نتایج جستجو برای: influenza a h1n1

تعداد نتایج: 13454521  

Journal: :American journal of epidemiology 2003
M Elizabeth Halloran Ira M Longini Manjusha J Gaglani Pedro A Piedra Haitao Chu Gayla B Herschler W Paul Glezen

The authors report on a community-based, nonrandomized, open-label study, conducted during the 2000-2001 influenza season in Temple-Belton, Texas, of the protective effectiveness of trivalent, cold-adapted, influenza virus vaccine (CAIV-T) in children aged 18 months-18 years. The dominant circulating strains in 2000-2001 were influenza A/New Caledonia/20/99 (H1N1) and influenza B/Sichuan/379/99...

2012
Donald M. Carter Hai-Rong Lu Chalise E. Bloom Corey J. Crevar Joshua L. Cherry David J. Lipman Ted M. Ross

BACKGROUND During the 2009 influenza pandemic, individuals over the age of 60 had the lowest incidence of infection with approximately 25% of these people having pre-existing, cross-reactive antibodies to novel 2009 H1N1 influenza isolates. It was proposed that older people had pre-existing antibodies induced by previous 1918-like virus infection(s) that cross-reacted to novel H1N1 strains. M...

2013
David L. Fitter Nicole M. Freeman Josiane Buteau Roc Magloire Wendy M. Sessions Lizheng Guo Mark A. Katz Jacques Boncy

From June 2009 through December 2009, Haiti conducted sentinel surveillance for influenza. 499 samples were collected and tested using real-time RT-PCR. 197 (39.5%) were positive for influenza, including 95 (48%) pandemic (H1N1) 2009, 57 (29%) seasonal influenza A and 45 (23%) influenza B. The median age of pandemic (H1N1) 2009 cases was 21.7; two-thirds of pandemic (H1N1) 2009 cases were in pa...

Journal: :The Journal of family practice 2009
Doug Campos-Outcalt

What is pandemic flu? Sometimes new strains of flu may appear that people have little or no immunity to. When this happens, the virus can spread easily between people and cause an outbreak on a global scale — a pandemic. For example, the 2009 H1N1 swine flu was considered a pandemic flu. Although flu pandemics are rare, they can have severe consequences, including high rates of worker absenteei...

Journal: :The Journal of Experimental Medicine 1936
Richard E. Shope

Sera from a very high proportion of the human adults and new-born infants studied neutralized swine influenza virus; sera from children below the age of 12 years seldom exerted such an effect. The results of neutralization experiments with human sera and the virus of swine influenza have been compared with the outcome of similar tests with the virus of human influenza, and it seems evident that...

Journal: :Rural and remote health 2009
Alexander Hamilton

Swine flu, 2009's influenza pandemic, has been in the spotlight since it began in Mexico early in 2009. The global response to swine flu has been forceful in an attempt to prevent a repeat of previous devastating influenza pandemics. Outside Mexico swine flu has remained for the most part a mild disease, and it may turn out to be no more dangerous than seasonal influenza. However it is crucial ...

2011
Uri Roll Rami Yaari Guy Katriel Oren Barnea Lewi Stone Ella Mendelson Michal Mendelboim Amit Huppert

BACKGROUND The swine influenza H1N1 first identified in Mexico, spread rapidly across the globe and is considered the fastest moving pandemic in history. The early phase of an outbreak, in which data is relatively scarce, presents scientific challenges on key issues such as: scale, severity and immunity which are fundamental for establishing sound and rapid policy schemes. Our analysis of an Is...

2013
Kannan Tharakaraman Rahul Raman Nathan W. Stebbins Karthik Viswanathan Viswanathan Sasisekharan Ram Sasisekharan

The 2009 swine-origin H1N1 influenza, though antigenically novel to the population at the time, was antigenically similar to the 1918 H1N1 pandemic influenza, and consequently was considered to be "archived" in the swine species before reemerging in humans. Given that the H3N2 is another subtype that currently circulates in the human population and is high on WHO pandemic preparedness list, we ...

2009
Alcyone Artioli Machado

In March of 2009, a flu epidemic began in Mexico. Shortly thereafter, similar cases appeared in other countries, alerting authorities to the risk of a pandemic. This article details the principal signs and symptoms of infection with the swine-origin Influenza A (H1N1) virus. In addition, the measures to be taken in suspected or confirmed cases are addressed, as are the procedures to follow in r...

2014
Hilda Sherbany John McCauley Tal Meningher Musa Hindiyeh Rita Dichtiar Michal Perry Markovich Ella Mendelson Michal Mandelboim

BACKGROUND Influenza pandemics are usually caused by the re-assortment of several influenza viruses, results in the emergence of new influenza virus strains that can infect the entire population. These pandemic strains, as well as seasonal influenza viruses, are subjected to extensive antigenic change that has, so far, prevented the generation of a universal vaccine. METHODS Samples of patien...

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