Dns Derma Roller,Microneedle Roller,Derma Roller Handsome Beauty Product Co., Limited , http://www.chinabeautyproduct.com
Bird flu virus spreads through people
Thai scientists announced on the 24th that a Thai girl who died of a bird flu virus last year may have transmitted this deadly virus to her relatives. This is the world's first case of bird flu spread through humans. A research team led by Thailand’s Ministry of Health officer Kunnu investigated and analyzed this rare case of bird flu and concluded that an 11-year-old girl transmitted the bird flu virus to her mother and aunt. The young girl was infected with the bird flu virus after coming into contact with the diseased chicken. Her mother had never been in contact with poultry, but she accompanied her sick daughter for 16-18 hours in the hospital and hugs and kisses her loving daughter. After three days of contact with her daughter, she was also infected with the bird flu virus and she was handcuffed for 12 days after her daughter died. The girl has been living with her aunt. Her aunt was infected with the virus after contact with the poultry for 17 days. At present, the patient usually has symptoms of infection within 10 days after contact with the poultry. Therefore, an expert analysis suggested that her aunt was also likely to be infected with the virus. "The virus that her mother and aunt infected were likely to be transmitted through humans," the report concluded. The results of this study will be published this week in the New England Journal of Medicine. According to the AFP report, the researchers said that they had obtained scientific evidence for the first time to confirm that everyone was worried that bird flu that had triggered a health warning in Southeast Asia might be transmitted from person to person. Researchers working for the Thai Ministry of Public Health and the United States Centers for Disease Control said that in a small village in Thailand, an 11-year-old girl died last year after being infected with influenza from chickens, and she may spread the virus to mothers and aunts. According to a study published in the New England Journal of Medicine published today, scientists confirmed that the girl’s 26-year-old mother and 32-year-old aunt were infected when they looked after her. However, this study, conducted by experts from the Ministry of Health of Thailand, found that they did not come into contact with infected birds. The study reported that the laboratory tests conducted by the two women's throat and nasal specimens showed that they had contracted pneumonia, and that the mother of the girl died of pneumonia after taking care of her daughter for 16 to 18 hours. The researchers said that from these samples, eight genes of the bird flu virus were found, and all of them met the genetic code of the H5N1 bird flu pathogen.