Saudi
Arabia tackles MERS virus, still hunting source
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[November 21, 2014]
By Kate Kelland
LONDON, Nov 21 (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia has
not yet traced the source of a mysterious camel virus, leaving many
questions about a disease that has killed 346 people in the Kingdom.
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The lack of scientific evidence about how camels contract the virus,
which causes an often fatal illness called Middle East Respiratory
Syndrome (MERS) in people, echoes wider concerns about the threat
posed to human health by animal-borne pathogens, including the Ebola
virus.
There is no cure or vaccine for MERS -- a severe respiratory disease
which causes cough, fever, breathing problems and can lead to
pneumonia and kidney failure.
Yet studies of both camels and people infected with MERS in Saudi
Arabia have given preliminary results that are helping authorities
curb the disease's spread, according to the scientist overseeing the
work.
"Coming into close contact with the nasal secretions of camels is a
major risk factor," said Tariq Madani, head of the scientific
advisory board of the Saudi health ministry command and control
center (CCC) set up in June to handle the outbreak.
"The main transmission is actually human to human," he told Reuters
in a telephone interview.
MERS was first identified in humans in 2012 and is caused by a
coronavirus from the same viral family as the one that caused a
deadly outbreak of SARS in China in 2003. Some 808 people in Saudi
Arabia are known to have been infected with it since it was
discovered, and 346 of them have died.
The World Health Organization and leading global health specialists
have criticized Saudi Arabia for failing to properly investigate the
causes of MERS.
Critics said Saudi delays contributed to the virus taking hold and
spreading via travelers to some 20 countries around the world.
Madani, who was appointed after the former Saudi health minister and
his deputy lost their jobs amid discontent about their handling of
the outbreak, said analysis showed most people were infected in
hospitals.
"We found out that 97 percent of the cases were healthcare
associated," he said. "And 3 percent of them were primary cases who
probably acquired the infection from contact with camels."
Tighter infection controls in hospitals have contributed to a
significant drop in cases recently, but he warned sporadic primary
cases will still pop up.
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Tests of nasal and rectal swabs from camel imports arriving from the
Horn of Africa -- the source of the majority of camels traded and
farmed in Saudi -- found no traces of the MERS virus, Madani said,
with 71 animals tested so far.
"Until now the camels we have examined have proven to be negative --
and this is really very unexpected," he said.
Asked whether this suggested the camels were being infected within
Saudi Arabia's borders, Madani said it was too early to reach
conclusions, but said tests on imported camels will continue
alongside studies of wild animals such as bats and monkeys that may
also be harboring the virus.
Meanwhile, studies of 12 camels with which MERS patients had had
contact showed six had the virus circulating in their noses, but
tests of their milk and urine were virus-free -- suggesting the risk
to humans from drinking camel milk is far lower than from direct
contact with nasal secretions.
Another study found that among a group of 36 workers in a camel
slaughterhouse, 58 percent had MERS antibodies -- indicating they
had been infected with it at some point.
"None of them recalls having a severe infection or pneumonia,"
Madani said. "And this indicates that you get some sort of immunity
as a result of repeated exposure to camels and the virus."
(Editing by Anna Willard)
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