Thai Health Ministry's Disease Control Department on Firday
confirmed that two cats had died from bird flu virus and experts
are cooperating to research the case, the Bangkokbiznews.com
reported.
Thai government spokesman Jakrapob Penkair said here Friday
afternoon that the government had received confirmed report from
the Disease Control Department, saying it's the first case in the
world that H5N1 virus had been detected on cat.
"Because it's the first case in the world, so nobody can explain
clearly so far how the virus can infected to the bodies of cats and
if other animals can be infected by the virus through cat or not,"
Jakrapob said.
He said experts from Thailand's institutes and universities are
researching the case and the government had informed the new case
to the concerned international organizations, including the Word
Health Organization (WHO), the United Nations Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO).
Thaneerat Santivatra, director of Kasetsart University's animal
hospitable hospital and dean of the university's Faculty of
Veterinary Science announced this morning that test results proved
that two cats from Nakhonpathom province had died of the H5N1 virus
that caused the avian influenza.
He also declared that the test identified that a leopard died
early this month and two tigers had recovered also infected by the
same virus.
The Disease Control Department's director Charal Trivuthipong
then told reporters that since the test also showed that the virus
detected on cats remained exactly the same as those found out on
chicken so he believed there is no mutation of the fatal H5N1
virus.
Many scientists worried that the H5N1 virus could mutate to a
new virus which can infect between humans. The WHO also warned for
many times that the mutation would make the disease more lethal and
hard to cure.
(Xinhua News Agency February 21, 2004)