• Re: California Dairy herds positive for the dairy virus

    From x@21:1/5 to RonO on Sat Sep 14 16:12:30 2024
    On 9/14/24 15:23, RonO wrote:
    On 9/12/2024 11:59 AM, RonO wrote:
    On 9/11/2024 12:05 PM, RonO wrote:
    On 9/8/2024 6:55 PM, RonO wrote:
    On 9/7/2024 2:17 PM, RonO wrote:
    On 9/6/2024 5:34 PM, RonO wrote:
    On 9/4/2024 8:23 PM, RonO wrote:
    3 herds in California central valley have been found to be
    positive for the dairy virus.

    https://www.statnews.com/2024/08/29/california-nations-largest-
    milk- producer-discloses-possible-bird-flu-outbreaks-in-three-
    dairy-cow- herds/

    They claim that California workers are "usually" dedicated to
    just one herd so do not pick up shifts at nearby poultry farms,
    but months ago (before I retired in May) I noted that California >>>>>>> had high levels of influenza virus in the waste water around the >>>>>>> bay area.  At that time they had estimated that the virus first >>>>>>> infected cattle Sept or Oct 2023, and they hadn't yet found viral >>>>>>> sequence from herds infected that early in Texas.  When I looked >>>>>>> into the avian influenza cases the Dairy virus was most similar
    to one isolated from a Peregrine falcon in California.
    California had high levels of influenza virus in their waste
    water (associated with infected herds in Texas and Michigan) and >>>>>>> Commercial poultry farms started to go down in the central valley >>>>>>> in Oct 2023 (the flocks get infected by the dairy workers).  A
    number of flocks went down within a few months working their way >>>>>>> up North and around the bay area.

    I contacted a person at the Avian disease ARS station in Georgia, >>>>>>> and tried to get the name of the person that would have the
    sequence data of the California samples (they had not been
    included in any of the dairy virus studies) but I was told that
    the USDA did not give out that information.  I told the guy that >>>>>>> they needed to check out those samples, but his comment was that >>>>>>> they were busy.

    My prediction is that when they sequence the central valley virus >>>>>>> they could identify the region where the initial dairy infection >>>>>>> occurred and it spread from California to Texas.  The virus
    spread rapidly out of Texas, but it probably came from somewhere >>>>>>> else.

    The CDC and USDA would have identified many more states with
    infected herds by now if they had acted on the waste water data
    and the FDA identification of states with virus positive dairy
    products.  The Dairy workers are not being protected from being >>>>>>> infected in states that refuse to identify their infected herds. >>>>>>>
    Ron Okimoto

    https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/person-infected-bird-
    flu- missouri-no-contact-animals-know-rcna170010

    There has been a case of H5N1 in a human in Missouri, but this
    person did not have contact with poultry or dairy cattle.  My
    guess is that it is person to person transmission.  Missouri is
    one of the states that has not verified any positive dairy herds
    (no one has been looking), but Kansas and Oklahoma have positive
    dairy herds. They have known that it was likely human transmission >>>>>> into Kansas and North Dakota from Texas because neither states got >>>>>> cattle from Texas, but both states got the virus from Texas.
    Human to human transmission has probably been going on for some
    time, but they never started contact tracing to identify possibly
    infected herds nor to determine how the virus was transmitted to
    the herds and poultry flocks that have been infected.

    Ron Okimoto



    The virus is H5, but hasn't been confirmed to be the dairy virus.
    The article notes that Missouri hasn't claimed to have positive
    herds at this time, but commercial poultry flocks have gone down
    and that usually happens when the dairies are infected and dairy
    workers take it to the poultry farms.  Previous human cases had
    mild symptoms, but this person was hospitalized.  The USDA and CDC
    are still not doing anything to identify all the infected herds in
    states like Missouri, so nothing much has been done to minimize the
    exposure of dairy workers.  My guess is that an infected dairy
    worker infected this patient, and it is a case of human to human
    transmission.

