• ¿Quieres apoyar a nuestro foro haciendo una donación?, entra aquí.

"novel coronavirus" el nuevo CUCO biologico segun el C.D.C. NORTEAMERICANO

Estado
No está abierto para más respuestas.

piemti

Huevon sin Vida
Registrado
2004/08/20
Mensajes
28.873
Sexo
Macho
MOH
  1. Old School
AQUÍ VAMOS DE NUEVO

Sólo se han detectado 14 casos en el mundo, pero es letal.
Es pariente del virus Sars que mató a 800 personas en 2003. Hasta ahora, este nuevo tipo ha dejado 9 víctimas mortales de 14 infecciones confirmadas.
Los infectados mueren de insuficiencia renal y neumonía, según los reportes de la prensa asiática.
Se cree que el virus reside originalmente en los murciélagos, aunque se desconoce si la primera infección fue por contacto directo o a través de un intermediario como el ganado.
La víctima mortal más reciente fue un hombre de 69 años de Arabia Saudita que estuvo 9 días hospitalizado. Lo preocupante del caso es que nunca estuvo en contacto con las otras personas infectadas.
La mitad de los casos reportados ocurrieron en Arabia Saudita y el resto se distribuye en Jordania y Reino Unido.
En Inglaterra están preocupados porque el coronavirus o NCoV saltó de Medio Oriente a su territorio a través de una familia que viajó a Arabia Saudita y a Pakistán.
La Organización Mundial de la Salud ya pidió a los países mencionados estar alerta ante los patrones extraños de la enfermedad.
Según el CDC, los síntomas de la infección por este nuevo virus incluyen infección respiratoria aguda grave con fiebre, tos y dificultad para respirar.
El director del CDC, Tom Frieden, ha hecho un llamamiento a la comunidad médica para que esté muy atenta a los pacientes que desarrollen una infección respiratoria inexplicable dentro de los 10 días siguientes a haber viajado desde la Península Arábiga o sus países vecinos.
Update: Severe Respiratory Illness Associated with a Novel Coronavirus — Worldwide, 2012–2013

Early Release

March 7, 2013 / 62(Early Release);1-2

CDC continues to work closely with the World Health Organization (WHO) and other partners to better understand the public health risk posed by a novel coronavirus that was first reported to cause human infection in September 2012 (1–3). Genetic sequence analyses have shown that this new virus is different from any other known human coronaviruses, including the one that caused severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) (2). As of March 7, 2013, a total of 14 confirmed cases of novel coronavirus infection have been reported to WHO, with eight deaths (4). Illness onsets have occurred from April 2012 through February 2013 (4,5). To date, no cases have been reported in the United States.
Three of the confirmed cases of novel coronavirus infection were identified in the United Kingdom (UK) as part of a cluster within one family (6). The index patient in the cluster, a man aged 60 years with a history of recent travel to Pakistan and Saudi Arabia, developed respiratory illness on January 24, 2013, before returning to the UK on January 28 (5,7,8). He was hospitalized on January 31 with severe lower respiratory tract disease and has been receiving intensive care (5,7,8). Respiratory specimens from this patient taken on February 1 tested positive for influenza A (H1N1) virus and for novel coronavirus infection (8). The second patient was an adult male household member with an underlying medical condition who became ill on February 6, after contact with the index patient, and received intensive treatment but died with severe respiratory disease (5,9). This patient's underlying illness might have made him more susceptible to severe respiratory infection. The third patient is an adult female who developed a respiratory illness on February 5, following contact with the index patient after he was hospitalized (5,10). She did not require hospitalization and had recovered by February 19 (5,6). Only the index patient had traveled recently outside the UK. Based on their ongoing investigation of this cluster of illnesses, the UK Health Protection Agency has concluded that person-to-person transmission likely occurred in the UK within this family (6).
This recent cluster provides the first clear evidence of human-to-human transmission of this novel coronavirus, coinfection of this novel coronavirus with another pathogen (influenza A), and a case of mild illness associated with this novel coronavirus infection. In light of these developments, updated guidance has been posted on the CDC coronavirus website (http://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/ncv). Persons who develop severe acute lower respiratory illness within 10 days after traveling from the Arabian Peninsula or neighboring countries* should continue to be evaluated according to current guidelines. Persons whose respiratory illness remains unexplained and who meet criteria for "patient under investigation" should be reported immediately to CDC through state and local health departments. Persons who develop severe acute lower respiratory illness of known etiology within 10 days after traveling from the Arabian Peninsula or neighboring countries but who do not respond to appropriate therapy may be considered for evaluation for novel coronavirus infection. In addition, persons who develop severe acute lower respiratory illness who are close contacts† of a symptomatic traveler who developed fever and acute respiratory illness within 10 days of traveling from the Arabian Peninsula or neighboring countries may be considered for evaluation for novel coronavirus infection. Testing of specimens for the novel coronavirus will be conducted at CDC.
Recommendations and guidance on case definitions, infection control (including use of personal protective equipment), case investigation, and specimen collection and shipment for testing, are available at the CDC coronavirus website. Additional information and potentially frequent updates will be posted on the CDC coronavirus website. State and local health departments with questions should contact the CDC Emergency Operations Center (770-488-7100).
Reported by

Div of Viral Diseases, National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases; Brian Rha, MD, EIS Officer, CDC. Corresponding contributor: Brian Rha, [email protected], 404-639-3972.
 
YASTABA

http://www.antronio.com/threads/pre...tal-tiene-a-los-yanquis-con-cagadera.1141422/


tumblr_lv8owezN0l1r084f7.gif
 
Estado
No está abierto para más respuestas.
Volver
Arriba