Active TopicsActive Topics  Display List of Forum MembersMemberlist  CalendarCalendar  Search The ForumSearch  HelpHelp
 Click here for the current WHO Alert Level.    
  RegisterRegister  LoginLogin
Main Forum: General Discussion
 Swine Flu > Swine Flu > Main Forum: General Discussion
Message Icon Topic: Tamiflu Resistant H1N1 Post Reply Post New Topic
<< Prev Page  of 4
Author Message
thanks4forum
Forum Moderator
Forum Moderator
Avatar

Joined: August 23 2009
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 3284
Quote thanks4forum Replybullet Posted: August 26 2009 at 6:16pm
Thanks...appreciate that.
I firmly believe it was this virus that claimed his life as well. Regardless, may he be at peace...and his Life Celebrated!
Am hoping and praying that those in the ICU stay well & safe....given the proper protections they need so that they may go home to their families at the end of the day.
IP IP Logged
thanks4forum
Forum Moderator
Forum Moderator
Avatar

Joined: August 23 2009
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 3284
Quote thanks4forum Replybullet Posted: August 26 2009 at 6:17pm
Originally posted by BabyGirl

thanks4forum sounds like a suspect h1n1 death. There is a real problem with false negatives as Ive been following this for a while.  My condolences to you and your boyfriend.


The above is in response to BG
IP IP Logged
BabyGirl
Admin Group
Admin Group
Avatar

Joined: April 26 2009
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 4706
Quote BabyGirl Replybullet Posted: August 27 2009 at 7:04pm
This really makes me wonder how much underreporting there is happening. I feel it is significant in both cases and deaths. Many people are underestimating the potential of the disease.
IP IP Logged
thanks4forum
Forum Moderator
Forum Moderator
Avatar

Joined: August 23 2009
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 3284
Quote thanks4forum Replybullet Posted: August 27 2009 at 7:51pm
BG, I agree with you

My thoughts are that if the projection comes to pass......not only we will all know it, it will be unmistakable. Personal Obits may be the source of information...saying died of the flu,made a valiant fight,in lieu of flowers, please help your neighbor...or such.

I'm personally aware of 2 deaths attributed to this novel influenza:
daughters' high school bf cousin: July Confirmed: 27 CA,perfectly healthy prior. 1 week progression
my bf brother: Aug 24, not confirmed,yet I'm fairly resolute in my convictions...53 FL ,a few sideline issues but generally should have made it.
26 days on vent

I feel it's significant for many to realize that it's not the "regular flu".
(like a Nyquil commercial)..
Of course most of those wouldn't be here.
I get frustrated when I hear out in the world.. from those who still hang on to the info from April...36K die every year to the flu, swine flu is mild for the most part..yada yada...(info was flawed, my opinion....and mild doesn't kill inexplicably) It may be epidemiologically ha! is that a word.....mild
but that's relative....
and when it takes ours
ouch!

some people's coping skills include a teeny bit of denial ...so as to not upset the "apple cart" of peace and joy.
acceptance is not a bad thing.......
can lead to positive actions...

Thanks for listening to me ramble:) Hope I didn't upset anyone.



IP IP Logged
BabyGirl
Admin Group
Admin Group
Avatar

Joined: April 26 2009
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 4706
Quote BabyGirl Replybullet Posted: August 30 2009 at 5:04pm

12 countries report Tamiflu-resistant H1N1

Kounteya Sinha, TNN 31 August 2009, 12:59am IST

NEW DELHI: An increasing number of countries, including some in Asia, are now reporting Tamiflu resistant H1N1 virus. The worrying development, according to WHO, has seen 12 countries including China and Singapore. India has not reported the mutation in the virus so far.

The changes in the virus reported in samples are making these strains of swine flu resistant to oseltamivir or Tamiflu - the antiviral of choice globally. Such cases have also been found in Japan, US, Hong Kong, Denmark and Canada.

While India is monitoring these reports closely, it will begin exit screening of pilgrims bound for Saudi Arabia for Haj as the desert nation is refusing entry to anyone with even a common cold. Saudi authorities are insisting on certificates stating that Haj pilgrims are completely free of any influenza infection.

