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A laboratory technician shows a testing kit from the U.S. Center Disease Control (CDC) on how to determine the presence of the new H1N1 flu virus, formerly referred to as the swine flu, inside the laboratory of the Philippine Research Institute for Tropical Medicine at Muntinlupa city, south of Manila, May 13, 2009. The new H1N1 flu virus could still mutate into a more virulent form and spark an influenza pandemic that could be expected to circle the globe up to three times, the World Health Organisation said on Tuesday.(Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
OTTAWA, May 16 (Xinhua) -- The H1N1 flu virus found
on infected swine at a Canadian farm is the same as the virus causing illness in
humans around the world, Canadian scientists have confirmed.
Scientists at the Canadian Food Inspection Agency
(CFIA)'s National Center for Foreign Animal Disease (NCFAD) have mapped the full
genetic sequence of the virus found in swine from Alberta and confirmed that the
virus on the infected swine is the same as on humans, the CFIA said in a press
release on its website late Friday.
A portion of a total of 2,300 swine on the farm were
found to be infected with the new virus in early May. The virus was believed to
be transmitted by a worker who had returned from Mexico.
As scientists are trying to probe this new virus,
this development will help scientists around the world better understand the
virus and its effects on animals, the CFIA said.
Researchers are now focusing on how the H1N1 flu
virus affects swine. Although more study is needed, early observations suggest
that infected animals become sick and recover naturally, just as they would if
exposed to influenza viruses commonly seen in swine herds at a global level, the
agency said.
Ongoing CFIA research is examining whether or not other animals are susceptible to the virus. This information may be used to refine disease prevention and control measures. Studies are also underway to assess the effectiveness of current vaccines, and to develop better and faster diagnostic methods, it said.