Texas bird flu strain kills ferrets used to mimic disease in humans, US
CDC says
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[June 08, 2024]
By Nancy Lapid
(Reuters) - The bird flu virus strain that infected a Texas dairy farm
worker in March was lethal to ferrets in experiments designed to mimic
the disease in humans, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) reported on Friday.
Seasonal flu, by contrast, makes ferrets sick but does not kill them,
the CDC said.
Ferrets are considered the best small mammal for studying influenza
virus infection and transmission and are commonly used as a tool to
inform public health risk assessments of emerging influenza viruses,
according to the CDC.
The strain of the (A)H5N1 avian influenza virus found in Texas spread
easily among healthy ferrets when they were placed in direct contact
with infected ferrets, the researchers found.
The virus was less efficient than other influenza strains at spreading
by respiratory droplets, however.
This suggests that viruses like this one "would need to undergo changes
to spread efficiently by droplets through the air, such as from coughs
and sneezes,” the CDC said.
Bird flu has been reported in more than 80 dairy herds across 11 U.S.
states since late March. Scientists are on alert for changes in the
virus that could signal it is adapting to spread more easily among
humans.
Reuters reported earlier on Friday that U.S. federal and state agencies
are planning research into potential respiratory spread of bird flu
among dairy cattle in a move aimed at guiding efforts to contain the
virus and reduce exposure to humans. Respiratory spread could give the
virus more opportunity to evolve, they said.
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![](../images/060824PIX/health90.jpg)
A man walks his ferret along 6th Street during the South by
Southwest Music Film Interactive Festival 2017 in Austin, Texas,
U.S., March 13, 2017. REUTERS/Brian Snyder/File Photo
![](http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/2024/Jun/08/images/ads/current/guzzardos_lda_GENERIC_040524.png) The U.S., Mexico and Australia have
reported a total of five human cases of different versions of H5
bird flu since March. The three U.S. cases were mild, with two dairy
workers - one infected in Texas - experiencing just conjunctivitis,
or pink eye, while a third case involved some respiratory symptoms.
The man in Mexico, who had other chronic conditions, died from
multiple factors, the WHO said on Friday.
The new findings in ferrets “are not surprising and do not change
CDC’s risk assessment for most people, which is low,” the agency
said.
“The results do reinforce the need for people who have exposure to
infected animals to take precautions and for public health and
agriculture communities to continue to work together to prevent the
spread of the virus to additional dairy herds and people.”
(Reporting by Nancy Lapid; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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