Adenovirus transmitted monkeys to human

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Angelus9

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One more article about an adenovirus caught my eye; although this is "old" news, the article I saw was dated this month.

"While other viruses can infect more than one species, adenoviruses tend to be species-specific, which makes this somewhat unusual,"

and


"A never-before detected strain of virus that killed more than one-third of a monkey colony at a U.S. lab appears to have 'jumped' from the animals to sicken a human scientist, researchers report...


Still, "there is very strong evidence to suggest a cross-species transmission event happened," said lead investigator Dr. Charles Chiu, an assistant professor of laboratory medicine and medicine/infectious diseases at the University of California San Francisco. "
....
The scientist appears to have caught the virus while investigating an outbreak of illness among a colony of Titi monkeys at the California National Primate Research Center in Davis, Chiu said.


Among the monkeys, the virus was highly contagious and deadly: Of 55 monkeys housed at the center, 23 (about 40 percent) became seriously ill with upper respiratory symptoms that progressed to pneumonia and an inflammation of the liver. Nineteen monkeys, or about 83 percent of those infected, died."

http://www.philly.com/philly/health...ey_to_Scientist__Causing_Serious_Illness.html

http://www.philly.com/philly/health...ans__Researchers_Find.html?ref=more-like-this
 
As you've said, old news. But, here's the feed from Davis about a year after the incident...

http://dateline.ucdavis.edu/dl_detail.lasso?id=13041>

It was found that this was not a danger to humans and that the virus was not further transmitted. The news initially caused a BIG stir; and most of us simply concluded that the individual who developed the antibodies was doing something they 'shouldn't' have been doing in the first place.
 
What do you mean? Like something as simple as not washing their hands, or more serious precautions....
 
Sorry for the interruption, but just from reading the title I thought that monkeys were transmitted to humans, not their disease/virus. I was wondering how that was possible until I actually opened the thread. 😳

Now carry on. Hahahaha.
 
What do you mean? Like something as simple as not washing their hands...

**Ding!** **Ding!** **Ding!**

Quick lecture: Proper PPE and hygiene are a must when working with our simian friends and/or their 'parts'. :zip:
 
Sorry for the interruption, but just from reading the title I thought that monkeys were transmitted to humans, not their disease/virus. I was wondering how that was possible until I actually opened the thread. 😳

Now carry on. Hahahaha.

😆That would be one HELL of a virus!

Props on the grammar policing!! 👍👍
 
No offense to anybody, but it really bothers me a lot when I notice that my spelling and/or grammar is better than that of Americans. It's not even my language. Come on.
 
No offense to anybody, but it really bothers me a lot when I notice that my spelling and/or grammar is better than that of Americans. It's not even my language. Come on.

Eh, that's kind of what happens with languages. Generally when you learn something as a 2nd language you're better at remembering all the technicalities that come with grammar, etc since you actually really had to learn it and weren't just born into it. My friends who know Spanish were way better at picking out grammatical mistakes their friends made when they studied abroad in South America since they didn't grow up learning all the short cuts. I definitely know my grammar isn't the best...my ex (who is from Germany) always threatened (jokingly, of course) to send me to an English school located in Chinatown of the UK city I studied abroad in. But I think that also had to do with my accent since he had a British one and sounds more proper...
 
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