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Seasonal Influenza and Pandemic Influenza A (H1N1, H5N1) Virus Dr. Alaa kuttar musa Department of Medicine College of Medicine/ Basra University
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Circulating Influenza Strains and Pandemics in The 20 th Century 19201940196019802000 H1N1 H2N2 H3N2 1918: “Spanish Flu”1957: “Asian Flu” 1968: “Hong Kong Flu” 20-40 million deaths1-4 million deaths
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3 Influenza Virus Types A and B Type A (Seasonal, avian, swine influenza,….) Type B (Seasonal influenza) Can cause significant disease Generally causes milder disease but may also cause severe disease Infects humans and other species (e.g., birds; H5N1) Limited to humans Can cause epidemics and pandemics (worldwide epidemics) Generally causes milder epidemics
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The InfluenzaVirus is an acute systemic viral infection that primarily affects the respiratory tract; it carries a significant mortality
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Avian influenza is caused by transmission of avian influenza A H5N1 from poultary. Infections with H5N1 viruses have been severe, with enteric features and respiratory failure. Swine influenza H1N1 transmitted from pigs to humans. Re-assortment of swine, avian and human influenza strains can occur in pigs. Sometimes this can lead to an outbreak of swine ‘flu’ in humans( Maxico 2009)
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Viral Re-assortment Reassortment in pigs Reassortment in humans Pandemic Influenza Virus
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Influenza Transmission Routes Infectious 1 day before and up to 7 days –Fever, cough, headache, muscle aches –Sometimes lower respiratory Transmission of influenza viruses –Air droplet from coughing or sneezing * Person-to-person (H1N1) * Poultry to human ( H5 N1) –Contact orally or MM with animal or animal products (meat, egg, discharges) 8
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Isolation Precautions
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Big droplets fall on people surfaces bed clothes Courtesy of CDC Clinical features -incubation period of 1–3 days, -fever, malaise and cough. May followed by Viral pneumonia. - superinfection with Strep. pneumoniae, Staph. aureus or other bacteria
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Complications extrapulmonary manifestations include: 1. myositis, myocarditis, pericarditis 2. neurological complications (Reye’s syndrome in children, encephalitis or transverse myelitis, fit). 3.Mortality is greatest in the elderly, those with medical comorbidities and pregnant women.
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Seasonal Flu Occurs every year during the winter. Affects up to 10% of the population. Looks ill, but not life-threatening in most cases. May complicated by pneumonia but not early Very young, very old, and people with certain chronic illnesses most at risk. Vaccines are available to prevent seasonal flu. Antiviral drugs available to treat those at special risk. How Do Pandemic Flu and Seasonal Flu Differ?
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1.Droplet precautions: Surgical Masks 2.Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) 3.Ovoid contact with infected patients 4.hand hygiene and preventing dissemination of infection by coughing and sneezing 5.seasonal vaccination Prevention
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Antivirals- Oseltamivir 1.Administration of neuraminidase inhibitor, oral oseltamivir (75 mg twice daily) or inhaled zanamivir (10 mg twice daily) for 5 days 2.Prophylaxis is 75 mg once a day for 7 days after last exposure
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Thank you
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