News and Research
Immune System
SARS Will Appear Again, As Will Other Viruses Incubating
In 'Pandora's Boxes' Around The World, UB Expert Predicts
8-22-2003
BUFFALO. N.Y. -- The world can expect more SARS-like outbreaks
in the near future due to evolving cultural, environmental
and economic conditions that provide viruses with new opportunities
to infect humans, according to an expert on infectious disease
and geographic medicine at the University at Buffalo.
"There's
going to be another SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome)
sometime; there's no doubt about it," says Richard
V. Lee, M.D., professor of medicine in the UB School of
Medicine and Biomedical Sciences and an adjunct professor
of anthropology.
"There
are places in the world that seem to be a Pandora's box
for certain kinds of infectious disease," explains
Lee, who studies the health status of geographically isolated
human populations. "The way people live and interact
with their environment sets the stage for letting these
viruses out of their box."
Some
of these places, according to Lee, include fish-farming
villages in Southeast Asia -- where liver fluke infections,
Japanese B encephalitis and Nipah virus threaten residents
-- and agricultural communities in Africa that share boundaries
with wildlife populations -- where the Ebola virus and African
tick typhus are active.
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Lee, who has led UB medical-student expeditions to
treat people in remote areas in India, China, Kenya and Brazil, says
the SARS outbreak was inevitable, as is the likelihood of outbreak
for new and "old" viruses.
He calls the spread of SARS a classic example of how
humans provide viruses -- in this case, the coronavirus -- with the
opportunity to evolve into harmful human disease. Other examples include
AIDS, which may have originated from human ingestion of infected gorilla
meat, and monkey pox, which Lee says existed for decades as a primate
disease in Africa before being transmitted to U.S. residents recently
via Gambian giant rats and prairie dogs sold as exotic pets.
In the case of SARS, the densely populated region
of Southern China -- where people and farm animals live closely together
-- likely gave the coronavirus opportunity to jump back and forth
among animal species before being passed on in new form to humans,
Lee says.
The virus may have spread further when people ventured
with their animals to marketplaces outside their home region, he speculates.
Global air travel and crowded urban living spaces helped spread the
disease to Hong Kong and North America.
"Humans can break a virus out of its Pandora
box by moving the geography of the germ, or a virus can break out
by switching to another species," Lee explains. "When we
do things to a germ's environment we set the stage for the germs to
do something to us."
SARS has not been eradicated, Lee notes. The virus
that causes SARS still exists in animal species and is "looking
for another opportunity" to infect humans, he says.
"As long as those hosts are alive and the bug
stays in those hosts, the coronavirus will be around," Lee says.
"It may evolve into a more benign bug or a more virulent bug,
but it's not dead."
According to Lee, there are many viruses, like influenza,
that are passed back and forth between humans and animals. As they're
passed, their capacity to create disease changes over time. "These
viruses go through all sorts of changes and when they emerge they
may emerge as a very serious disease for humans," he says.
"Germs are smart and they do evolve."
Hand washing, Lee says, is one of the best defenses
against the spread of disease. He cautions against the overuse of
antiseptics, which could kill "good germs" that aid the
body -- in digestion, for example - and he says over-prescription
of antibiotics could create drug-resistant viral strains.
"The fact that germs become resistant should
not surprise anyone," Lee concludes. "They're in a constant
state of guerilla warfare."
This story has been adapted from a news release issued
by University At Buffalo, www.buffalo.edu.
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