    Ron Okimoto


    As stupid as it may be the CDC response to the latest human
    infection without contact with animals is worse than can be
    imagined.  They did not send a team to investigate, and have not
    started contact tracing and testing of close contacts.  It seems
    crazy when you think that the person was hospitalized, and this is
    obviously a serious case of infection.  What they do not want is the
    50% human mortality associated with the H5N1 virus to become a
    reality for the dairy virus.  The CDC continues to do nothing but
    monitor the disease in two states, which is just nuts.  They are
    actually waiting for it to become a noticeable problem somewhere
    else before starting to do anything in other states.

    https://www.statnews.com/2024/09/08/missouri-h5-bird-flu-case-
    questions- cat-raw-milk/

    Ron Okimoto

    R

    https://medicalxpress.com/news/2024-09-missouri-resident-bird-flu-
    livestock.html

    This ariticle seems to be trying to downplay the possibility of human
    to human transmission.  The Texas antibody testing of dairy workers
    have already come out with evidence for human to human transmission
    because one of the workers positive for H5 antibodies did not have
    contact with cattle, and only had contact with other dairy workers.
    There was also the case of the indoor cat in Colorado that was
    probably infected by humans.  The states that did not get cattle from
    affected states, but still got the dairy virus were likely infected
    by human dairy workers migrating to those states.  Kansas got
    infected from Texas, and then Dakota got infected with the strain in
    Kansas, and Kansas did not get cattle from Texas, and South Dakota
    did not get cattle from Kansas.  The CDC has known this since about
    the beginning of detecting the infections in April, but they never
    started human contact tracing to determine how all the dairy herds
    and poultry flocks were being infected.

    Humans have been transmitting the virus since the start of this
    fiasco. Humans could have brought the virus into Texas.  The Texas
    Dairy worker that was the first infection had a virus that had
    branched off earlier than the strain that infected Texas.  They never
    got the name of that dairy worker, so they couldn't ask him where he
    could have been infected.  He could have been infected in the state
    that was the origin of the dairy infection.  One of his fellow dairy
    workers could have been infected in that same state, but brought in
    the Texas strain (one with more substitutions than the strain that
    infected the first dairy worker).

    Ron Okimoto


    New Texas Waste water data indicates that H5N1 seems to have started
    to be detected in 10 Texas cities monitored in March 2024 (when the
    Texas Dairy infections were first detected) but were not found in
    samples taken earlier in the year.  This study used a detection method
    that uses a probe to pull out the influenza RNA from the waste water,
    so they can get the sequence of RNA and determine what strain of
    influenza they are picking up.  Even though there was no indication of
    human infections (no increase in influenza cases) the waste water for
    these cities were positive.  The high levels of influenza in various
    Texas county's waste water has been attributed to dairy farms, but
    these samples were from city waste water.  It could still be due to
    milk products in the waste water, but it might also mean that there
    were undetected human infections (the letter claims waste water
    results are due to "multiple animal" infections).  Most of the
    infected humans have had mild symptoms, and the infection was not
    respiratory, but involved their eyes.  The virus was not detected in
    nasal swabs, and only in eye swab samples.

    https://www.nejm.org/doi/10.1056/NEJMc2405937

    It could be that human infection was already wide spread in March.
    Since contact tracing and testing was never implemented, no one knows
    how wide spread the human infections have been and how much they have
    contributed to the infection of dairy herds and poultry flocks.  One
    dairy worker that did not have contact with cattle was found to have
    been infected by the dairy virus, and may have been infected by human
    contact (the antibody positive dairy worker worked in the dairy
    cafeteria).  My take is that the infections may have gone unnoticed
    because the symptoms are just itchy eyes, and it was the spring pollen
    season.  People touching infected surfaces and then rubbing their eyes
    would be infected.

    Ron Okimoto



    https://www.cnn.com/2024/09/13/health/missouri-bird-flu-h5n1/index.html

    The CDC has admitted that the Missouri H5 virus is closely related to
    dairy virus and is likely part of the spread of the dairy H5N1, but they
    did not release any phylogenetic analysis which is pretty much done when
    you do the sequence comparison, so we do not know where the dairy virus
    may have come from.  The Colorado virus that infected all the farm
    workers in that state was most closely related to the virus isolated
    from a Michigan farm worker.  So somehow that virus got from Michigan to Colorado, and some dairy worker or their close contact likely was
    infected and took it to Colorado.  The virus doesn't survive on
    equipment or clothing long enough to make the trip.  The CDC is trying
    to down play the possiblity of human transmission, but it has likely
    been going on since the start of the dairy virus fiasco.  They have
    known since Texas and Michigan that human dairy workers likely took the
    virus to poultry farms because it doesn't survive on clothing long
    enough to go from farm to farm and no one takes equipment from a dairy
    farm to a poultry farm, and they found that some dairy workers and or
    their close contacts also worked on commercial poultry farms.  The most likely scenario was that these dairy workers were infected and took the
    virus to the other farms, but this has been downplayed from the beginning.