Changes in the virus are also being tracked closely as scientists are concerned that new strains may make the vaccines being developed at a feverish pace infructuous. As of now, WHO fears Tamiflu resistance may be more widespread than officially reported.

Going by available data, majority of the resistant cases were reported where oseltamivir was given as preventive medication to people exposed to the flu but who had not tested positive themselves. Some cases were a result of treatment of mild illness as well as "immuno-compromised" patients or persons whose immune systems were working imperfectly.

India has so far not reported such a mutation. ICMR director general Dr V M Katoch told TOI, "We have been constantly sequencing genes in H1N1 to mark any form of mutation. However, we have still not found a case of oseltamivir resistant H1N1 virus."

He added, "Fear of resistance is why we are so careful about Tamilfu's availability to the public and its use in management of H1N1 infected or suspected patients. Tamilfu is now only available in select hospitals so that we can keep a record of the treatment."

Meanwhile, the decision on exit screening was taken in a meeting between the director general of health services and the Haj Committee of India on Saturday.

Till now, India has only been carrying out screening of passengers arriving at the country's 22 international airports.

Saudi Arabia has announced that it will require a health certificate for all pilgrims to Mecca, showing they are not suffering from normal flu. In the meeting on Saturday, the health ministry said that in the next 10 days, it would provide the Haj committee and states with the prototype of India's flu free certificate that every pilgrim will have to get stamped after a check-up by designated doctors.

The certificate will state that the pilgrim isn't suffering from seasonal flu or has H1N1 symptoms.

Speaking to TOI from Mumbai, CEO of India's Haj committee Mohammad Owais said, "A high-level expert committee has been formed to see whether all Indian pilgrims can be given a 42-day regimen of Tamilfu as a form of protection. The committee will see what the drug's side effects will be if used for so long and whether it is a feasible proposition."
IP IP Logged
BabyGirl
Admin Group
Admin Group
Avatar

Joined: April 26 2009
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 4706
Quote BabyGirl Replybullet Posted: August 30 2009 at 5:04pm
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/msid-4952430,prtpage-1.cms
IP IP Logged
BabyGirl
Admin Group
Admin Group
Avatar

Joined: April 26 2009
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 4706
Quote BabyGirl Replybullet Posted: October 02 2009 at 9:45am

Tamiflu in Rivers Could Breed Drug-Resistant Flu Strains


The premier flu-fighting drug is contaminating rivers downstream of sewage-treatment facilities, researchers in Japan confirm. The source: urinary excretion by people taking oseltamivir phosphate, best known as Tamiflu.

Concerns are now building that birds, which are natural influenza carriers, are being exposed to waterborne residues of Tamiflu’s active form and might develop and spread drug-resistant strains of seasonal and avian flu.

For their new study, Gopal Ghosh and his colleagues at Kyoto University sampled water discharged from three local sewage treatment plants and water at several points along two rivers into which the treated water flowed. Sampling started early in December 2008, as flu season got underway. The researchers sampled again at the height of the seasonal flu onslaught in early February and again as infection rates waned.

Tamiflu’s active form, oseltamivir carboxylate, or OC, turned up in the treated sewage on every occasion, the researchers report online Sept. 28 in Environmental Health Perspectives. Values were in the low nanograms-per-liter range during the first and last samplings, and reached a high of almost 300 ng/L at one outflow during the flu’s peak, a week when there were 1,738 recorded flu cases in Kyoto.

River residues showed up during only that second sampling — from low-nanogram levels at most sampling points to a high of 190 ng/L in a portion of the Ni****akase River where treated sewage accounts for 90 percent of the flow.

Computer modeling has shown that OC should survive sewage treatment, noted Wolf von Tümpling Jr. of the Helmholtz Center for Environmental Research, a federal institute in Magdeburg, Germany. Ghosh’s team is now the first to confirm this, he said. Von Tümpling’s own data show that once exposed to sunlight, OC will break down, albeit slowly. Concentrations would fall at best by half every three weeks, he said.

