Swine flu virus 'closely related' to 1918 pandemic
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Swine flu penetrates deeper into the lungs and can inflict more
damage than ordinary seasonal flu, scientists have found.
The discovery could explain why the virus is able to cause severe
illness in people with no underlying health problems.
Experts also believe swine flu is closely related to strains
responsible for the 1918 pandemic which killed up to 40 million
people worldwide.
Evidence suggests that people born after 1920 have little natural
resistance to the virus.
US and Japanese researchers tested the ability of swine flu strains
obtained from infected patients to cause disease in mice, ferrets,
and macaque monkeys.
They found that swine-origin influenza viruses (S-OIVs) were about
five times more harmful than seasonal versions of the H1N1 flu
strain.
Their effect on the lungs was reminiscent of H5N1 bird flu, which
is almost always fatal when it infects humans. But in the case of
swine flu, most victims recover.
The viruses were also found to infect pigs without causing disease
symptoms. This could be why there were no reports of flu outbreaks
in pigs before humans started to get ill.
Close inspection showed that the new strains were similar to the
1918 pandemic viruses.
Antibodies collected from patients born before 1920 were able to
recognise them, and would presumably offer some immunity. But there
was little evidence individuals born after 1920 harboured
antibodies that could target swine flu.
A report on the research appeared online in the journal
Nature.
The scientists, led by Dr Yoshihiro Kawaoka from the University of
Wisconsin-Madison in the US, wrote: "Most human infections with
swine-origin H1N1 influenza viruses (S-OIVs) seem to be mild;
however, a substantial number of hospitalised individuals do not
have underlying health issues, attesting to the pathogenic
potential of S-OIVs..
"Our findings indicate that S-OIVs are more pathogenic in mammalian
models than seasonal H1N1 influenza viruses."
The good news from the research was that Tamiflu and other
antiviral drugs were effective against swine flu viruses.
However the scientists warned that sustained person-to-person
transmission might lead to the emergence of more dangerous, drug
resistant strains.
Commenting on the research, Professor Ian Jones, from the
University of Reading, said: "This complete analysis of the current
H1N1 is what we've been waiting for. It shows that the new virus is
about five times more pathogenic than seasonal H1N1 but that,
nonetheless, the major outcome to infection is recovery. For the
few cases of severe infection the data will help in clinical
management of hospitalised patients."
Professor Wendy Barclay, chair in influenza virology at Imperial
college London, said: "By comparison with a seasonal human H1N1
virus, it is shown that the sw (swine) origin H1N1 infect cells
deeper into the respiratory tract. It must be borne in mind that
typical circulating human strains of H1N1 have been associated with
rather mild illness in recent years, and that the sw origin H1N1
may be behaving in these animal models more like the type of H3N2
viruses that caused a pandemic in 1968."
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