    Ron Okimoto

    Is there any reason why this might be different
    from other types of flu?

    Is there any reason why it would be difficult to
    add to the next flu shot?

    Is there any reason why they might not bother doing
    that?

    Are you purposefully suppressing the word 'influenza'
    as a joke?

    Am I confused. Is this a totally different type of
    virus?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From x@21:1/5 to RonO on Tue Sep 17 11:18:16 2024
    On 9/16/24 18:30, RonO wrote:
    On 9/16/2024 8:18 PM, RonO wrote:
    On 9/14/2024 8:27 PM, RonO wrote:
    On 9/14/2024 6:12 PM, x wrote:
    On 9/14/24 15:23, RonO wrote:
    On 9/12/2024 11:59 AM, RonO wrote:
    On 9/11/2024 12:05 PM, RonO wrote:
    On 9/8/2024 6:55 PM, RonO wrote:
    On 9/7/2024 2:17 PM, RonO wrote:
    On 9/6/2024 5:34 PM, RonO wrote:
    On 9/4/2024 8:23 PM, RonO wrote:
    3 herds in California central valley have been found to be >>>>>>>>>>> positive for the dairy virus.

    https://www.statnews.com/2024/08/29/california-nations-
    largest- milk-
    producer-discloses-possible-bird-flu-outbreaks- in-three- >>>>>>>>>>> dairy-cow- herds/

    They claim that California workers are "usually" dedicated to >>>>>>>>>>> just one herd so do not pick up shifts at nearby poultry >>>>>>>>>>> farms, but months ago (before I retired in May) I noted that >>>>>>>>>>> California had high levels of influenza virus in the waste >>>>>>>>>>> water around the bay area.  At that time they had estimated >>>>>>>>>>> that the virus first infected cattle Sept or Oct 2023, and >>>>>>>>>>> they hadn't yet found viral sequence from herds infected that >>>>>>>>>>> early in Texas.  When I looked into the avian influenza cases >>>>>>>>>>> the Dairy virus was most similar to one isolated from a
    Peregrine falcon in California. California had high levels of >>>>>>>>>>> influenza virus in their waste water (associated with
    infected herds in Texas and Michigan) and Commercial poultry >>>>>>>>>>> farms started to go down in the central valley in Oct 2023 >>>>>>>>>>> (the flocks get infected by the dairy workers).  A number of >>>>>>>>>>> flocks went down within a few months working their way up >>>>>>>>>>> North and around the bay area.

    I contacted a person at the Avian disease ARS station in >>>>>>>>>>> Georgia, and tried to get the name of the person that would >>>>>>>>>>> have the sequence data of the California samples (they had >>>>>>>>>>> not been included in any of the dairy virus studies) but I >>>>>>>>>>> was told that the USDA did not give out that information.  I >>>>>>>>>>> told the guy that they needed to check out those samples, but >>>>>>>>>>> his comment was that they were busy.

    My prediction is that when they sequence the central valley >>>>>>>>>>> virus they could identify the region where the initial dairy >>>>>>>>>>> infection occurred and it spread from California to Texas. >>>>>>>>>>> The virus spread rapidly out of Texas, but it probably came >>>>>>>>>>> from somewhere else.

    The CDC and USDA would have identified many more states with >>>>>>>>>>> infected herds by now if they had acted on the waste water >>>>>>>>>>> data and the FDA identification of states with virus positive >>>>>>>>>>> dairy products.  The Dairy workers are not being protected >>>>>>>>>>> from being infected in states that refuse to identify their >>>>>>>>>>> infected herds.

    Ron Okimoto

    https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/person-infected- >>>>>>>>>> bird- flu- missouri-no-contact-animals-know-rcna170010

    There has been a case of H5N1 in a human in Missouri, but this >>>>>>>>>> person did not have contact with poultry or dairy cattle.  My >>>>>>>>>> guess is that it is person to person transmission.  Missouri >>>>>>>>>> is one of the states that has not verified any positive dairy >>>>>>>>>> herds (no one has been looking), but Kansas and Oklahoma have >>>>>>>>>> positive dairy herds. They have known that it was likely human >>>>>>>>>> transmission into Kansas and North Dakota from Texas because >>>>>>>>>> neither states got cattle from Texas, but both states got the >>>>>>>>>> virus from Texas. Human to human transmission has probably >>>>>>>>>> been going on for some time, but they never started contact >>>>>>>>>> tracing to identify possibly infected herds nor to determine >>>>>>>>>> how the virus was transmitted to the herds and poultry flocks >>>>>>>>>> that have been infected.

