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The Lawspeaker
10-19-2010, 03:46 PM
Scientists eradicate deadly rinderpest virus (Elimination of virus that causes deadly cattle plague makes rinderpest only the second viral disease in history to have been wiped out by humans)
Elimination of virus that causes deadly cattle plague makes rinderpest only the second viral disease in history to have been wiped out by humans

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Rinderpest causes respiratory disease and gut problems that lead to diarrhoea, dehydration and eventually death of livestock.

Scientists have eradicated a killer virus in the wild, only the second time such a feat has been achieved in human history.

Researchers at the UN said today that rinderpest (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rinderpest), a virus that causes devastating cattle plague, has been wiped out, the first time such an announcement has been made since the end of smallpox more than 30 years ago.

John Anderson, the head of the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation, called the success "the biggest achievement of veterinary history". Rinderpest is the first animal virus to be contained and then eradicated in the wild.

The rinderpest virus originated in Asia but spread worldwide with help from imported livestock and invaders such as Gengis Khan, whose oxen carried the disease to other countries.

The virus causes respiratory disease and gut problems that lead to diarrhoea, dehydration and eventually death. More than 80% of cattle who contract the virus die from it.

As the virus spread, it left vast numbers of dead livestock in its wake, and communities without meat and milk. The loss of the animals, which were used to plough the land, crippled farming and led to widepsread starvation.

The catastrophic impact of rinderpest led to the establishment of Britain's national veterinary service in 1865, which through surveillance, culls and import restrictions, eradicated the disease in this country two years later.

A global eradication plan for rinderpest, backed by the UN and the World Organisation for Animal Health, was launched in 1994. Scientists at the Institute for Animal Health's (IAH) Pirbright laboratory in Surrey developed pregnancy-test like kits that were distributed in affected countries so that local officials could identify and kill infected livestock. Animals in areas surrounding outbreaks were vaccinated to protect them from the disease.

The eradication programme was feasible because rinderpest has remained as a single strain since it was identified, so all animals can be protected by the same vaccine. Most viruses evolve into a variety of strains, making them much harder to control.

Stocks of the rinderpest virus will be kept in high-security laboratories, including the IAH's own facility.

The last known outbreak of rinderpest was reported in Kenya in 2001, though some disease was thought to have lingered on in Somalia. The last animal vaccinations were given in 2006 and targeted surveillance in 2009 failed to spot new cases of the disease. On the back of the success, the UN closed field operations to curtail the disease this year.

"There has never been such an important and devastating disease as rinderpest in livestock," said Michael Baron of the IAH. "We've known about it and its problems for a thousand years and we've got rid of it."

The Lawspeaker
10-19-2010, 04:16 PM
Good I am looking at the wiki list of global eradication programs that are underway: poliomyelitis (polio) and dracunculiasis are next to the menu for eradication.

There are also projects underway to rid the world (or at least several WHO areas) of measles, malaria, filariasis, yaws, BSE and some more stuff.

My best wishes to the scientists and now that we are at it: let's make attempt to kill off lyme, rabies, tuberculosis and various childhood diseases and make this world (or at least the western world) a better place. :thumb001:

Devils Advocate
10-19-2010, 08:19 PM
Let us have a quiet moment in contemplation. Imagine the world without European or Asian scientists. I shudder to think of how many would die each year.