http://www.aljazeera.com/news/middleeast/2013/08/201388222628245673.html

         
         
Study: Arabian camel may be MERS virus host
Scientists find clue that suggests camels may be involved in infecting people 
with the deadly respiratory virus.
Last Modified: 08 Aug 2013 22:57
Scientists found traces of antibodies against the MERS virus in dromedary 
camels, but not the virus itself [AP]

Researchers have pointed to the Arabian camel as a possible host of the deadly 
human MERS virus plaguing the Middle East.

The exact origins of the virus is a riddle scientists have been working hard to 
solve in a bid to halt its spread, especially in the lead-up to the annual hajj 
pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia in October.

Now an international team says blood tests were positive for antibodies in 
camels from Oman, meaning they had at some point been infected with Middle East 
Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (MERS-CoV), or a closely-related virus.

The findings suggest that Arabian or dromedary camels "may be one reservoir of 
the virus that is causing MERS in humans," said a statement that accompanied 
the study published in The Lancet Infectious Diseases journal on Friday.

Deadly virus

MERS has killed 46 of the 94 people confirmed infected since September last 
year, according to the World Health Organisation.

Concerns about the virus, for which there is no vaccine, have led Saudi Arabia 
to restrict visas for the 2013 hajj, which sees millions of Muslims flock to 
the holy sites of Mecca and Medina every year.

Scientists had long suspected that like its cousin virus SARS, which killed 
hundreds of people in Asia 10 years ago, MERS may originate in bats.

It is unlikely, however, that these shy, nocturnal creatures are passing the 
virus on to humans, and the involvement of an intermediary "reservoir" animal 
is suspected - with anecdotal evidence of patients having been in contact with 
camels or goats.

The virus is not very adept at jumping from person to person, though there have 
been isolated cases.

For the study, the team took blood from 50 camels from across Oman and another 
105 in the Canary Islands, as well as llamas, alpacas, Bactrian camels, cattle, 
goats and sheep from the Netherlands, Chile and Spain.

They found MERS-like antibodies in all of the Omani camels and lower levels in 
15 of those from the Canary Islands.

"What it means is that these camels some time ago have come across a virus that 
is very similar to MERS-CoV," the paper's senior author Marion Koopmans of the 
Netherlands' National Institute of Public Health and the Environment, told AFP 
news agency.

Additional testing

According to the study, the Oman samples came from various locations in the 
country, "suggesting that MERS-CoV, or a very similar virus, is circulating 
widely in dromedary camels in the region".

But the team could not say when the animals had been exposed, or whether it was 
the exact same virus.

"For that, studies are needed that collect the right samples from camels while 
they are infected," said Koopmans. Other animals from the Middle East, like 
goats, must also be tested, she said.

Dromedary camels are popular animals in the Middle East and North Africa, used 
for transport, meat and milk, as well as racing. There are an estimated 13 
million of them in the world today - all but a few domesticated.

A respiratory virus that causes fever and pneumonia, MERS has claimed lives in 
Jordan, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, France, Germany, Italy, 
the UK and Tunisia.

All people who had fallen ill outside the Arabian peninsula had either visited 
one of the Middle Eastern countries or had been infected by a person thought to 
have come from there.
Source:
AFP
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