Archive for the tag: Influenza

Influenza (Flu)

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Influenza, or the flu, is a contagious viral infection that attacks your nose, throat, and lungs. It can cause fever, chills, runny nose, sore throat, cough, muscle aches, and fatigue. The flu virus is extremely small and only visible through electron microscopes. Inside the virus, genetic material contains the information to make more copies of the same virus. A protein shell provides a hard, protective enclosure for the genetic material as the virus travels between the people or animals it infects. An outer envelope allows the virus to infect cells by merging with the cell’s outer membrane. Projecting from the envelope are spikes of protein molecules. The flu virus uses its H spikes like a key to get inside your cells. N spikes allow copies of the virus to break away from your infected cells to infect more cells. There are 17 known types of H spikes and nine types of N spikes that scientists use to name different flu viruses, such as the virus H5N1. You get the flu by touching an object that has the flu virus on it or through exposure to body fluids from people or animals infected with the virus. When an infected person talks, coughs, or sneezes, droplets carrying the influenza virus may land in your mouth or nose and then move into your lungs. Once inside your body, the influenza virus comes into contact with cells in your nose, throat, or lungs. The H spike on the virus inserts into a receptor molecule on your healthy cell membrane, like a key in a lock. This action allows the virus to get inside your cell. Next, the virus travels inside a sack made from your cell membrane to your cell’s nucleus. Then the viral envelope and cell membrane sack combine, allowing the viral genetic material to leave the sack and enter the nucleus. The viral genetic material hijacks the energy and materials in your cell’s nucleus to make thousands of copies of itself. Some of the genetic material moves out of the nucleus, then attaches to ribosomes, which are the protein building parts of your cell. Ribosomes use information from the genetic material to make other viral proteins, such as the H and N spikes. A packaging structure in your cell, called the Golgi apparatus, carries the H and N spikes in vesicles which merge with your cell’s membrane. All the parts needed to create a new virus gather just beneath your cell’s membrane. Then a new virus begins to bud off from the cell’s membrane. During this process, the newly created virus gets stuck on your cell’s membrane when a viral H spike locks onto membrane receptors. However, the virus has a way to get around this problem. The viral N spike frees the virus by cutting it away from the receptor. New influenza viruses are now free to infect more of your cells and cause you to develop the flu. If you have the flu, your doctor may prescribe Oseltamivir, which you would take orally, or Zanamivir, which you would take using an inhaler, to help speed your recovery or reduce your risk for complications. These anti-viral drugs stop the influenza virus by blocking the viral N spike from freeing the virus. This causes the new viruses to stick to the surface of your cell, so they cannot escape and infect more of your cells. The best way to protect yourself from the flu is to get the flu vaccine every year. You may receive the vaccine as a shot, which contains dead versions of several types of the virus, or you may receive it as a nasal spray, which contains several types of live, but very weak, forms of the virus. The vaccine exposes your body to several types of the influenza virus that are too weak to cause infection but just strong enough to stimulate an immune response. Within two weeks, cells in your immune system make markers called antibodies, which are specific for only the types of flu you were exposed to. The antibodies attach to each flu virus and prevent it from attaching to your cells. Antibodies are also able to attach to more than one flu virus, which causes viruses to clump together. Your immune system responds to signals from the antibodies by engulfing and destroying the clumps of viruses. Later, if you are exposed to these types of flu again, your body recognizes and destroys them, so you will not develop the flu from these same viruses. For continued protection against new flu viruses, you will need to get a flu vaccine every year.

#Influenza #Flu #FluVirus
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Every flu season is unique. The 2019-2020 outbreak features more cases of influenza B, the viral strain that usually emerges later in the season.

“We’re right now in the thick of the flu season. Here at Harborview, we’re seeing anywhere from 5-10 cases of influenza in our clinics and our emergency room pretty much every day,” says Dr. John Lynch, the hospital’s medical director of infection control.

