THIS is the season of fevers. The menace of fevers is
rocking the world. True, yellow fever is no longer a global threat, but malaria
fever is still with us while typhoid fever remains on the prowl . Sierra Leone
is still at alert for Ebola fever and Saudi Arabia is wary of the Middle East
Respiratory Syndrome a.k.a MERS – a viral respiratory illness that is
relatively new to humans. Most people infected with MERS-CoV developed severe
acute respiratory illness, including fever, cough, and shortness of breathe. It
was first reported three years ago and the Saudi government is “very keen” on
finding a vaccine since there is pressing need to control the spread of the
MERS virus.zika The Lassa fever epidemic, currently running around in Nigeria,
also comes to mind.
Nigerians are not at ease because there is no vaccine
against the disease at the moment; and no experimental vaccine has completely
protected non-human primates against a lethal challenge. But right now, the
world is not much bothered by MERS, Lassa fever or even Ebola, The world’s
latest health scare is a seemingly minor illness that carries a killer wrapped
inside – Zika, the mosquito-borne virus that is sweeping across Latin America
in the form of a tropical fever, linked to neurological problems and a surge in
microcephaly, a condition in which babies are born with abnormally small heads.
The defect can cause brain damage and death.
The outbreak of Zika virus has led authorities in some
countries to urge couples not to get pregnant, while the US Centers for Disease
Control, CDC, has warned pregnant women to avoid traveling to at least 25
affected countries. On February 1, 2016, the World Health Organisation (WHO)
declared Zika virus a public health emergency of international concern.
Following an Emergency Committee Meeting on Zika virus, convened under the
International Health Regulations, 18 experts and advisers looked, in
particular, at the strong association, in time and place, between infection
with the Zika virus and a rise in detected cases of congenital malformations
and neurological complications. The experts agreed that a causal relationship
between Zika infection during pregnancy and microcephaly is strongly suspected,
though not yet scientifically proven, but all agreed on the urgent need to
coordinate international efforts to investigate and understand this
relationship better.
The experts also considered patterns of recent spread and
the broad geographical distribution of mosquito species that can transmit the
virus. The lack of vaccines and rapid and reliable diagnostic tests, and the
absence of population immunity in newly affected countries were cited as
further causes for concern. After a review of the evidence, the Committee
advised that the recent cluster of microcephaly cases and other neurological
disorders reported in Brazil, following a similar cluster in French Polynesia
in 2014, constituted an “extraordinary event” and a public health threat to
other parts of the world.
Director General, WHO, Dr Margaret Chan, in a statement,
afterwards, said: “I am now declaring that the recent cluster of microcephaly
cases and other neurological disorders reported in Brazil, following a similar
cluster in French Polynesia in 2014, constitutes a Public Health Emergency of
International Concern. Chan said a coordinated international response is needed
to improve surveillance, the detection of infections, congenital malformations,
and neurological complications, to intensify the control of mosquito
populations, and to expedite the development of diagnostic tests and vaccines
to protect people at risk, especially during pregnancy. Although the Committee
found no public health justification for restrictions on travel or trade to
prevent the spread of Zika virus, it noted that, at present, the most important
protective measures are the control of mosquito populations and the prevention
of mosquito bites in at-risk individuals, especially pregnant women.
The virus What’s Zika? This is probably the million-dollar
question. Sunday Vanguard investigations revealed that the virus was first
identified in a rhesus monkey specie in Africa in 1947. WHO confirmed that Zika
is actually named after a forest in Uganda where the first infected rhesus
monkeys were found. The virus then “jumped”, over time, to humans in Uganda and
Tanzania in East Africa. Hospital information says most of the time, Zika
disease infection goes unnoticed. The symptoms are like a mild case of the flu
— headache, muscle and joint pain, and mild fever — plus a rash and usually
last two to seven days. Zika is linked to two serious complications:
Neurological problems and birth defects in babies born to infected women. The
main neurological complication is Guillain-Barre syndrome, a disorder in which
the immune system attacks the nervous system, causing weakness and sometimes
paralysis.
Most patients recover, but the syndrome is sometimes deadly.
Cases linked to Zika were first reported in Brazil and French Polynesia.
Microcephaly and other brain deformities in newborns have also been reported,
particularly in Brazil. Since the Zika outbreak began, last year, microcephaly
cases have surged. With no vaccine, or specific treatment, Zika has become a
potential death sentence overnight. ‘No more pregnancy’ Recently, the US Centers
for Diseases Control issued a travel ban for pregnant women. Don’t travel to
Brazil, it warned. For women in Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, El Salvador, Jamaica
and at least 18 other Latin America and Caribbean countries, women have been
advised to avoid pregnancy for the time being.
An American woman was reportedly said to have given birth to
a baby with microcephaly after traveling to Brazil. The Zika virus itself is
considered a bit of a dark horse by scientists. A member of the flaviviridae
family transmitted to humans by Aedes aegypti mosquitoes, it is related to
other pathogenic vector borne flaviviruses including Dengue , West-Nile and
Japanese encephalitis viruses but prior to the last few months, produced a
comparatively mild disease in humans. The vector Like dengue fever and
chikungunya, two similar diseases, Zika is transmitted by the aedes mosquito
species found in tropical and sub-tropical regions. The specific host of the
Zika virus is the aedes aegypti mosquito. It has a number of aliases including
the yellow fever mosquito, tiger mosquito or stegomyia mosquito.