    Ron Okimoto



    The virus is H5, but hasn't been confirmed to be the dairy
    virus. The article notes that Missouri hasn't claimed to have >>>>>>>>> positive herds at this time, but commercial poultry flocks have >>>>>>>>> gone down and that usually happens when the dairies are
    infected and dairy workers take it to the poultry farms.
    Previous human cases had mild symptoms, but this person was
    hospitalized.  The USDA and CDC are still not doing anything to >>>>>>>>> identify all the infected herds in states like Missouri, so
    nothing much has been done to minimize the exposure of dairy >>>>>>>>> workers.  My guess is that an infected dairy worker infected >>>>>>>>> this patient, and it is a case of human to human transmission. >>>>>>>>>
    Ron Okimoto


    As stupid as it may be the CDC response to the latest human
    infection without contact with animals is worse than can be
    imagined.  They did not send a team to investigate, and have not >>>>>>>> started contact tracing and testing of close contacts.  It seems >>>>>>>> crazy when you think that the person was hospitalized, and this >>>>>>>> is obviously a serious case of infection.  What they do not want >>>>>>>> is the 50% human mortality associated with the H5N1 virus to
    become a reality for the dairy virus.  The CDC continues to do >>>>>>>> nothing but monitor the disease in two states, which is just
    nuts.  They are actually waiting for it to become a noticeable >>>>>>>> problem somewhere else before starting to do anything in other >>>>>>>> states.

    https://www.statnews.com/2024/09/08/missouri-h5-bird-flu-case- >>>>>>>> questions- cat-raw-milk/

    Ron Okimoto

    R

    https://medicalxpress.com/news/2024-09-missouri-resident-bird-flu- livestock.html

    This ariticle seems to be trying to downplay the possibility of
    human to human transmission.  The Texas antibody testing of dairy >>>>>>> workers have already come out with evidence for human to human
    transmission because one of the workers positive for H5
    antibodies did not have contact with cattle, and only had contact >>>>>>> with other dairy workers. There was also the case of the indoor
    cat in Colorado that was probably infected by humans.  The states >>>>>>> that did not get cattle from affected states, but still got the
    dairy virus were likely infected by human dairy workers migrating >>>>>>> to those states. Kansas got infected from Texas, and then Dakota >>>>>>> got infected with the strain in Kansas, and Kansas did not get
    cattle from Texas, and South Dakota did not get cattle from
    Kansas.  The CDC has known this since about the beginning of
    detecting the infections in April, but they never started human
    contact tracing to determine how all the dairy herds and poultry >>>>>>> flocks were being infected.

    Humans have been transmitting the virus since the start of this
    fiasco. Humans could have brought the virus into Texas.  The
    Texas Dairy worker that was the first infection had a virus that >>>>>>> had branched off earlier than the strain that infected Texas.
    They never got the name of that dairy worker, so they couldn't
    ask him where he could have been infected.  He could have been
    infected in the state that was the origin of the dairy
    infection.  One of his fellow dairy workers could have been
    infected in that same state, but brought in the Texas strain (one >>>>>>> with more substitutions than the strain that infected the first
    dairy worker).

    Ron Okimoto


    New Texas Waste water data indicates that H5N1 seems to have
    started to be detected in 10 Texas cities monitored in March 2024
    (when the Texas Dairy infections were first detected) but were not >>>>>> found in samples taken earlier in the year.  This study used a
    detection method that uses a probe to pull out the influenza RNA
    from the waste water, so they can get the sequence of RNA and
    determine what strain of influenza they are picking up.  Even
    though there was no indication of human infections (no increase in >>>>>> influenza cases) the waste water for these cities were positive.
    The high levels of influenza in various Texas county's waste water >>>>>> has been attributed to dairy farms, but these samples were from
    city waste water.  It could still be due to milk products in the
    waste water, but it might also mean that there were undetected
    human infections (the letter claims waste water results are due to >>>>>> "multiple animal" infections). Most of the infected humans have
    had mild symptoms, and the infection was not respiratory, but
    involved their eyes.  The virus was not detected in nasal swabs,
    and only in eye swab samples.

    https://www.nejm.org/doi/10.1056/NEJMc2405937

    It could be that human infection was already wide spread in March. >>>>>> Since contact tracing and testing was never implemented, no one
    knows how wide spread the human infections have been and how much
    they have contributed to the infection of dairy herds and poultry
    flocks.  One dairy worker that did not have contact with cattle
    was found to have been infected by the dairy virus, and may have
    been infected by human contact (the antibody positive dairy worker >>>>>> worked in the dairy cafeteria).  My take is that the infections
    may have gone unnoticed because the symptoms are just itchy eyes,
    and it was the spring pollen season.  People touching infected
    surfaces and then rubbing their eyes would be infected.