If correlations predicted by earlier studies are correct, concentrations measured at some river sites in the new Kyoto study seem “high enough to lead to antiviral resistance in waterfowl,” Ghosh says

And the Kyoto team didn’t test during a pandemic, when Tamiflu prescription rates might be 10 times higher, von Tümpling notes.

Indeed, the expected coinciding hits by seasonal and H1N1 swine flu this winter, could send Tamiflu use skyrocketing. In a July 14 letter, Food and Drug Administration deputy commissioner Joshua Sharfstein noted that “there is no adequate, approved and available alternative to the emergency use of certain oseltamivir phosphate products for the treatment and prophylaxis of influenza.”

Once ingested, virtually all Tamiflu will end up in the environment in the active form, noted environmental chemist Jerker Fick of Umeå University in Sweden. The reason: Tamiflu becomes active once the body converts it into a carboxylate form. Roughly 80 percent of an ingested dose becomes this OC, which the body eventually excretes. The body sheds the remaining 20 percent of Tamiflu in its original form, but this phosphate form is immediately turned into the active, carboxylate form when it reaches a water treatment plant, he said.

Two years ago, Fick’s team published data showing that most sewage-treatment technologies will remove “zero percent” of any OC present. And ducks love hanging out around warm, nutrient-rich outflows of treated water during winter-flu season. While sampling for waterborne OC last year in Japan, “I saw it myself,” he said.

If Tamiflu resistance does develop in exposed birds, the affected flu strains will probably be conventional seasonal and avian-flu strains, which claim thousands of lives each year, and not H1N1. That’s because H1N1 seems to bypass birds as it spreads among people, noted William Schaffner, chair of preventive medicine at the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine in Nashville, Tennessee.

He also notes that U.S. policy is more conservative than Japan’s when it comes to Tamiflu use. Federal guidelines, he said, recommend that “Tamiflu be reserved for treatment of the very sick and anyone who is immunocompromised.”

Image: Flickr/Karmor

IP IP Logged
BabyGirl
Admin Group
Admin Group
Avatar

Joined: April 26 2009
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 4706
Quote BabyGirl Replybullet Posted: October 02 2009 at 9:47am
http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2009/09/drug-resistant-influenza/
IP IP Logged
BabyGirl
Admin Group
Admin Group
Avatar

Joined: April 26 2009
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 4706
Quote BabyGirl Replybullet Posted: October 14 2009 at 5:48pm
Vietnam detects 3 cases of drug-resistant swine flu

Vietnam has detected three cases of swine flu that were resistant to the antiviral drug Tamiflu, but an expert said there was no evidence the mutant strains had infected other people.

 The three were admitted to the Hospital for Tropical Diseases in Ho Chi Minh city in late August and September and have all recovered, said Rogier van Doorn, a clinical microbiologist and doctor at the hospital. “The viruses that were isolated when they were admitted were still sensitive (to the drug), but during treatment with oseltamivir, resistance built up,” said van Doorn, referring to the generic form of Tamiflu. “So it was not transmission of resistant viruses, but we observed that it developed during treatment of these three patients ... we have no evidence to show that (there was further transmission of resistant viruses),” he said.

IP IP Logged
BabyGirl
Admin Group
Admin Group
Avatar

Joined: April 26 2009
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 4706
Quote BabyGirl Replybullet Posted: October 14 2009 at 5:48pm
http://www.gulf-times.com/site/topics/article.asp?cu_no=2&item_no=319832&version=1&template_id=45&parent_id=25
IP IP Logged
BabyGirl
Admin Group
Admin Group
Avatar

Joined: April 26 2009
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 4706
Quote BabyGirl Replybullet Posted: November 16 2009 at 6:56pm

Drug-resistant swine flu found

SCOTLAND could be facing a drug-resistant strain of swine flu after two patients failed to respond to treatment.
One patient in the Lothians and another believed to be from Fife failed to respond to Tamiflu, one of the only treatments for the H1N1 virus.

