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Influenza A virus subtype H3N8

H3N8 is a subtype of the species Influenza A virus that is endemic in birds, horses and dogs. It is the main cause of equine influenza and is also known as equine influenza virus. In 2011, it was reported to have been found in seals.[1] Cats have been experimentally infected with the virus, leading to clinical signs, shedding of the virus and infection of other cats.[2] In 2022 and 2023, three people in China were infected with H3N8,[3] with one fatality, marking the first time a human has died from this strain of flu.[4]

Influenza A virus subtype H3N8
Virus classification
(unranked): Virus
Realm: Riboviria
Kingdom: Orthornavirae
Phylum: Negarnaviricota
Class: Insthoviricetes
Order: Articulavirales
Family: Orthomyxoviridae
Genus: Alphainfluenzavirus
Species:
Serotype:
Influenza A virus subtype H3N8

Introduction edit

 
Phylogenetic tree of 57 equine influenza viruses

Equine influenza (EI) is a highly contagious respiratory disease of horses and related animals such as donkeys, mules and zebras (collectively known as equines). Equine influenza is caused by a type A influenza virus in the family Orthomyxoviridae (genus Influenzavirus). Transmission of the equine influenza virus (EIV) to humans has not occurred during outbreaks of the disease in horses. A lineage of H3N8 has been found to infect humans, with the first two cases in China in April and May 2022,[5] and a third case in March 2023, which was the first death.[3]

History edit

In 1963, the H3N8 (A/equine/2/Miami/63) subtype created an epidemic of equine influenza in Miami and subsequently spread throughout North and South America and Europe, creating massive outbreaks during 1964 and 1965. Since 1963, the H3N8 virus has drifted along a single lineage at a rate of 0.8 amino acid substitutions per year. Between 1978 and 1981, there were widespread epidemics of the A/equine/2 strain throughout the US and Europe despite the development of vaccines. Since the late 1980s, evolution of the H3N8 virus has diverged into two families: an "American-like" lineage and a "European-like" lineage.[6] A 1997 study found H3N8 was responsible for over one quarter of the influenza infections in wild ducks.[7]

H3N8 has been suggested as a possible cause of the 1889–1890 pandemic in humans, and also another epidemic in 1898–1900.[8][9] Before the identification of H3N8 as a possible cause of the 1889 pandemic, the H2N2 subtype was suggested.[10][11][12] At this point, it is not possible to identify the virus for either the 1889 or 1900 outbreak with certainty.[13]

Route of transmission edit

 
Transmission routes of EIV

Equine influenza virus (H3N8) can be spread by a few different routes. The ultimate source of the virus is respiratory tract secretions. Coughing horses can release the virus into the air, where it can spread up to 30–50 metres. It can also be spread by direct contact between horses, or indirectly via a person's hands or clothing, or on inanimate objects (e.g. buckets, tack, twitches). However, the virus doesn't survive outside of a horse for long[14] The virus is delicate within the environment and easily killed by heat, cold, desiccation, and disinfectants.[15] The virus multiplies in epithelial cells of upper respiratory tract. Dispersed by aerosol droplets when horse coughs or exhales. The virus can survive in the environment, on different surfaces, for up to 48 hours. Spread of the disease has been associated with the movement of people, pets, horse equipment and tack where proper biosecurity procedures have not been followed[16]

Subclinical infection with virus shedding can occur in vaccinated horses, particularly where there is a mismatch between the vaccine strains and the virus strains circulating in the field. Such infections contribute to the spread of the disease.[17]

Incubation period edit

The time from when a horse gets exposed to the time when it gets sick. It is quite short for equine influenza: typically 1–3 days and up to 7 days. This makes disease control easier, as infected horses can be identified sooner, meaning that appropriate control measures can be enacted more quickly. Diseases that have very long incubation periods can be more difficult to control.[14]

Pathophysiology edit

 
Life cycle and pathogenesis of EIV

Aerosolized influenza virus is inhaled and embeds in the respiratory mucosa, of the upper and lower respiratory tract. The virus is attracted to the glycoproteins and mucopolysaccharides of the mucus coating the respiratory mucosa. If the infecting dose of virus is high, abundant viral neuraminidase breaks down the mucosal layer, allowing access of the virus to the underlying epithelial cells. The virus then attaches to epithelial cells through binding of the hemagglutinin spike to the N-acetylneuraminic acid receptor on the cell. The virus then enters the cell by endocytosis into the cell cytoplasm where it replicates to produce new virions that are released back into the respiratory tract by budding from the infected cell. The virus disperses throughout the trachea and bronchial tree within 3 days, causing hyperemia, edema, necrosis, desquamation, and focal erosion. Viremia is rare, but is possible if the virus crosses the basement membrane and enters the circulation, potentially causing inflammation of skeletal and cardiac muscle (myositis and myocarditis), encephalitic signs, and limb edema[6]

