Person with bird flu died in Mexico, WHO says
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[June 06, 2024]
By Julie Steenhuysen and Adriana Barrera
(Reuters) -A person with prior health complications who had contracted
bird flu died in Mexico in April and the source of exposure to the virus
was unknown, the World Health Organization said on Wednesday.
WHO said the current risk of bird flu virus to the general population is
low.
The 59-year-old resident of the State of Mexico had been hospitalized in
Mexico City and died on April 24 after developing a fever, shortness of
breath, diarrhea, nausea and general discomfort, WHO said.
"Although the source of exposure to the virus in this case is currently
unknown, A(H5N2) viruses have been reported in poultry in Mexico," WHO
said in a statement.
It was the first laboratory-confirmed human case of infection with an
influenza A(H5N2) virus globally and the first avian H5 virus reported
in a person in Mexico, according to the WHO.
Scientists said the case is unrelated to the outbreak of H5N1 bird flu
in the United States that has so far infected three dairy farm workers.
Mexico's Health Ministry also said in a statement the source of
infection had not been identified.
The victim had no history of exposure to poultry or other animals but
had multiple underlying medical conditions and had been bedridden for
three weeks, for other reasons, prior to the onset of acute symptoms,
the WHO said.
Mexico's health ministry said the person had chronic kidney disease and
type 2 diabetes.
"That immediately puts a person at risk of more severe influenza, even
with seasonal flu," said Andrew Pekosz, an influenza expert at Johns
Hopkins University.
But how this individual got infected "is a big question mark that at
least this initial report doesn't really address thoroughly."
In March, Mexico's government reported an outbreak of A(H5N2) in an
isolated family unit in the country's western Michoacan state. The
government said the cases did not represent a risk to distant commercial
farms, nor to human health.
After the April death, Mexican authorities confirmed the presence of the
virus and reported the case to the WHO, the agency said.
Mexico's Health Ministry said there was no evidence of person-to-person
transmission in the case and farms near the victim's home were
monitored.
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A man walks past the Institute of Epidemiological Diagnosis and
Reference after the World Health Organization said a person's death
was caused by the first laboratory-confirmed human case of infection
with the A(H5N2) subtype of bird flu reported globally, and the
first human infection with the H5 strain of the virus reported in
Mexico, in Mexico City, Mexico June 5, 2024. REUTERS/Daniel Becerril
Other people in contact with the
person tested negative for bird flu, the health ministry and the WHO
said.
Bird flu has infected mammals such as seals, raccoons, bears and
cattle, primarily due to contact with infected birds.
Scientists are on alert for changes in the virus that could signal
it is adapting to spread more easily among humans.
The United States has reported three cases of H5N1 human infection
after exposure to cows since an outbreak was detected in dairy
cattle in March. Two had symptoms of conjunctivitis, while the third
also had respiratory symptoms.
Although the death in Mexico was not the same strain as the one that
is currently infecting cattle in the United States, they are both H5
avian viruses.
Pekosz said that since 1997, H5 viruses have continuously shown a
propensity to infect mammals more than any other avian influenza
virus.
"So it continues to ring that warning bell that we should be very
vigilant about monitoring for these infections, because every
spillover is an opportunity for that virus to try to accumulate
those mutations that make it better infect humans," Pekosz said.
Australia reported its first human case of A(H5N1) infection in May,
noting there were no signs of transmission. It has however found
more poultry cases of H7 bird flu on farms in Victoria state.
(Reporting by Urvi Dugar and Puyaan Singh in Bengaluru, Ana Isabel
Martinez and Sarah Morland in Mexico City; Writing by Caroline
Stauffer; Editing by Richard Chang, Bill Berkrot and Lisa Shumaker)
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