The vector host is well distributed in Africa, the
surrounding tropics and subtropics, south eastern US, the Middle East, South
East Asia, Pacific and Indian Islands and Northern Australia. Sunday Vanguard
gathered that the first documented transmission of Zika virus, outside of its
traditional endemic areas in Africa and Asia,was recorded in 2007, when it
caused an outbreak on the island of Yap in the Pacific. Today, Zika virus is
considered an emerging infectious disease with the potential to spread to new
areas where the aedes mosquito vector is present. However, there is still no
evidence of transmission Zika virus in Europe to date and imported cases are
rare. Entomological information provided by the European Centres for Disease
Control and Prevention, ECDCP, shows that the aedes aegypti is a relatively
small insect with an aggressive biting habit.
It is easily distinguished by its characteristic black and
white pattern due to the presence of white/silver scale patches on a black
background on the legs and other parts of the body. Aedes aegypti has a high
biting and disease risk. It is a known vector of several viruses including
yellow fever virus, dengue virus and chikungunya virus. Others are Japanese
encephalitis, viral haemorrhagic fevers and Zika virus. Over the past 25 years
there has been an increase in distribution of this mosquito to every continent
worldwide making it one of the most widespread mosquito species globally. The success
of this invasive species has largely been due to globalisation. It thrives in
densely populated areas which lack reliable water supplies, waste management
and sanitation.
Historically, this mosquito has moved from continent to
continent via ships, and this method of dispersal is thought to present the
highest risk. It is even suggested that the mosquito evolved its domestic
behaviour in West Africa and its widespread distribution and colonisation in
the tropics led to the highly efficient inter-human transmission of viruses
such as dengue. Sunday Vanguard investigations show that aedes aegypti prefers
mammalian hosts and will preferentially feed on humans, even in the presence of
alternative hosts. Historically, the mosquitoesi were found in forested areas,
using tree holes as aquatic habitats. But as they have adapted to more urban
domestic habitats, they have exploited a wide range of artificial containers
such as vases, water tanks and tyres that are often associated with human
habitations.
The mosquito has also been found utilising underground
aquatic habitats such as septic tanks and adapting to use both indoor and
outdoor aquatic habitats in the same area. Adaptation to breeding outdoors may
allow for increased population numbers and difficulty in implementation of
control methods. The insect is often not found further than 100m from human
habitations. They prefer human habitations that provide resting and
host-seeking possibilities and, as a result, will readily enter buildings. Hope
for a vaccine How far away is a Zika virus vaccine? Experts say research
efforts will focus on developing a vaccine for the mosquito-borne illness, but
it will take time. However, scientists have quickly turned their attention to
trying to develop a vaccine, but a widely available safe and effective Zika
vaccine is not likely this year and probably not in the next few years. Two
potential approaches have been mapped out to developing a Zika vaccine. The
first is a DNA-based strategy similar to one employed in a vaccine for West
Nile virus, in which a piece of the virus’s genetic structure is inserted into
another harmless virus and used to create an immune response in the patient.
The second, more traditional approach would use a live
attenuated vaccine in which the virus has been weakened to prompt immunity.
Last week, Genekam, a German biotechnology company, said it had created
technology that can not only reveal the presence of Zika pathogens in a blood
sample, but also shed light on the quantity in the patient’s blood. The new
test can, therefore, definitely determine if a person is a carrier of the Zika
virus, as only one in five people infected actually becomes ill, the media
reports. Additionally, the test renders diagnostic results in real time, which
is relatively quick for a virus of this kind. The test examines DNA and works
with chemicals that react to the Zika virus only. As the race to come up with a
vaccine that could fight Zika virus hots up, scientists admit that it’s not
going to be easy.
Scientists from around the world have pledged to fast-track
the research. U.S. National Institutes of Health, Brazil’s Butantan Institute
and the Public Health Agency of Canada have already started their research.
Biotech firm, NewLink Genetics and Merck & Co, who are behind the
successful Ebola vaccine, are also working on a possible solution. Large
Pharmaceutical companies like Sanofi, GlaxoSmithKline and Japan’s Takeda
pharmaceutical are also in the race to develop the Zika virus vaccine. However,
despite technological advancements, scientists confessed that there are many
challenges to the development of a vaccine.The target profile is women who are
pregnant or who are planning to get pregnant – which is about the highest bar
there is for safety. Last week, Bharat Biotech Ltd., in India, claimed it
already had a possible Zika virus vaccine.
It even said it actually had two. It said it could possibly
make one million doses and that it aimed to provide help to fellow BRICS
(Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) member-country, Brazil. But the
vaccine will also need to undergo further animal trials, which could take some
time. Rage of viruses In recent years, viruses have been emerging from nowhere.
Outbreaks of killer-viruses like SARS, swine flu, and West Nile have raised
international fears. One other virus dominating the headlines is a new strain
of bird flu (H7N9) in China. Detected last year, the virus transmits easily
from birds to humans, killing about one in five people it infects. Fears also
centre around a novel coronavirus (NCoV), a SARS-like virus.
The world’s fears of viruses is clear: Which one has the
capacity to become an uncontrollable pandemic. In a world of global air travel,
a deadly virus could sweep round the earth with frightening speed. Viruses
outnumber all other life forms on earth. Scientists have estimated that there
are about 10 million times the number of stars in the universe. A virus that
kills more quickly than it can spread will die out before infecting a
significant proportion of the population. A perpetual fear is that deadly
viruses will mutate to develop person to person transmission, allowing rapid
spread (rather than, for example, spreading to humans from an infected animal
source). The WHO’s recent admission that the novel coronavirus is probably
spreading from person to person made the news for this reason.
Source:Vanguard
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