#91583 - 04/18/07 09:48 PM
Avian flu vaccine approved by FDA
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Pooh-Bah
Registered: 09/15/05
Posts: 2485
Loc: California
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A vaccine for the H5N1 strain of influenza has finally gotten approval from the Food and Drug Administration. The vaccine requires two doses, about a month apart. This vaccine will not be available for sale, but the US gov't will purchase it to add to the U.S. Strategic National Stockpile maintained by the CDC.
Note that this is *not* the magic bullet that will save us from the next pandemic. First, the next pandemic could involve a completely different disease or a different strain of influenza that this vaccine doesn't protect against. However, H5N1 is the most likely candidate at present to become the next pandemic. Secondly, the vaccine is "only" effective for about half the people who receive it. The other half may have partial immunity to no immunity. The point of this vaccine is to slow down any H5N1 epidemic by immunizing at least a good chunk of the population. That will give scientists time to develop and manufacture a vaccine for the specific strain that is circulating.
Anyway, good news, I think. I'm not aware of any serious side effects during the clinical trials, although that only involved 103 participants, so it's possible that a rare but serious side effect could still appear in widespread use, like during an actual epidemic/pandemic.
Oh, that reminds me. A couple weeks ago, there were reports out of Japan that the run-of-the-mill influenza B was developing resistantance to anti-viral meds, like Tamiflu. Hypothetically, someone infected with H5N1 and the common influenza B could transfer the drug resistance to H5N1, creating a new, drug-resistant strain.
Edited by Arney (04/20/07 04:00 PM) Edit Reason: Fixed subject
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#91870 - 04/20/07 10:15 PM
Re: Avian flu vaccine approved by FDA
[Re: Arney]
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Registered: 02/13/07
Posts: 17
Loc: NJ, USA
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Great. I can add that to the laundry list of shots the military makes me get, to include anthrax and small pox--I am going to become indestructible. When the apocalypse hits I am going to be the only one left alive. Along with cockroaches and Cher.
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#91871 - 04/20/07 11:21 PM
Re: Avian flu vaccine approved by FDA
[Re: Jess]
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Carpal Tunnel
Registered: 11/09/06
Posts: 2851
Loc: La-USA
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I'm glad I retired when I did! At least I can look forward to sleeping until the end of eternity, someday.
_________________________
QMC, USCG (Ret) The best luck is what you make yourself!
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#91934 - 04/21/07 08:51 PM
Re: Avian flu vaccine approved by FDA
[Re: MDinana]
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Newbie
Registered: 05/18/06
Posts: 41
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I think,aside from the deaths a pandemic would bring itself,a major concern should be that with the current size of the world's human population and the ability for any disease to spread rapidly across the globe,the very real and possibly more dangerous effects of rotting corpses that can't be buried fast enough will cause secondary epidemics that would strain any society and it's economy. So in my opinion,H5N1 isn't getting enough attention and with it the aftermath of potential millions of bodies needing to be disposed of rather fast and efficiently.
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#91997 - 04/22/07 08:31 PM
Re: Avian flu vaccine approved by FDA
[Re: infrared]
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Cranky Geek
Carpal Tunnel
Registered: 09/08/05
Posts: 4642
Loc: Vermont
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They didn't have a problem with disposing of the bodies during the Black Death- pile them up and light them, communal pyres.
_________________________
-IronRaven
When a man dare not speak without malice for fear of giving insult, that is when truth starts to die. Truth is the truest freedom.
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#92001 - 04/22/07 09:03 PM
Re: Avian flu vaccine approved by FDA
[Re: ironraven]
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Geezer
Registered: 01/21/04
Posts: 5163
Loc: W. WA
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So far, since this Bird Flu surfaced and anyone started counting, a grand total of somewhere near 200 deaths have occurred since 2004. In the whole world.
That is not an epidemic, that is random. All the deaths that I've read about happened after heavy contact with infected birds, and most of the infected birds were in high-density populations.
A lot of people were sure it would follow the migration patterns of birds. It didn't --- it followed the roads along which dripping trucks of birds carcasses traveled.
The last time there was a Flu Scare was in the 1970s, they rushed a flu vaccine through the system to avoid a major pandemic. A grand total of ONE person died from Swine Flu, 25 died from the vaccine, and at least 500 came down with Guillain-Barré syndrome from the vaccine.
If H5N1 DID happen to mutate into a human-to-human disease, the mutation itself would probably make the current vaccine useless, wouldn't it?
And I don't really understand why they think this particular flu would be the one to go pandemic. A pandemic could come from many other, and possibly more likely, sources, such as pigs, which seem to share a lot of diseases with us.
