Science in Action   /     First US avian flu fatality

Description

H5N1 bird flu is still spreading across farms in the USA and this week claimed its first human life in North America - an elderly patient in Louisiana infected by backyard poultry. But last week, Sonja Olsen, Associate Director for Preparedness and Response in the CDC’s flu division, and her colleague Shikha Garg, published new analysis in the New England Journal of Medicine summarizing the human cases and epidemiology so far. A lab study underscoring a suspected link between the virus responsible for cold sores, and Alzheimers, the most common form of dementia, has been published in Science Signalling this week. The study, by Dana Cairns of Tufts University, looks at whether repetitive brain trauma – another risk factor - adds to the evidence that latent herpes simplex can be involved. Song Lin, a chemist at Cornell University who’s won prizes for pioneering the use of electrical currents to drive chemical reactions rather than heat, has teamed up with Cornell microengineer Paul McEuen to power up a new kind of chemistry and invent another kind of SPECS – an acronym for Small Photoelectronics for Electrochemical Synthesis. They outlined their 1st generation device and the promises it brings in Nature this week.Presenter: Roland Pease Producer: Alex Mansfield Production Coordinator: Jana Bennett-Holesworth(Image: Chickens eating feed. Credit: San Francisco Chronicle/Hearst Newspapers via Getty Images.)

Subtitle
Update on bird flu; Herpes, brain trauma and Alzheimer’s; a new kind of electrochemistry.
Duration
1809
Publishing date
2025-01-09 21:00
Link
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/w3ct5vdz
Contributors
  BBC World Service
author  
Enclosures
http://open.live.bbc.co.uk/mediaselector/6/redir/version/2.0/mediaset/audio-nondrm-download-rss-low/proto/http/vpid/p0khqqzj.mp3
audio/mpeg