Bird Flu Monitor > Study examining new vaccine for avian flu | Research News ...
[Vanderbilt News] “The H1N1 influenza pandemic of 2009 demonstrated the ability of influenza to cause widespread disease in a very short period of time,” Edwards said. “As a result, public health efforts continue to focus on developing new vaccines and therapeutics for the next influenza pandemic.”
[Previous] Avian (Bird) Flu, Chicken Pox, West Nile? | CHICKEN PO...
[Next] Bird Flu: Is the swine flu pandemic a hoax created...
Some related posts from Technorati and Google.
[imagedolezelova.com] The result can be dangerous if the progeny of strains of the hang ...: This new research published in the recent edition of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), is based on the previous findings, Perez and his team increased communicability H1N1 virus, as well as their work on the airborne H9N2 communicability. And he adds, that they can develop the long-term efforts of modern medicine to learn how to predict when the arise of a pandemic flu.
[Avian Influenza] Avian Influenza: Dangerous Progeny Can Result When Flu Strains ...: MedicalNewsToday.com - A new University of Maryland-led study finds that 'sex' between the virus responsible for the 2009 flu pandemic (H1N1) and a common type of avian flu virus (H9N2) can produce offspring - new .
[BioScholar News] 'Sex between flu strains can create new influenza pandemic': According to Perez and his colleagues many factors are involved in the viability of new viruses that result from reassortment, but the most important is the compatibility of their two sets of viral genes to work together to form functional offspring. The importance of reassortment in the generation of viruses with pandemic potential, the scientists say, was demonstrated in 2009 when a novel H1N1 influenza (pH1N1) virus caused the first influenza pandemic in 40 years.
[Avian Flu Talk] Avian Flu Talk: Reassortant H9N2-H1N1 visruses transmit in ferrets: In the current study they created four reassortant H9N2-pH1N1 genes and found that three showed "efficient respiratory droplet transmission" in the animals. They conclude, "The results clearly indicate that H9N2 avian influenza viruses and pH1N1 viruses, both of which have occasionally infected pigs, have the potential to reassort and generate novel viruses with respiratory transmission potential in mammals."
[Bird Flu Monitor] Swine Flu Hoax Pt 2 H1N1? | Avian Influenza ... - Bird Flu Monitor: ..: The World Health Organisation (WHO) declared bird flu a global pandemic (stage 6) in 2009 after evidence showed that it was spreading in the southern hemisphere. Glossary of Terms ( thanks, JWR): H5N1: The CDC's designation for one of the current strains of the Asian Avian Flu Also called Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (HPAI).
[Influenza Flu Info Blog] Are primates the only animals that catch the flu and fever ...: People are not the only species that can get the flu. The explanation it is known as swine flu is since it is a sort of flu virus that originally arrived from a pig.
[Avian Influenza (Bird Flu) Blog] Swine Flu Hoax Pt 2 H1N1 - Avian Influenza (Bird Flu) Blog: Valuable information for everyone, particularly those in the danger zone, between ages five to sixty, for the H1N1 virus. This is information you need to know, because the period of infectiousness is more than a week, from one day prior to the symptoms appearing, to seven days after they appear.
[PandemicMap.com] Mid-Day Update - Pandemic Map .com - Pandemic, H1N1, Swine Flu ...: Mid-Day Update: Stock Slide Continues Amid Concern Over Economy, Employment NASDAQ Shares of Novavax ( NVAX ) are down despite positive study results on the company's A/H1N1 virus-like-particle pandemic influenza vaccine candidate in the journal Vaccine. Single administrations of the VLP vaccine induced high levels of HAI titers in …
[Avian Influenza (Bird Flu) Blog] Have you received the H1N1 or H5N1 flu shot? | Avian Influenza ...: American influenza vaccines do not contain squalene. Squalene is not a poison, it’s an oil used as an irritant to induce a stronger immune response.
Reflected tags on Technorati: Blog, "avian Flu", Bird Flu Monitor