Avian flu testing. Credit: Saiful52, Shutterstock
Recent Studies Have Affected the Rate of JAMA Network Open Review confirmed Asymptomatic human infection with highly pathogenic H5N1 is rare, but possibleIdentifying There are 18 cases around the world.
Spain continues to manage the poultry outbreaks including the culling 450,000 hens at Madrid and public concerns about product safety with ongoing guidance, such as how you can spot signs of bird influenza in eggs.
Humans have been diagnosed with 18 H5N1 cases that are symptom-free.
Researchers screened 1,567 publications, reducing them to 10 publications, which confirmed 18 H5N1 asymptomatic infections.
This includes:
- Two cases confirmed both by molecular and Serologic Testing (MSC).
- 16 cases confirmed only by Molecular Testing (MC)
Both cases were detected in Pakistan and Vietnam during investigations of households that had confirmed H5N1 infection. The authors state that neither MSC patient nor their family members exposed to poultry or infected family were wearing personal protective equipment.
The 16 remaining cases (14 adult, 2 child) were discovered primarily through increased surveillance of people who had been exposed to infected chicken in Bangladesh, Spain and the UK.
The review notes that two Spanish poultry workers tested positive with high cycle threshold values, suggesting – according to the authors – that the detections may reflect “possible environmental contamination rather than true infection.”
Why H5N1 asymptomatic remains a concern for public health
The study highlights that “asymptomatic infections” are “rarely reported”, and that the evidence available is too limited to determine if symptomless carriers can transmit infection.
The authors suggest that to close this gap, prospective surveillance should be conducted with serial serum and respiratory sampling in high-risk groups like poultry workers and household contact of confirmed cases.
These findings are applicable across Europe, as authorities continue to evaluate the risks posed from ongoing outbreaks including those that affect poultry farms in Spain.
For locals and expats in Spain living near poultry production – or those working in agriculture, food retail, or food processing – the review provides some reassurance in that asymptomatic H5N1 infections are exceptionally rare. It also stresses the importance of continuing monitoring and protective measures.
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