Made with Love

MERS coronavirus deadlier than SARS

Wazzap

Senior Member
Joined
Sep 28, 2011
Messages
1,049
How worried are you?.

MERS, a mysterious new respiratory virus that originated in the Middle East, spreads easily between people and appears to be more deadly than SARS, doctors reported Wednesday after investigating the biggest outbreak in Saudi Arabia.

More than 60 cases of what is now called MERS, including 38 deaths, have been recorded by the World Health Organization since Sept. 2012, . So far, illnesses haven't spread as quickly as SARS did in 2003, ultimately triggering a global outbreak that killed about 800 people.

An international team of doctors who investigated nearly two dozen cases in eastern Saudi Arabia found the new coronavirus has some striking similarities to SARS. Unlike SARS, though, scientists remain baffled as to the source of MERS.

In a worrying finding, the team said MERS (Middle East respiratory syndrome) not only spreads easily between people, but within hospitals. That was also the case with SARS, a distant relative of the new virus.

"To me, this felt a lot like SARS did," said Dr. Trish Perl, a senior hospital epidemiologist at Johns Hopkins Medicine, who was part of the team. Their report was published online Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Perl said they couldn't nail down how it was spread in every case - through droplets from sneezing or coughing, or a more indirect route. Some of the hospital patients weren't close to the infected person, but somehow picked up the virus.

"In the right circumstances, the spread could be explosive," said Perl, while emphasizing that the team only had a snapshot of one MERS cluster in Saudi Arabia.

Cases have continued to trickle in, and there appears to be an ongoing outbreak in Saudi Arabia. MERS cases have also been reported in Jordan, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Tunisia. Most have had a direct connection to the Middle East region.



  • [*=left]
    [*=left]
    [*=left]
    [*=left]

In the Saudi cluster that was investigated, certain patients infected many more people than would be expected, Perl said. One patient who was receiving dialysis treatment spread MERS to seven others, including fellow dialysis patients at the same hospital. During SARS, such patients were known as "superspreaders" and effectively seeded outbreaks in numerous countries.

Perl and colleagues also concluded that symptoms of both diseases are similar, with an initial fever and cough that may last for a few days before pneumonia develops.
But MERS appears far more lethal. Compared to SARS' 8 percent death rate, the fatality rate for MERS in the Saudi outbreak was about 65 percent, though the experts could be missing mild cases that might skew the figures.

While SARS was traced to bats before jumping to humans via civet cats, the source of the MERS virus remains a mystery. It is most closely related to a bat virus though some experts suspect people may be getting sick from animals like camels or goats. Another hypothesis is that infected bats may be contaminating foods like dates, commonly harvested and eaten in Saudi Arabia.
Doctors around the world have struggled to treat patients.

"We need more information from other countries to find out what the best treatment is," said Dr. Clemens Wendtner, who treated a MERS patient who later died in Munich. "Our patient got everything possible and it still didn't help him."

Other experts said there are enough worrying signs about MERS that it can't yet be written off, despite the relatively small number of cases it has caused.
"As long as it is around, it has every opportunity at the genetic roulette table to turn into something more dangerous," said Michael Osterholm, an infectious diseases expert at the University of Minnesota.

has previously called MERS the single biggest public health threat and acknowledged officials were "empty-handed" regarding prevention measures.

"We understand too little about this virus when viewed against the magnitude of its potential threat," she said last month in Geneva.

At a meeting this weekend in Cairo, WHO will meet with other experts to discuss MERS and to possibly develop guidelines for next month's Ramadan, when millions of Muslim pilgrims will be visiting Saudi Arabia.


 
As far as I can remember only 44 people died of SARS in Ontario. The pharmaceutical section made millions out of it.

Guess what now.
 
Hopefully the WHO and other health organizations will do a good job controlling the desease like they did with SARS.
 
So, it's here.

Doctor exposed to MERS is in Canada


A Florida doctor who was exposed to the MERS virus travelled to Canada before knowing he might be at risk, Florida health officials have confirmed.
Geo Morales, a spokesperson for Orlando Health, told CTV News on Wednesday that efforts are underway to test the doctor for the potentially fatal respiratory virus that has affected hundreds of people in Saudi Arabia.

Morales would not say if the Orlando-based doctor is Canadian or American, but he did confirm that the doctor came to Canada by plane and remains in the country.


The doctor was exposed to a MERS patient that had recently travelled to Saudi Arabia.Meanwhile, about 20 Florida hospital workers who came in contact with the patient are currently being monitored for MERS symptoms, which include a flu-like fever and cough that can potentially lead to shortness of breath, pneumonia and death.

On Wednesday, the World Health Organization decided against declaring the evolving MERS outbreak in the Middle East a global health emergency.

WHO spokesman Dr. Keiji Fukuda said there's no convincing evidence to conclude that MERS has become more transmissible from person to person.
University of Calgary infectious disease specialist Glen Armstrong said while MERS is concerning, it’s not particularly contagious.

"It only really spreads if you've come into very close contact with an individual that is showing signs of sickness with the virus," he told CTV News Channel on Wednesday.

A total of 152 people have now died and 495 have been confirmed to have contracted the virus in Saudi Arabia since it was discovered in 2012.

Armstrong said while the mortality rate is quite high, MERS tends to cause very serious illness or death in individuals with underlying medical conditions.

He said MERS cannot be treated with antiviral drugs and there's no vaccine for the illness.

Some experts say the spread of MERS is similar to the 2003 global outbreak of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome, or SARS, which infected about 8,000 people, killing nearly 800 worldwide including 44 in Canada.


Two MERS cases have been confirmed in the U.S. and Armstrong said he expects the virus to spread to Canada.

"It's probably only a matter of time before it does show up in travellers coming back from the Middle East to Canada," he said.

However, global disease specialist Dr. Kamran Khan said the transmission of the MERS virus is more of a concern to the medical and public health community and less of a concern to the general public.


Khan said that while the doctor who travelled to Canada was exposed to the virus, chances are low that the physician is infected.

"At this point in time there are no symptoms or signs (of MERS), there's a very good chance nothing will happen," the Toronto-based doctor said.

Khan said while SARS caught medical experts off guard, much has changed over the last decade and hospitals are better prepared for outbreaks.

He said plenty of correspondence about MERS signs and symptoms is already circulating at the Toronto hospital where he works.

"We're really kind of just waiting for this virus to arrive and essentially jump on it with the appropriate infection control precautions," Khan said.



https://www.ctvnews.ca/health/doctor-exposed-to-mers-is-in-canada-1.1820885
 
MERS is pretty nasty. As is SARS, but SARS is mostly controlled now. MERS ain't. And there isn't much you can do about it!
 
Oh shit.

LOS ANGELES (CBSLA.com) — KCAL9 News has learned that as many as 16 people in LA County are being monitored for possible exposure to MERS.
MERS stands for Middle East Respiratory Syndrome.

The California Department of Public Health says the 16 people were all passengers on a flight with a man who is now hospitalized with the disease in Florida.
The disease first appeared in the Middle East two years ago.

Worldwide, health officials say there have been about 650 reported cases with nearly one-third ending in death.

Three people in the United States were recently diagnosed with MERS. Two of the three people reportedly traveled into this country from Saudi Arabia.

MERS, like the similar disease SARS (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome) causes fever, coughing and often-fatal pneumonia.

https://losangeles.cbslocal.com/201...-county-for-possible-exposure-to-deadly-mers/
 
Back
Top Bottom