the adaptive immune system. It spreads easily through the air, allowing less-ill carriers to spread it widely (the Tyhoid Mary effect). It starts out by pretending to be the common cold, so carriers ignore it and continue to expose the community. Very few disease organisms combine these factors, and most of those that do (measles, smallpox, diptheria) are mercifully vulnerable to vaccines.

        Why should we spend billions on this one virus that has thus for only shown the potential for danger?
        Because the potential is real and quantified, not blindy extrapolated from fears. Influenza does regularly sweep across the world, leaving death and destruction in its wake. It does regularly kill people even in wealthy countries. The 1918 pandemic did send millions of strong, healthy adults to their deaths.

        Certain strains are right now killing strong, healthy adults. Certain other strains do right now have the molecular factors for extreme transmissibility. It is an absolute guarantee that those strains will fuse in a single infected person, producing a new strain that has both virulence and transmissibility. When that happens, we will have another 1918-style pandemic on our hands.

        And unless we can rapidly turn-around production of a strong vaccine, that pandemic will strike down millions of us. On the basis of missed work days alone, it makes sense to pour billions of dollars into preventing a flu pandemic.

        [ Parent ]
        • Isn't there a so-called chicken cancer virus that is also RNA-based and has been known about for over a century without spreading to humans?

          Biology is not my field, but the thing that bothers me is that the virus has to mutate before it will readily transf
          • Biology is not my field, but the thing that bothers me is that the virus has to mutate before it will readily transfer between humans.
            Not necessarily. What can happen is that avian and human flu can infect one host at the same time. Even by viral stand
              • If a combination virus includes an avian virulence factor and a human transmissibility factor, you get the Martian Death Flu.
                Okay. That still sounds like a mutation to me.
                It's more of a new hybrid species, like mules and triticale.

                I still haven't
                • It's more of a new hybrid species, like mules and triticale.

                  Mules don't replicate. I don't think the analogy works.

                  Just spend a few seconds thinking through the math. A bad influenza pandemic would kill around 1% of young, healthy people (1918 flu ki

      • One wonders what you would have said about the Spanish flu which became pandemic and killed millions worldwide. Before it mutated to become highly transmissible and took off, it also only showed "the potential for danger". Afterward, of course, it moved fa
    • At any rate, even if it does make the transition, I do believe this would be the last major flu pandemic. The next time people will not be so complacent. The billions the first-world nations have just pledged to fight Avian Flu will be pledged much more q
  • ...a few months ago and here it is why it's stupid.

    This is the animal-vaccine they are talking about. It offers next to nothing protection from a yet non-existant human to human spreading version of avian flu.

    Btw, Hungary's one of the leading vaccine d
  • 1918 Flu was Bird Flu (Score:4, Interesting)

    by DigitalRaptor (815681) on Friday January 27 2006, @01:18PM (#14580800) Homepage
    Recently researchers were able to recreate the 1918 flu that killed 100 million around the world, and what they found was a little alarming. The 1918 flu jumped directly from birds to humans and became transmissable between humans.

    If the current bird flu manages that, there will be an 18 month siege on the economy the likes of which our generations have never seen as borders are shut down and vital supply chains are broken.

    Hopefully this new advance offers some hope. Who knows if a pandemic will happen (well, one will happen without a doubt because they have on average every 30 years for the last 300, but we just don't know if this bird flu is the next one), it's just a roll of the dice everytime a human gets infected whether it will mutate.

    • Re:1918 Flu was Bird Flu (Score:3, Interesting)

      If the current bird flu manages that, there will be an 18 month siege on the economy the likes of which our generations have never seen as borders are shut down and vital supply chains are broken.

      It would also mean, computer technology, telecomutting, and
      • Re:1918 Flu was Bird Flu (Score:4, Insightful)

        by DigitalRaptor (815681) on Friday January 27 2006, @02:40PM (#14581998) Homepage
        The problem is, what happens when the power goes out because everyone who works at the powerplant is dead, infected, taking care of sick family, or unable / unwilling to come to work?

        Same with the ISP, the hospital (which has no medicine anyway), the grocery store (which has no food anyway), the gas station (which has no gas or goodies to sell anyway).

        People don't realize how much our society relies on JIT, Just In Time delivery. Most stores have less than a week of food on hand and it is constantly replenished. Most gas stations have less than a week of gas onhand. Most hospitals have less than a few weeks medicine on hand.

        If the bird flu becomes human to human transmissible, it won't be pretty, and we won't be sitting at home surfing the `net with a Starbucks. Hopefully we'll have food, water, and electricity.

        [ Parent ]
        • The problem is, what happens when the power goes out because everyone who works at the powerplant is dead, infected, taking care of sick family, or unable / unwilling to come to work?

          Same with the ISP, the hospital (which has no medicine anyway), the groce
  • by mmell (832646) <mike.mell@sbcglobal.net> on Friday January 27 2006, @01:38PM (#14581073)
    The research described in TFA could have repercussions for immunization and vaccination programs worldwide. That the researchers are concentrating on the H5N1 avian flu virus is predictable given the recent concerns about the potential for a lethal pandemic, but the research is applicable to a broad variety of virii such as the multiple influenza strains, which annually result in literally thousands of deaths worldwide, in part due to the lengthy and complex process involved in isolating, identifying, characterizing and controlling the virus particles involved.

    We're dealing with a family of virii which mutates with frightening rapidity; speeding up the ability to respond to these mutations strikes me as an incredible advance which will ultimately save thousands of lives per year (assuming, of course, that this research is verifiable).

  • Seriously, why are we talking about this as if it's dangerous to humans? The blurb states that this virus has killed 80 people so far. Regular old influeza kills 250,000 to 500,000 per year. I know there is the risk of it spreading and mutating and ca
    • Avian flu is now endemic amongst birds in South Asia, and was reportedly suspected to be endemic amongst birds in Turkey (which I still find bitterly ironic)

      It may have only killed 80 people so far, but thats over 50% of the 150 or so people that have be
    • Regular influenza has the potential to kill individuals whose immune system is weak. Avian influenza kills individuals with strong, healthy immune systems. Big difference. People who say "I have a strong immune system, Avian Flu won't affect me" are cluele

  • Making the vaccine is just the first step. Manufacturing ramp-ups and other time delays mean that it will still probably be at least two or three years before this vaccine is actually in use.

    Of course, it will likely be in us
  • A lot of folks out there, particularly in the United States, believe that:

    • Genetic engineering is evil.
    • Scientists, and especially biologists, are atheistic minions of Satan out to destroy True Christianity (tm)
    • The End Times (tm) are upon us, and God wil
    • I'm not going to dispute all that, but I'd give the "common folk" a little more credit. While they might have problems with the flourescent pigs mentioned on Slashdot recently, the production of vaccines isn't all that strange. It has long been common to
    • by exi1ed0ne (647852) <(exile) (at) (pessimists.net)> on Friday January 27 2006, @01:03PM (#14580594) Homepage

      In the dusty recesses of my memory, I seem to recall some experimentation where they sprayed benign bacteria on chickens. The theory goes that the competition for resources and the ample supply of non-harmful bacteria would reduce the sustainable population of harmful bacteria.

      I find it interesting that being too clean of all bacteria can actually have harmful effects. We're really colony organisms after all. I wondered whatever happened with it?

      [ Parent ]
    • I don't think the problem is in eating chicken pumped full of antibiotics (the cooking will destroy them,) but rather that it creates a population perfectly suited for breeding antibiotic resistant strains of disease.

      For example now we're starting to see s