Diagnosis edit

Fever of 102.5–105.0 °F (39.2–40.6 °C), frequent dry cough for several weeks, ‘drippy’ nose with discharge and secondary bacterial infection are some of the clinical signs of Equine influenza virus infection. isolation of influenza virus from nasopharyngeal and or large rise in antibody titer in equine-1 or 2 serum can be used as diagnosis in horses. Other clinical findings may include a serous or light mucoid nasal discharge, epiphora, tender but rarely swollen submandibular lymph nodes, hyperemia of nasal and conjunctival mucosa, tachypnea, tachycardia, limb edema, muscle soreness and stiffness.[15]

Period of infectivity edit

The length of time a horse can spread the virus after being infected. It is a very important concept, because horses can still infect other horses after they have gotten over their own illness. Viruses that are shed for long periods of time after a horse gets better are much harder to control. Horses tend to be most infectious (i.e. shedding the most virus) in the first 24–48 hours after they develop a fever, but they can shed the virus for up to 7–10 days after their signs of illness disappear.[14]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ McGrath, Matt (31 July 2012). "New flu virus found in seals concerns scientists". BBC News. Retrieved 2012-07-31.
  2. ^ Su S, Wang L, Fu X, et al. (December 2014). "Equine influenza A(H3N8) virus infection in cats". Emerging Infectious Diseases. 20 (12): 2096–2099. doi:10.3201/eid2012.140867. PMC 4257791. PMID 25417790.
  3. ^ a b "China reports first death from H3N8 bird flu". BNO News. 10 April 2023. Retrieved 10 April 2023.
  4. ^ "First H3N8 bird flu death reported in China, says WHO". WION. Retrieved 2023-04-12.
  5. ^ Patton, Dominique (2022-04-27). "China reports first human case of H3N8 bird flu". Reuters. Retrieved 2023-05-09.
  6. ^ a b Equine influenza virus by Wilson et al doi:10.1053/j.ctep.2006.03.013
  7. ^ Sharp, GB; Kawaoka, Y; Jones, DJ; et al. (August 1997). "Coinfection of wild ducks by influenza A viruses: distribution patterns and biological significance". J. Virol. 71 (8): 6128–35. doi:10.1128/JVI.71.8.6128-6135.1997. PMC 191873. PMID 9223507.
  8. ^ Valleron, Alain-Jacques; Cori, Anne; Valtat, Sophie; Meurisse, Sofia; Carrat, Fabrice; Boëlle, Pierre-Yves (May 11, 2010). "Transmissibility and geographic spread of the 1889 influenza pandemic". PNAS. 107 (19): 8778–8781. Bibcode:2010PNAS..107.8778V. doi:10.1073/pnas.1000886107. PMC 2889325. PMID 20421481.
  9. ^ Salmon, Roland, Swine Flu: what next? (PDF), National Public Health Service for Wales, Communicable Disease Surveillance Centre
  10. ^ Hilleman MR (19 August 2002). "Realities and enigmas of human viral influenza: pathogenesis, epidemiology and control". Vaccine. 20 (25–26): 3068–3087. doi:10.1016/s0264-410x(02)00254-2. PMID 12163258.
  11. ^ "pilva.com".
  12. ^ Alexis Madrigal (April 26, 2010). "1889 Pandemic Didn't Need Planes to Circle Globe in 4 Months". Wired.
  13. ^ Didier Raoult; Michel Drancourt, eds. (2008-01-24), Paleomicrobiology: Past Human Infections, Springer, ISBN 9783540758556
  14. ^ a b c "equidblog.com". ww38.equidblog.com. Retrieved 2023-05-09.
  15. ^ a b Equine influenza virus by Wilson et al. doi:10.1053/j.ctep.2006.03.013
  16. ^ Farmnote on Equine Influenza by Karen Yurisich, Veterinary Officer, Perth ISSN 0726-934X.
  17. ^ Daly, JM; Newton, JR; Mumford, JA (2004). "Current perspectives on control of equine influenza" (PDF). Vet. Res. 35 (4): 411–23. doi:10.1051/vetres:2004023. PMID 15236674. S2CID 11346318.

