University of Louisville research team explores H1N1 outbreak

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Just the mention of H1N1 can conjure up images of long lines of people waiting to be vaccinated, news reports of the severity of the pandemic and the count of the number of people who perished from the 2009-10 outbreak. However, some positives are coming forward.

Researchers at the University of Louisville have found variations within H1N1 patients who were hospitalized and identified those that most impacted patients. Their findings were published today (Feb. 18, 2013) on the PLOS ONE website.

"While all of the variants that we uncovered hijacked the body's usual system for fighting off foreign objects in the lungs, namely the white blood cells, their ability to fight appears to differ," said Colleen Jonsson, Ph.D., professor of microbiology and immunology at UofL and the director of the university's Center for Predictive Medicine. "We were able to take the strain variants from patients who were hospitalized during the pandemic, isolate those variants and determine how they functioned using a mouse model. Future studies will determine the impact of various treatment options.

"These results are very limited and preliminary," Jonsson warned. "This year's influenza outbreak is an opportunity for us to verify much of what we originally learned and to extend our understanding of the mechanisms involved."

Jonsson said that collaboration between physicians at University of Louisville Hospital and her team has been critical to the advances made thus far. She noted that being able to have the full continuum of disease that has manifested inpatients, taking it to bench and animal research, and then ultimately back to helping patients is the final goal of the work.

Comments

  1. Pandemic Twenty-Thirteen Pandemic Twenty-Thirteen United Kingdom says:

    Two separate studies into the 2009 H1N1 Pandemic which examined in depth data collected in Norway and Kentucky have been published in the past week and BOTH identify a curious feature of the H1N1(2009) Swine Flu virus. These add to the growing number of studies all of which found that when this mutation on an H protein (D222G) occurred the virus seemed to replicate in the host at a greater rate.  So although the majority of cases were mild a few were very serious indeed and these were typically those that led to the death of an otherwise fit patient.  Clearly urgent research is needed to discover why this happens in some people and not others so that our prophylaxis can be more targetted.

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