The most effective prevention method is the flu shot – and it’s not too late to get one. Beyond that, wash your hands, stay home if you don’t feel well, and if you or another family member plans to seek treatment at a clinic, call in advance so they can prepare. Wear a mask, too, if they have those available in the waiting room to keep from spreading the virus.
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What is the difference between Influenza A and B? (Flu)

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What is influenza virus causing? Influenza is H1N1 infections and they are based on the type and way it manifests. The symptoms will remain same but it will keep rotating from time immemorial and it gets assorted with all genetic arrangements and sometimes we call it as H1N1 or H1N5. These are the numerological names which are given from time immemorial. Flu will be caused whenever the strain will be more stronger and during flu season every year throughout the world. There is an influenza surveillance and regularly we have some specific influenza virus affecting endemically or sometimes it can be coming as a seasonal pandemic. To know the symptoms and treatment in detail, watch the video.
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The end of Influenza B? How it could impact the effectiveness of flu vaccines

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Influenza B does not have an animal reservoir, which means it does not live in animals and with no reported cases in humans, there’s a theory that it could go extinct and increase the flu shot’s effectiveness.

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Dr. Don Shiffrin explains why the flu vaccine is so important as cold and flu season continues.

Understanding Influenza Viruses – The Influenza (FLU)

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Understanding Influenza Viruses – The Influenza (FLU)

Every year Americans end up getting a billion colds, and 1/5 of Americans get the flu. Adults average two to three colds per year, while the numbers are even higher for kids.

Colds are caused by viruses such as Adenovirus, Rhinovirus, and others. Flu is caused by the Influenza Virus. They don’t respond to antibiotics in both cases, meaning they don’t respond to antibacterial medications. And on a side note, people often use the term stomach flu to describe an illness causing stomach symptoms. But this is not an accurate term because the influenza virus does not cause the stomach flu. It’s actually caused by other viruses or bacteria. Into making it a little more confusing, getting the flu, meaning the influenza virus, often causes gastrointestinal symptoms like nausea and vomiting, in addition to the other flu symptoms such as fever and body aches.

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There are different types of influenza viruses. Type A and Type B, there are subtypes of Influenza A like h1n1 and h3n2. And there are rare types of Swine Flu in avian flu.

How Flu Virus Spreads | How a Cold Spreads
The main way that both colds and flu spread from one person to another is through droplets that infect people sprayed when they coughed and sneeze, and kissing is another form of transmission. It can also be spread when a person touches pretty much any surface that accumulated droplets from a sick person, and then they end up touching their faces. So these surfaces could be someone’s hand or a doorknob or light switch, money, Keys, phones, gas pumps, remote controls, toilets, etc.

Viruses and bacteria can live on services for two hours or more. The flu is much more seasonal than colds, mainly from November to March.

What are the symptoms of the flu, and what are the symptoms of a cold?
There is an overlap between flu symptoms and cold symptoms. For example, both can have congestion, runny nose, sneezing, and coughing. If there is a fever, it’s almost always gonna be the flu. Especially if that fever reaches the 102 – 104 range. Body aches in exhaustion are also more common and more severe with the flu. If there is nausea or vomiting, it’s gonna be the flu.

Other illnesses cause symptoms similar to that of the cold or the flu. For example, bronchitis is an infection of the bronchial tubes or the bronchial tree. The bronchial tubes carry air into and out of your lungs and are caused by the same virus that is caused. The common cold bronchitis can develop as part of a cold or all by itself. With bronchitis, you get soreness in your chest in a bad cough. Sometimes there’s fever and chills. Bronchitis usually goes away on its own. It’s almost always caused by a virus. Less than 10 percent of the time, it’s caused by bacteria, then there’s pneumonia.

Pneumonia is a broad term that refers to an inflammation within the lung. The most common type of pneumonia is infectious pneumonia, most commonly caused by bacteria, but it can also be caused by viruses.

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Causes of Pneumonia:
Pneumonia causes fever, cough with nasty Phlegm, difficulty breathing, chest pain associated with it, and there can be evidence of pneumonia visible on either chest x-ray or cat scan.

Doctors will especially want to test you if you fall into any of the following categories –
– If you have a compromised immune system
– If you have a normal immune system, but you’re at risk for severe disease, for example, if you have a medical condition like COPD, Asthma, Chronic kidney disease, Congestive heart failure, or something like that.
– If you’re admitted to the hospital with an acute febrile respiratory disease.
This is probably because flu patients in the hospital need to be isolated from other patients to prevent flu transmission from one patient to another. When doctors do the nose and throat swap, doctors can test the swap in two different ways.

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Internal Medicine | Pulmonary Disease | Critical Care Medicine
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#influenza #flu #pneumonia
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Influenza – causes, symptoms, diagnosis, treatment, pathology

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What is influenza? Influenza’s one of the most common infectious diseases, and is caused the influenza virus.

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