influenza, virus, subtype, h3n8, h3n8, subtype, species, influenza, virus, that, endemic, birds, horses, dogs, main, cause, equine, influenza, also, known, equine, influenza, virus, 2011, reported, have, been, found, seals, cats, have, been, experimentally, in. H3N8 is a subtype of the species Influenza A virus that is endemic in birds horses and dogs It is the main cause of equine influenza and is also known as equine influenza virus In 2011 it was reported to have been found in seals 1 Cats have been experimentally infected with the virus leading to clinical signs shedding of the virus and infection of other cats 2 In 2022 and 2023 three people in China were infected with H3N8 3 with one fatality marking the first time a human has died from this strain of flu 4 Influenza A virus subtype H3N8Virus classification unranked VirusRealm RiboviriaKingdom OrthornaviraePhylum NegarnaviricotaClass InsthoviricetesOrder ArticulaviralesFamily OrthomyxoviridaeGenus AlphainfluenzavirusSpecies Influenza A virusSerotype Influenza A virus subtype H3N8 Contents 1 Introduction 2 History 3 Route of transmission 4 Incubation period 5 Pathophysiology 6 Diagnosis 7 Period of infectivity 8 See also 9 ReferencesIntroduction edit nbsp Phylogenetic tree of 57 equine influenza virusesEquine influenza EI is a highly contagious respiratory disease of horses and related animals such as donkeys mules and zebras collectively known as equines Equine influenza is caused by a type A influenza virus in the family Orthomyxoviridae genus Influenzavirus Transmission of the equine influenza virus EIV to humans has not occurred during outbreaks of the disease in horses A lineage of H3N8 has been found to infect humans with the first two cases in China in April and May 2022 5 and a third case in March 2023 which was the first death 3 History editIn 1963 the H3N8 A equine 2 Miami 63 subtype created an epidemic of equine influenza in Miami and subsequently spread throughout North and South America and Europe creating massive outbreaks during 1964 and 1965 Since 1963 the H3N8 virus has drifted along a single lineage at a rate of 0 8 amino acid substitutions per year Between 1978 and 1981 there were widespread epidemics of the A equine 2 strain throughout the US and Europe despite the development of vaccines Since the late 1980s evolution of the H3N8 virus has diverged into two families an American like lineage and a European like lineage 6 A 1997 study found H3N8 was responsible for over one quarter of the influenza infections in wild ducks 7 H3N8 has been suggested as a possible cause of the 1889 1890 pandemic in humans and also another epidemic in 1898 1900 8 9 Before the identification of H3N8 as a possible cause of the 1889 pandemic the H2N2 subtype was suggested 10 11 12 At this point it is not possible to identify the virus for either the 1889 or 1900 outbreak with certainty 13 Route of transmission edit nbsp Transmission routes of EIVEquine influenza virus H3N8 can be spread by a few different routes The ultimate source of the virus is respiratory tract secretions Coughing horses can release the virus into the air where it can spread up to 30 50 metres It can also be spread by direct contact between horses or indirectly via a person s hands or clothing or on inanimate objects e g buckets tack twitches However the virus doesn t survive outside of a horse for long 14 The virus is delicate within the environment and easily killed by heat cold desiccation and disinfectants 15 The virus multiplies in epithelial cells of upper respiratory tract Dispersed by aerosol droplets when horse coughs or exhales The virus can survive in the environment on different surfaces for up to 48 hours Spread of the disease has been associated with the movement of people pets horse equipment and tack where proper biosecurity procedures have not been followed 16 Subclinical infection with virus shedding can occur in vaccinated horses particularly where there is a mismatch between the vaccine strains and the virus strains circulating in the field Such infections contribute to the spread of the disease 17 Incubation period editThe time from when a horse gets exposed to the time when it gets sick It is quite short for equine influenza typically 1 3 days and up to 7 days This makes disease control easier as infected horses can be identified sooner meaning that appropriate control measures can be enacted more quickly Diseases that have very long incubation periods can be more difficult to control 14 Pathophysiology edit nbsp Life cycle and