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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Tuesday, November 13, 2001 |
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Anthrax vaccine being tested
By R.K. Radhakrishnan
BHOPAL, NOV. 12. The High Security Animal Disease Laboratory here
has taken up testing of the human anthrax vaccine developed by
two Delhi scientists, according to its director, Dr. H.K.
Pradhan. The testing could take ``six to nine months''.
He said the human anthrax vaccine technology had been developed
now only in the U.S. and Russia. The World Health Organisation's
and the U.S. Centre for Disease Control's protocols on testing
would be followed, but refused to elaborate.
The vaccine developed by Dr. Rakesh Bhatnagar of the Centre for
Biotechnology, Jawaharlal Nehru University, and Dr. Yogendra
Singh of CSIR's Centre for Biochemical Technology, was unveiled
in New Delhi on November 5. The new, relatively inexpensive
vaccine is prepared by cloning and over expression of the
protective antigen gene alone through a polymerase chain
reaction. Preliminary studies on mice and guinea pigs have proved
the efficiency of the vaccine, according to the researchers.
Anthrax was prevalent in animals such as cattle, sheep and goats
in the country for more than a century and the disease was under
control in the country, he said. There were instances of people
being affected by the disease, but this was ``only an
occupational hazard'', he told a group of visiting presspersons
here.
The laboratory also had received for testing some ``six or seven
letters'' addressed to prominent politicians with traces of some
white powder. But none of these had tested positive for anthrax,
Dr. Pradhan said.
The laboratory has drawn up a Rs. 60 lakh proposal to study the
``fresh emergence'' of mad cow disease. But right now, it did not
have the facility to take up research on the disease, which is
estimated to cause a loss of about Rs. 4000 crore to the country.
The long-term objective behind setting up the laboratory is to
develop competency for diagnosis and control of foreign diseases
in animals important to India, in the event of their entry into
the country. The immediate mandate of the laboratory included
developing tests and screening regimen for animal and animal
products for exotic diseases and pathogens; diagnosis and
differential diagnosis of exotic/emerging animal diseases using
standard/latest technology.
The Laboratory had identified 39 ``foreign'' diseases which had
the potential to enter the country. These diseases were not
present in the country and efforts were on at various levels to
ensure that these were not introduced here.
The Laboratory's close watch yielded results on two occasions
this year. In January, the laboratory discovered that 150 rabbits
imported from Germany by the Union Ministry of Textiles for a fur
development programme were afflicted with Rabbit Haemorrhagic
disease. The animals, kept in quarantine in Delhi, were destroyed
and the issue was taken up with the German Government.
Incidentally, a German laboratory had certified the animals free
of the disease.
In another case, an Indian national had imported 80 pigeons from
Saudi Arabia last August, through Chennai, without a valid
permit. A laboratory test revealed that they were afflicted with
Avian Influenza.
The Laboratory was now working on an antidote for nine of the
diseases which had ``high potential'' to enter the country. These
included the Bovine Viral Diarrhoea, Bovine Immuno Deficiency
(similar to HIV infection in human beings), Pseudo- rabies in
Cattle, Porcine respiratory and reproductive syndrome, HongKong
flu (popularly Avian Influenza), Rabbit haemorrhagic disease and
transmittable gasteroenteritis.
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