Non-Profit Trusted Source of Non-Commercial Health Information
The Original Voice of the American Academy of Anti-Aging, Preventative, and Regenerative Medicine
logo logo
Infectious Disease

SARS study may hold key to eventual vaccine

20 years, 2 months ago

9202  0
Posted on Jan 30, 2004, 6 a.m. By Bill Freeman

WASHINGTON - Chinese scientists have documented how the SARS virus genetically evolved during last year's massive outbreak, adaptations that might have helped the deadly respiratory illness become more infectious. Some of the genetic changes point to potential targets for future vaccine development, scientists at China's SARS Molecular Epidemiology Consortium concluded.

WASHINGTON - Chinese scientists have documented how the SARS virus genetically evolved during last year's massive outbreak, adaptations that might have helped the deadly respiratory illness become more infectious. Some of the genetic changes point to potential targets for future vaccine development, scientists at China's SARS Molecular Epidemiology Consortium concluded. The work also bolsters evidence that SARS jumps from animals to humans, possibly frequently - and urges prompt control of new cases before viral strains have time to adapt.

Source: http://news.mysanantonio.com/story.cfm?xla=saen%26xlb=0%26xlc=1121121



[Editor: The preceding article was not written by A4M/WHN]

WorldHealth Videos