pathogenesis of EIVAerosolized influenza virus is inhaled and embeds in the respiratory mucosa of the upper and lower respiratory tract The virus is attracted to the glycoproteins and mucopolysaccharides of the mucus coating the respiratory mucosa If the infecting dose of virus is high abundant viral neuraminidase breaks down the mucosal layer allowing access of the virus to the underlying epithelial cells The virus then attaches to epithelial cells through binding of the hemagglutinin spike to the N acetylneuraminic acid receptor on the cell The virus then enters the cell by endocytosis into the cell cytoplasm where it replicates to produce new virions that are released back into the respiratory tract by budding from the infected cell The virus disperses throughout the trachea and bronchial tree within 3 days causing hyperemia edema necrosis desquamation and focal erosion Viremia is rare but is possible if the virus crosses the basement membrane and enters the circulation potentially causing inflammation of skeletal and cardiac muscle myositis and myocarditis encephalitic signs and limb edema 6 Diagnosis editFever of 102 5 105 0 F 39 2 40 6 C frequent dry cough for several weeks drippy nose with discharge and secondary bacterial infection are some of the clinical signs of Equine influenza virus infection isolation of influenza virus from nasopharyngeal and or large rise in antibody titer in equine 1 or 2 serum can be used as diagnosis in horses Other clinical findings may include a serous or light mucoid nasal discharge epiphora tender but rarely swollen submandibular lymph nodes hyperemia of nasal and conjunctival mucosa tachypnea tachycardia limb edema muscle soreness and stiffness 15 Period of infectivity editThe length of time a horse can spread the virus after being infected It is a very important concept because horses can still infect other horses after they have gotten over their own illness Viruses that are shed for long periods of time after a horse gets better are much harder to control Horses tend to be most infectious i e shedding the most virus in the first 24 48 hours after they develop a fever but they can shed the virus for up to 7 10 days after their signs of illness disappear 14 See also editHorse flu Dog fluReferences edit McGrath Matt 31 July 2012 New flu virus found in seals concerns scientists BBC News Retrieved 2012 07 31 Su S Wang L Fu X et al December 2014 Equine influenza A H3N8 virus infection in cats Emerging Infectious Diseases 20 12 2096 2099 doi 10 3201 eid2012 140867 PMC 4257791 PMID 25417790 a b China reports first death from H3N8 bird flu BNO News 10 April 2023 Retrieved 10 April 2023 First H3N8 bird flu death reported in China says WHO WION Retrieved 2023 04 12 Patton Dominique 2022 04 27 China reports first human case of H3N8 bird flu Reuters Retrieved 2023 05 09 a b Equine influenza virus by Wilson et al doi 10 1053 j ctep 2006 03 013 Sharp GB Kawaoka Y Jones DJ et al August 1997 Coinfection of wild ducks by influenza A viruses distribution patterns and biological significance J Virol 71 8 6128 35 doi 10 1128 JVI 71 8 6128 6135 1997 PMC 191873 PMID 9223507 Valleron Alain Jacques Cori Anne Valtat Sophie Meurisse Sofia Carrat Fabrice Boelle Pierre Yves May 11 2010 Transmissibility and geographic spread of the 1889 influenza pandemic PNAS 107 19 8778 8781 Bibcode 2010PNAS 107 8778V doi 10 1073 pnas 1000886107 PMC 2889325 PMID 20421481 Salmon Roland Swine Flu what next PDF National Public Health Service for Wales Communicable Disease Surveillance Centre Hilleman MR 19 August 2002 Realities and enigmas of human viral influenza pathogenesis epidemiology and control Vaccine 20 25 26 3068 3087 doi 10 1016 s0264 410x 02 00254 2 PMID 12163258 pilva com Alexis Madrigal April 26 2010 1889 Pandemic Didn t Need Planes to Circle Globe in 4 Months Wired Didier Raoult Michel Drancourt eds 2008 01 24 Paleomicrobiology Past Human Infections Springer ISBN 9783540758556 a b c equidblog com ww38 equidblog com Retrieved 2023 05 09 a b Equine influenza virus by Wilson et al doi 10 1053 j ctep 2006 03 013 Farmnote on Equine Influenza by Karen Yurisich Veterinary Officer Perth ISSN 0726 934X Daly JM Newton JR Mumford JA 2004 Current perspectives on control of equine influenza PDF Vet Res 35 4 411 23 doi 10 1051 vetres 2004023 PMID 15236674 S2CID 11346318 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Influenza A virus subtype H3N8 amp oldid 1176314710, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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