    Ron Okimoto



    https://www.cnn.com/2024/09/13/health/missouri-bird-flu-h5n1/index.html >>>>>
    The CDC has admitted that the Missouri H5 virus is closely related
    to dairy virus and is likely part of the spread of the dairy H5N1,
    but they did not release any phylogenetic analysis which is pretty
    much done when you do the sequence comparison, so we do not know
    where the dairy virus may have come from.  The Colorado virus that
    infected all the farm workers in that state was most closely
    related to the virus isolated from a Michigan farm worker.  So
    somehow that virus got from Michigan to Colorado, and some dairy
    worker or their close contact likely was infected and took it to
    Colorado.  The virus doesn't survive on equipment or clothing long
    enough to make the trip.  The CDC is trying to down play the
    possiblity of human transmission, but it has likely been going on
    since the start of the dairy virus fiasco.  They have known since
    Texas and Michigan that human dairy workers likely took the virus
    to poultry farms because it doesn't survive on clothing long enough
    to go from farm to farm and no one takes equipment from a dairy
    farm to a poultry farm, and they found that some dairy workers and
    or their close contacts also worked on commercial poultry farms.
    The most likely scenario was that these dairy workers were infected
    and took the virus to the other farms, but this has been downplayed
    from the beginning.

    Ron Okimoto

    Is there any reason why this might be different
    from other types of flu?

    This is influenza A, but it has not fully adapted to infecting
    mammals at this time, and is still considered to be an Avian
    Influenza, but all human influenza A strains were once Avian
    Influenzas.  The dairy H5N1 strain that infected the Colorado workers
    seems to more easily infect humans, but it is claimed that it still
    lacks the usual mutations needed to become a human infectious virus.

    The Dairy H5N1 is related to the Asian Avian H5N1 virus that is
    associated with 50% mortality in the humans that it has infected, but
    the Dairy H5N1 is a recombinant.  It does have the same H5 and N1
    genes as the Asian strain, but half of it's genome comes from a North
    American strain of Avian influenza.  Instead of having a 50%
    mortality in humans the dairy H5N1 has, so far, exhibited only mild
    symptoms in those infected.  The major fear is that it will coinfect
    with a human influenza A strain and recombine to become more of a
    hazard.


    Is there any reason why it would be difficult to
    add to the next flu shot?

    They can add it to the next flu shot, but at this time they do not
    know what the sequence will be if it adapts to humans.  A current H5
    vaccine strain of the virus does make neutralizing antibodies to the
    H5 antigen of the Dairy virus, but this latest Missouri strain has 2
    additional amino acid substitutions in it that may compromise the
    neutralizing ability of that H5 vaccine strain.


    Is there any reason why they might not bother doing
    that?

    They are already planning to make a vaccine, as soon as the virus
    adapts to humans and they know what they need to make a vaccine against. >>>

    Are you purposefully suppressing the word 'influenza'
    as a joke?

    Everyone should know that bird flu or dairy flu is influenza.


    Am I confused.  Is this a totally different type of
    virus?

    It is currently classified as an H5N1 Avian Influenza virus, but it
    can obviously infect mammals.  As I noted before all human influenza
    A strains evolved from Avian influenza strains.  That is where the
    "A" comes from. H5 and N1 are just allele designations of the two
    main viral antigens used to classify viral subtypes.  The Dairy virus
    H5 gene is the same clade (2.3.4.4b) as the H5N1 Asian avian
    influenza virus that has killed 800 people (50% mortality), but it is
    genotype B3.13 because part of it's genome comes from another Avian
    influenza virus.  We are lucky that this is the case because, so far,
    there hasn't been any mortality among the infected humans (high
    mortality among infected cats) and only mild symptoms.

