middle east respiratory syndrome - coronavirus

eatshitndie

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sars-like, but originated from the middle east. multiple deaths so far in multiple countries, all in the middle east. saudi arabia to report the latest case. the acronym is mers-cov. cdc and who extremely worried. the best experts on pandemic diseases are on alert. no travel advisory so far out of the state department. but it's a matter of time before they issue one.
 
hmm... remembered reading somewhere we have a BSL4 lab somewhere in Singapore...
 
ya they've got to watch this one and hope that it clears before the onset of winter....thats when environmental conditions are ideal for the rapid spread of the virus.


sars-like, but originated from the middle east. multiple deaths so far in multiple countries, all in the middle east. saudi arabia to report the latest case. the acronym is mers-cov. cdc and who extremely worried. the best experts on pandemic diseases are on alert. no travel advisory so far out of the state department. but it's a matter of time before they issue one.
 
ya they've got to watch this one and hope that it clears before the onset of winter....thats when environmental conditions are ideal for the rapid spread of the virus.

that's why the cdc is truly worried, as this is taking off in the summer. and in the middle east where temps soar, you would hope the virus will wither at over 37 celsius. must be the aircon in the hospitals keeping the virus alive.
 
ME patients have a habit of traveling to other countries for treatment. One of the mers.cov case went to the UK and died there.

Singapore welcomes foreign patients.
 
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ME patients have a habit of traveling to other countries for treatment. One of the mers.cov case went to the UK and died there.

Singapore welcomes foreign patients.

just in time for the launch of the world war z movie.
 
the last defense against this virus spreading to our sinkie part of the world is India. As the virus travels across the subcontinent we can just hope the hot air from all

the ah nehs TCSSing would polish off the virus.

that's why the cdc is truly worried, as this is taking off in the summer. and in the middle east where temps soar, you would hope the virus will wither at over 37 celsius. must be the aircon in the hospitals keeping the virus alive.
 
The demand for meat has created such virus... wish all meat eater drop dead immediately.
 
the last defense against this virus spreading to our sinkie part of the world is India. As the virus travels across the subcontinent we can just hope the hot air from all

the ah nehs TCSSing would polish off the virus.

human carriers would prefer the direct flight from dubai to sg, skipping ah neh land all the way. :eek:

and direct transfer from changi to hospital in aircon taxi or limousine. ultra violet light and the heat will never get their chance. :eek:
 
The demand for meat has created such virus... wish all meat eater drop dead immediately.

This theory is very strange, if I may say .... but good try for you, very good try. :oIo::oIo::oIo:
 
Oh No! Which part of the middle east? Oh No!
 
sars-like, but originated from the middle east. multiple deaths so far in multiple countries, all in the middle east. saudi arabia to report the latest case. the acronym is mers-cov. cdc and who extremely worried. the best experts on pandemic diseases are on alert. no travel advisory so far out of the state department. but it's a matter of time before they issue one.


Time to switch to vegan. Vegan can avoid such diseases.
 
Time to switch to vegan. Vegan can avoid such diseases.

not when one is lying on a hospital bed right next to an infected patient. the virus has no execution program that reads "if{vegan}, {spare}; otherwise, {attack}". :p

anyway, bat shit falling on a vege salad while one is dining alfresco may lead to bat virus jumping to a human. in other words, tony better look up for shit falling from the sky. :eek:
 
Re: SARS: Where Did It Come From?

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The fact that both sars and most flu viruses originated in southern china is no surprise," says virologist Michael Lai, who believes that the region's social customs of catching and eating wild game expose people to animal viruses.
In April, when Canadian scientists sequenced the genetic code of the SARS virus, they discovered a microbe unlike any other ever seen in humans or animals. On its genome "there is a long stretch of nucleotides and then one big piece that sticks out," says University of Hong Kong microbiologist Malik Peiris, who first linked SARS to a novel coronavirus. "When we then looked to see if antibodies for it exist in human blood samples, there were none."


So where did the SARS virus come from? At press time, eight months after the first case was diagnosed in a bird and snake merchant in the Chinese city of Shunde, the source of the virus was still unknown. But researchers are narrowing the suspects to animals found in southern China, where humans and critters often live cheek by jowl.


Michael Lai, a virologist at the University of Southern
California, says the virus's genome is similar to that of both a mouse and a bird virus, hinting that it may be a mix of the two. "My analysis suggests that it likely existed in a wild animal, probably a bird. It jumped species only recently when it came into contact with a human being," he says.

In theory, SARS leapt from
a wild beast to a human when it acquired the molecular "keys" to gain entry to our cells, explains Lai. To do that, it may have first mingled with a human virus brewing inside another species. A pig, for example, can serve as a genetic mixing bowl when co-infected with two viruses, allowing them to swap genes.

In a recent experiment to show how easily the coronavirus can morph and become harmful in a new species, Peter Rottier of Utrecht University in the Netherlands simulated a gene swap by taking a coronavirus that is lethal to cats and adding a single gene fragment from a mouse virus. The recombinant virus was lethal to both
animals. "Coronaviruses have a unique ability to mix with other viruses," Lai says.

Meanwhile, scientists from Lyon to Winnipeg are spraying, injecting, and orally feeding the coronavirus to monkeys, dogs, cats, mice and rabbits. Goats and sheep are next. "We want to see how they react to high doses of the virus, how susceptible they are, which replicate the virus, which excrete it, which show antibodies," says Klaus Stöhr, chief SARS scientist for the World Health Organization's Animal Influenza Network.


Once the lab tests yield more specific clues, experts like Stöhr will comb the ground in southern China to pinpoint the SARS animal hosts.

Doing so will help scientists develop strategies to intercept other emerging animal-borne viruses. The WHO already maintains an active surveillance of animal flu viruses in the region, where both the 1957 Asian flu and the 1968 Hong Kong flu, which together killed some 1.5 million people, originated. So did the 1997 avian flu and possibly the 1918 Spanish flu, which claimed 20 million lives. All have been linked to animal hosts. For this reason, a similar surveillance system is being established for corona-viruses. In the end, says Stöhr, "there's no point in conquering SARS as it exists now, only to have something similar or related swirling in an animal reservoir, waiting to spark the whole thing all over again."
 
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