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 Doctors examine the chest X-ray results of an infant suffering from bird flu. The H5N1 strain of bird flu seen in human cases in China has mutated as compared with strains found in human cases in Vietnam.[AFP/file] | BEIJING, Nov. 28 (Xinhuanet) -- Studies show the H5N1 strain of virus separated from China's human cases of bird flu has mutated compared with the strain found in Vietnam's human cases, said the Ministry of Health (MOH) on Monday.
Lab tests find the H5N1 strain of virus separated
from recent human cases is highly homologous with that found in poultry samples
from the bird flu outbreak places, according to the information office of the
MOH.
However, compared with the virus strain from the
human cases in Vietnam, the genetic order of H5N1 in China's human cases has
mutated "to a certain degree," the MOH spokesman Mao Qun'an said.
"But the mutation is impossible to cause
human-to-human transmission of the avian flu," he noted.
Mao said since the H5N1 bird flu first broke out in
1997, most human cases have been reported in Hong Kong, Thailand, Vietnam,
Cambodia, Indonesia and the Chinese mainland. No human case has been found in
Europe so far.
The major channels of human infection involve direct
contact with infected poultry or their secretion and excretion, as well as
inhalation of the particles of the virus from the poultry's secretion and
excretion, said Mao, noting that the general public won't get infected if they
keep themselves away from sick and dead poultry.
By Nov. 25, the World Health Organization (WHO) had
reported 132 laboratory-confirmed human cases of bird flu including 68 deaths.
China has reported three confirmed human cases of
bird flu, including two fatality cases from east China's Anhui Province and one
case from the central Hunan Province in which the patient has recovered.
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