    Ron Okimoto

    https://www.latimes.com/environment/story/2024-09-04/bird-flu-outbreaks- confirmed-in-three-california-dairy-farms

    The California dairy influenza is reportedly most closely related to
    the Colorado virus (which is most closely related to the virus
    isolated from one of the Michigan dairy workers).  Doesn't this mean
    that it is more likely that an infected dairy worker brought the virus
    from Colorado? They claim that it is due to transfer of cattle, but
    all lactating cattle have to be tested before interstate transfer.
    Later in the article they claim that transfer of newborn calves is
    common, and my guess is that they do not fall under the new USDA
    guidelines for testing.  The calves could be infected if they are fed
    contaminated milk before shipping them out.

    I thought that they may have picked up evidence of earlier infection
    in the California herds, but that doesn't seem to be the case.

    What the article does not mention is that 10 (11 if you count the
    Michigan dairy worker with the same strain) of the 14 known human
    infection cases were infected by the Colorado strain of the virus.  That should be an important consideration when they consider the possible infection of the California dairy workers.  Probably 1/5 of the dairy
    cattle in the US are in California.  The impact on human infections
    could be something to worry about.

    Ron Okimoto

    Ok. Sorry to have implied that about a joke.

    What is going on with the flu strains with a 50% fatality rate?

    Is that something involving low numbers of infected and statistics
    or is that something real about the nature of those flu strains?

    Does that involve differences in antigen presentation?

    Do they have symptoms similar to other flu but more severe
    or can they have vastly different symptom sets in comparison
    with other colds or flus?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From *Hemidactylus*@21:1/5 to RonO on Wed Sep 18 16:11:29 2024
    RonO <[email protected]> wrote:
    On 9/17/2024 1:18 PM, x wrote:

    [snip]

    Ok.  Sorry to have implied that about a joke.

    What is going on with the flu strains with a 50% fatality rate?

    There is an Asian and European H5N1 strain of avian influenza that has
    been responsible for over 800 human deaths (50% mortality of known
    infected humans). Infection is not a common occurrence and requires
    contact with infected birds. Wild bird migration brought this virus to
    North America, but the virus that infected the Dairy cattle was a
    recombinant with another North American avian influenza strain. It
    inherited the H5 and N1 antigen genes from the Asian virus, but around
    half of it's genome comes from another influenza virus. This is likely
    why it doesn't have a 50% mortality when it infects humans. So far
    humans have only exhibited mild symptoms, but the worry is that the
    virus will mutate to better infect humans and become more pathogenic.


    Is that something involving low numbers of infected and statistics
    or is that something real about the nature of those flu strains?

    As noted above the Asian H5N1 has infected fewer than 2,000 people in
    Asia and Europe, but over 800 of them died due to the infection.


    Does that involve differences in antigen presentation?

    Due to the recombinant half, the dairy virus is antigenically different
    than the Asian H5N1, but initially the H5 antigen was neutralized by
    related H5 virus that the CDC had already banked for vaccine use. One
    thing that they are not making a big deal about is that the latest human
    case (without known animal contact) in Missouri has a couple of amino
    acid substitutions relative to the original dairy H5 and the Missouri H5
    can avoid the existing H5 antibodies, and those antibodies are now 10 to
    100 times less effective in neutralizing an infection. This just means
    that they have to start working up a vaccine strain with the new H5 mutations.


    Do they have symptoms similar to other flu but more severe
    or can they have vastly different symptom sets in comparison
    with other colds or flus?


    Most of the humans infected with the dairy virus have mild symptoms with
    most of them having only itchy eyes. The virus was not isolated from
    nasal swabs so the infection had not become respiratory. Virus has been isolated from eye swabs of infected individuals. The latest Missouri
    example is different. Apparently the virus was detected in samples
    taken normally to check for respiratory infections, but the patient was
    not exhibiting the normal respiratory symptoms. Instead the patient had "nausea, vomiting, diarrhea and weakness". The CDC has noted that these
    are not the normal respiratory symptoms of influenza, but they do not
    note that these are symptoms that have been associated with the H5N1
    Asian virus with a high human mortality. The CDC seems to have the goal
    of downplaying how bad things probably are.

    So the common misnomer of “stomach flu” applied to norovirus would actually apply in cases where influenza infection actually does result in digestive symptoms?

    So if someone says “I have stomach flu” I would now reply “I sure hope you’re wrongly calling noro that, because actual H5 stomach flu is much worse!”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)