A recent study found two types of H1N1 flu (swine flu) in sickly dogs in China. This begs the question: Can humans get dog flu?
Recent study shows two types of H1N1 flu in dogs in China.
If you’re a dog lover, it’s not unusual to share your bed
and maybe even some human food with your beloved dog. In return, your
dog gives you a ton of love and tail wags, but might give you something
else instead: dog flu.
Wait, can humans get dog flu?
Scientists are worried dogs might be the next animal to cause a big flu outbreak. A study published recently in mBio
found that influenza viruses from pigs — already known to transfer
dangerous swine flu to humans — can "jump" into dogs, evolve and then
infect humans.
And flu in humans that originated in animals has happened in the past.
How humans could get dog flu
The 2009 outbreak of H1N1 — known as swine flu — first came
from birds. The virus "jumped to pigs, exchanged some of its genes with
previously circulating swine viruses and then jumped from pigs into
humans," according to the American Society for Microbiology.
A similar process could happen from pigs to dogs to humans. In the
study, researchers found two types of H1N1 viruses in sick dogs living
in China.
"In our study, what we have found is another set of viruses
that come from swine that are originally avian in origin, and now they
are jumping into dogs and have been re-assorted with other viruses in
dogs," Adolfo GarcÃa-Sastre, study co-author and director of the Global
Health and Emerging Pathogens Institute at the Icahn School of Medicine
at Mount Sinai in New York, said in a statement.
"They are starting to interact with each other. This is
very reminiscent of what happened in swine ten years before the H1N1
pandemic."
Dog flu is already similar to human flu — and like human flu, there was a dog flu outbreak throughout the United States in winter 2017.
"Canine influenza is very similar to the human form in that
it is self-limiting and not life-threatening," Dr. Robin Brennen,
senior medical director at Animal Care Centers of New York City, told
Metro earlier this year.
Dog flu symptoms are also like the human flu with coughing,
sneezing, fever, nasal and eye discharge, a decrease in appetite and
general mood changes — and if not treated, it can turn into pneumonia
and be fatal.
Is dog flu really a danger to humans?
The study authors say that "further research is greatly
needed to assess the pandemic risk" of dog flu viruses and that no
humans have contracted dog flu yet. They only studied dogs in China and
it’s not certain that the same process is happening in other dogs
throughout the world.
So, can humans get dog flu? It’s not certain, but if this past flu season has taught us anything, it’s that anything can happen.
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