New
strain of norovirus spreads around the world
A
new strain of the winter vomiting disease norovirus has spread to
France, New Zealand and Japan from Australia and is overtaking all
others to become the dominant strain in Britain, health officials
said on Wednesday.
9
January, 2013
The
norovirus variant, known as Sydney 2012, was identified in a
scientific paper last week and Britain's Health Protection Agency
(HPA) said genetic testing showed it was now causing more cases in
England and Wales than other strains.
Sydney
2012 does not carry worse symptoms than others but, like other
norovirus strains, it can cause violent and projectile vomiting,
diarrhea and sometimes fevers, headaches and stomach cramps.
Norovirus
cases have risen earlier than expected this winter in Britain, across
Europe, Japan and other parts of the world.
Although
norovirus mostly causes just a few days of sickness, it is
responsible for millions of infections every year and is notorious
for its ability to evade control.
In
the United States, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention say
norovirus causes 21 million illnesses a year, with 70,000 cases
requiring hospitalization and around 800 ending in death.
Ian
Goodfellow, a scientist who has studied norovirus for 10 years,
describes it as "the Ferrari of the virus world" and "one
of the most infectious viruses of man".
Latest
HPA data showed a dip in reported norovirus cases over the Christmas
period - something scientists had predicted - but with 4,140 cases so
far in England and Wales, infections are still 63 percent higher than
at this time last year.
For
every laboratory-confirmed case, scientists estimate there are 288
unreported cases, since the vast majority of people affected don't go
to a doctor. This means the number affected so far in Britain is more
than 1.2 million.
"The
emergence of a new strain does not mean that it causes more serious
illness, and managing outbreaks and those with the illness remains
the same," said David Brown, director of the virology reference
department at the HPA.
"Noroviruses
mutate rapidly and new strains are constantly emerging. At the start
of the season it is normal for outbreaks to be caused by a range of
different strains. However, as the season progresses, particular
strains are more successful and become dominant."
There
is no specific treatment for norovirus infection other than to let
the illness take its course and try to stay hydrated by drinking
regularly. Symptoms usually last around two days.
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