Agency Report The World Health Organisation, on Friday, revealed that a man infected with H5N2 bird flu, the first confirmed human infection with the strain, died from multiple factors. WHO added that investigations were ongoing. WHO announced on Wednesday that the first laboratory-confirmed human case of infection with the H5N2 avian influenza virus had been reported from Mexico.
Meanwhile, Mexico’s health ministry said the 59-year-old man had “a history of chronic kidney disease, type 2 diabetes (and) long-standing systemic arterial hypertension”. He had been bedridden for three weeks prior to the onset of acute symptoms, developing fever, shortness of breath, diarrhoea, nausea and general malaise on April 17. He was taken to a hospital in Mexico City on April 24 and died later that day.
“The death is a multi-factorial death, not a death attributable to H5N2,” WHO spokesman Christian Lindmeier told a media briefing in Geneva on Friday. “The patient came to the hospital after weeks of multi-factorial background of multi other diseases.” His body was subsequently routinely tested for flu and other viruses, and H5N2 was detected, Lindmeier said.
Seventeen contacts of the case in the hospital were identified and they all tested negative for influenza. In the man’s place of residence, 12 contacts in the weeks beforehand were identified, and they likewise tested negative. “Investigations are ongoing.
Serology is ongoing. That means the blood testing of contacts .