Vet scientists' work on diagnostic, intervention tools for h1n1 helps human health lab, tooAugust 19, 2009If some day you are tested for the H1N1 virus without the painful prick of a needle, thank a pig -- and a team of Kansas State University researchers and their collaborators who are connecting animal and human health. K-State professors Dick Hesse and Bob Rowland -- along with a research partner at Iowa State University -- are collaborating with Susan Wong, a scientist at the New York State Department of Health, on diagnostic and intervention tools for the H1N1 virus. While Wong is working on the human health side, the other scientists are focused on aspects of the research that will benefit animal health, including the health of swine in Kansas. Hesse is an associate professor of diagnostic medicine and pathobiology and head of diagnostic virology in the K-State Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory. Rowland is a K-State professor of diagnostic medicine and pathobiology. Their Iowa State collaborator, Jeffrey Zimmerman, is a professor of veterinary diagnostic and production animal medicine. One of the ways these scientists' work intersects is in a method for identifying the H1N1 virus. At K-State, Rowland and Hesse are working on a diagnostic method for pigs that analyzes saliva rather than blood. Zimmerman developed a less invasive collection procedure for the pigs: The animals chew on a rope, from which saliva is collected. "Just as we are developing noninvasive techniques to collect samples from animals, it provides the New York State health lab the opportunity to develop the same oral fluids technique for humans," Rowland said. "Using a saliva swab rather than a needle to draw blood works especially well for kids." The K-State researchers also contribute to the human health side by providing Wong's lab with antigen targets and by validating test systems. "We bring a lot to the table, but at the same time they bring a lot to us," Rowland said. "One of the nice things is we can study the virus in pigs and get the type of reagents and samples from which to develop the tests. You can't do that with people." Such benefits to human health stem from K-State's efforts to help swine producers across Kansas. The K-Staters are developing multiplex system tests to profile swine herds and determine what's circulating, what the antibody response is, and with that knowledge help producers make sound management decisions. "This standardized diagnostic testing is to help the citizens of Kansas," Hesse said. "We herd profile on the veterinary end of things, and you can consider the human population a herd you can profile as well." Rowland said that some of the benefits of their testing system are that it provides more information, better accuracy and should be available to producers at a less expensive price. "This is the next generation of diagnostic tests that will replace a lot of things we've done in the past," he said. "The bottom line is these producers have to be able to afford the tests we provide them," he said. Healthy pigs mean successful producers, Hesse said. "At the end of the day, these diagnostics help maintain the healthy agriculture economy of the state," Hesse said. After diagnosing diseases in herds, the researchers said that their next goals are to help producers with surveillance and prevention. "The same reagents we use for diagnostics are often the ones we use for vaccines, so we're not only looking at diagnosing something, we're always looking at the next stage," Rowland said. Gary Anderson, who directs the K-State Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory, said that what sets apart Hesse, Rowland and many of their colleagues at K-State is their work at the bench nearly always translates into benefits for the field. "These are hard-core scientists who are really interested in meeting real-world needs and taking the research from the bench to the field, and the K-State Veterinary Diagnostic Lab is doing that every single day by helping people in our state and nation." The importance of the K-State researchers' efforts is magnified with diseases like the flu that humans share with other animals. "This really gets back to the concept of one health, one medicine," Rowland said. "Veterinary and human medicine have a lot of interaction, especially on the infectious disease side, where we look at infectious agents that may circulate in both human and animal populations." Kansas State University |
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| Related H1N1 Virus Current Events and H1N1 Virus News Articles CT scans better than X-rays when detecting abnormalities in patients with H1N1 virus Computed tomography (CT) scans are better than standard radiography (X-rays) in showing the extent of disease in patients with the H1N1 virus. U-M researchers find those with severe H1N1 at risk for pulmonary emboli University of Michigan researchers have found that patients with severe cases of the H1N1 virus are at risk for developing severe complications, including pulmonary emboli, according to a study published today in the American Journal of Roentgenology. Earlier flu viruses provided some immunity to current H1N1 influenza, study shows University of California, Davis, researchers studying the 2009 H1N1 influenza virus, formerly referred to as "swine flu," have identified a group of immunologically important sites on the virus that are also present in seasonal flu viruses that have been circulating for years. Flu surveillance boosts control, treatment options, says UAB travel-clinic chief Because pandemics unfold in unpredictable ways, surveillance of travel-related illness is among the most powerful tools health officials and doctors can use to detect and respond to new pathogens like the novel H1N1 influenza, says the physician who heads the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) Travelers' Clinic. CT scans show patients with severe cases of H1N1 are at risk for developing acute pulmonary emboli Researchers utilizing computed tomography (CT) scans have found that patients with severe cases of the H1N1 virus are at risk for developing severe complications, including pulmonary emboli (PE). Intensive care procedure saves lives: Swine flu study A research team has warned medical experts in the Northern Hemisphere not to underestimate the serious impact of the H1N1 (Swine flu) virus with a new report showing that many patients who were critically ill with the virus required prolonged life support treatment with heart-lung machines. NIH launches 2009 H1N1 influenza vaccine trials in HIV-infected pregnant women The first clinical trials to test whether the 2009 H1N1 influenza vaccine can safely elicit a protective immune response in pregnant women launched yesterday, and a trial to conduct the same test in HIV-infected children and youth will begin next week. Lessons learned from H1N1 virus pandemic A comprehensive study has revealed, for the first time, the impact of swine flu on the health of the general public in Australia and New Zealand. Aspirin Misuse May Have Made 1918 Flu Pandemic Worse The devastation of the 1918-1919 influenza pandemic is well known, but a new article suggests a surprising factor in the high death toll: the misuse of aspirin. Surgical masks vs. N95 respirators for preventing influenza among health-care workers Surgical masks appear to be no worse than, and nearly as effective as N95 respirators in preventing influenza in health care workers. More H1N1 Virus Current Events and H1N1 Virus News Articles |
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