I'll pass. It's time to go out and see how my chickapoos are doing!
Sue
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#92019 - 04/22/07 10:21 PM
Re: Avian flu vaccine approved by FDA
[Re: Susan]
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Rapscallion
Carpal Tunnel
Registered: 02/06/04
Posts: 4020
Loc: Anchorage AK
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I'd say what makes the threat so alarming isn't it's current configuration, where it does not readily infect humans. I would say it's propensity for mutating, the contagion rate of this type of influenza, and the effects it has on it's human hosts that make it such a big scare.
That this strain would tend to adversely effect younger, healthier people by triggering a cascade of overwhelming immune response that seriously compromises the lungs, and that this virus doesn't just attack the respiratory system but readily infects other organs, including the brain, liver and heart, and damages them severely, make this a particularly noxious bug. Human influenzas are extremely contagious, and the way they attack the body by forcing healthy cells to manufacture more of the virus until the cell dies is pretty efficient. The virus itself doesn't do any work, it fools the cell into doing it all.
If you look at the 1918 outbreak, something that isn't so popular are the after effects, a particularly nasty encephalitic infection that came on about 3 or 4 years later in people who were infected but survived the respiratory attack, only to succomb to a vegetative consumption in the 20's as the virus slowly ate their brain.
Anti-virals like Tamiflu only postphone the pandemic, they don't immunize you against infection, they just temporarily block or inhibit the virus from taking over your cells. It is only effective in your system for a little while, and the timing of the dosage is critical to effectiveness as well. Once you've dosed and it wears off, you are just as susceptible to infection as you were beforehand. It will take 6 to 8 months for a vaccine to be produced once the virus mutates; the current vaccine will likely not be effective against a mutated human host strain. Think what happens to our civilization if people refuse to function to keep it going for 6 to 8 months. Yeah, I kinda like the idea of being thrown back in time for a bit too, kinda like the end of that Kurt Russell movies Escape to LA, but realistically we produce one heckuva waste stream these days, and if the sewage treatment plants stop functioning and the garbage doesn't get collected, well, things get very simple very quick. We run the risk of other more recognizably nasty diseases becoming a big factor now as well. How many of us have a big check valve at the main drain from our households, so that when the sewage system backs up it doesn't just start flooding into our homes, which I've seen happen more than once.
Now, I ain't trying to play chicken little here. I got more pressing issues to worry about right now just like the next guy, and my finances are just as finite and I am required to prioritize my needs, and I am not going to go hog wild right now preparing for a perceived threat beyond my general preparation for surviving in this day and age. Realistically if the flu did go off now, I would be hard pressed to avoid being one of it's statistics. I do think, though, that knowing what I am up against helps me to be prepared for it a little better. Our first tool of defense is always knowledge.
Were I to get stuck out in the open where I had to go be amongst the public during such an event, I would be looking to grab a few good tyvek suits, a full face motorcycle helmet, and a few goodies from the local hardware and electronics stores. Those ought to be reasonable, maybe the tyvek might be a bit of a challenge, so it pays to locate a supply nearby now and keep it in mind if the time comes.
That's about the extent of it I reckon.
_________________________
The ultimate result of shielding men from the effects of folly is to fill the world with fools. -- Herbert Spencer, English Philosopher (1820-1903)
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#92052 - 04/23/07 01:45 AM
Re: Avian flu vaccine approved by FDA
[Re: Susan]
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Pooh-Bah
Registered: 09/15/05
Posts: 2485
Loc: California
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If H5N1 DID happen to mutate into a human-to-human disease, the mutation itself would probably make the current vaccine useless, wouldn't it? This vaccine would likely provide some immunity to an H5N1-derived pandemic strain, although a radical mutation could render it ineffective. Like I said, scientists know that this vaccine won't match an H5N1 pandemic strain perfectly since the actual pandemic strain is just a hypothetical at the moment. I suppose most of us think in terms of individuals, and in that sense, a partially effective vaccine doesn't sound that great, but in terms of the public at large, even a partially effective vaccine could prove immensely useful and avoid a lot of deaths. And I don't really understand why they think this particular flu would be the one to go pandemic. A pandemic could come from many other, and possibly more likely, sources, such as pigs, which seem to share a lot of diseases with us. It's true that a completely different disease or influenza strain could turn out to be the next pandemic disease, but H5N1 is a front runner since it has proven to be able to infect humans and it is extremely lethal. That's gives it a leg up on pretty much every other emergent disease. All it needs is the ability to jump from human-to-human like your typical human influenza and then we'll all be in deep trouble.
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