Doctors around the world have seen a handful of cases where the virus has mutated to develop resistance to the drug.

NHS Lothian confirmed it has seen one patient with Tamiflu-resistant swine flu.

A spokesman for the Scottish Government said: "We are aware of Tamiflu resistance in two Scottish H1N1 patients.

"We have asked Health Protection Scotland to monitor the situation closely."
IP IP Logged
BabyGirl
Admin Group
Admin Group
Avatar

Joined: April 26 2009
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 4706
Quote BabyGirl Replybullet Posted: November 21 2009 at 2:10pm
Tamiflu-resistant swine flu spreading

Sat, 21 Nov 2009 18:18:37 GMT


Amid concerns about increasing numbers of swine flu victims despite the use of a vaccine, officials now warn of a new wave of Tamiflu-resistant strain.

Swine flu continues to spread globally and has already claimed the lives of some 5,000 individuals; the majority of them reported in the US.

Tamiflu, on the other hand, is one of two flu medications effective in treating the affected cases as it not only shortens the duration of the disease, but also reduces the risk of developing complications.

More than 50 resistant cases have been reported in the world since the appearance of the disease in April, including 21 in the US. Four North Carolina patients are the most recent of such cases detected at a single hospital on Friday.

Five other victims identified at the University Hospital of Wales, in the UK are believed to have acquired the infection in hospital, becoming the first confirmed cases of person-to-person transmission of a Tamiflu-resistant strain in the world.

"The emergence of influenza A viruses that are resistant to Tamiflu is not unexpected in patients with serious underlying conditions and suppressed immune systems, who still test positive for the virus despite treatment," said the director of the National Public Health Service for Wale's Communicable Disease Surveillance Centre, Roland Salmon.

He stressed that such resistance strains are not more severe than the strain that has been circulating all around the world since April.

While health officials are concerned regarding the possible outbreak of a Tamiflu-resistant strain of the illness, they urge individuals to take Tamiflu if needed, stressing that Tamiflu is still the most appropriate medication to fight swine flu.

PKH/SC/MMN
IP IP Logged
BabyGirl
Admin Group
Admin Group
Avatar

Joined: April 26 2009
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 4706
Quote BabyGirl Replybullet Posted: November 21 2009 at 2:10pm
http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=111855&sectionid=3510210
IP IP Logged
mamamichele
Forum Moderator
Forum Moderator
Avatar

Joined: June 16 2009
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 3216
Quote mamamichele Replybullet Posted: November 21 2009 at 5:35pm
Expert warning over new swine flu

12:05, Nov 21 2009

 

Tamiflu-resistant swine flu which has broken out in Wales will become much more common as the virus mutates, a flu expert said.

Three out of five patients diagnosed with the Tamiflu-resistant strain remain in hospital, after it was revealed they could be the world's first cases of person-to-person transmission of the virus, the National Public Health Service for Wales (NPHS) said.

Professor Nigel Dimmock, a virologist at the University of Warwick said: "This is just the beginning. You have got a lot of viruses and if you use Tamiflu at the level they are using it you get resistance.

"However, they probably aren't resistant to Relenza, the other antiviral. You need other mutations to make it resistant to Relenza.

"Also, the vaccine is coming on so people regard Tamiflu as a stop gap and there's no need to panic."


He added it was unsurprising person-to-person transmissions had started. He said: "This is the trouble with going into hospitals, where you can get MRSA, C.diff, Norovirus and so on. You go in with something and you come out with a virus, it's a well known problem."

Three of the five people on a unit for severe underlying health conditions at the University Hospital of Wales, in Cardiff, appear to have acquired the infection on the ward, the NPHS said.

Two of the five have recovered and have been discharged from hospital, one is in critical care and two are being treated on the ward.

Professor Dimmock said the likelihood of the cases in Cardiff causing an outbreak of the resistant strain depend on how well the virus has been contained.

 
.
MamamicheleTN
IP IP Logged
<< Prev Page  of 4
Post Reply Post New Topic
Printable version Printable version

Forum Jump
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot create polls in this forum
You can vote in polls in this forum