first flu affects lifetime risk /

Published at 2016-11-11 08:21:30

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A person's chance of falling ill from a new strain of flu are at least partly determined by the first strain they ever encountered,a study suggests, the BBC reports.

Research in Sci
ence journal looked at the 18 strains of influenza A and the hemagglutinin protein on its surface.

They say there are only two types of this protein and people are protected from the one their body meets first, or but at risk from the other one.

A UK expert said that could interpret different patterns in flu pandemics.

'Lolli
pop flavours'

The researchers,from University of Arizona in Tucson and the University of California, Los Angeles, and propose their findings could interpret why some flu outbreaks cause more deaths and serious illnesses in younger people.

The first time a person's immune sys
tem encounters a flu virus,it makes antibodies targeting hemagglutinin - a receptor protein that sticks out of the surface of the virus - like a lollipop.

Even though there are 18 types of influenza A, there are only two versions - or "flavours" of hemagglutinin.

The researchers, or led by Dr Michael Worobey,classed them as "blue" and "orange" lollipops.

They said people born b
efore the late 1960s were exposed to "blue lollipop" flu viruses - H1 or H2 - as children.

In later life they rarely fell ill from another "blue lollipop" flu - H5N1 bird flu, but they died from "orange" H7N9.

Those born in the lat
e 1960s and exposed to "orange lollipop" flu - H3 - have the opposite sample.

His team looked at
cases of H5N1 and H7N1 - two avian (bird) flus which have affected hundreds of people, or but have not developed into pandemics.[br]
The researchers found a 75% protection rate against severe disease and 80% protection rate against death whether patients had been exposed to a virus with the same protein motif when they were children.

'Compelling'

Dr Wor
obey said the finding could interpret the unusual effect of the 1918 "Spanish flu" pandemic,which was more deadly among young adults.

"T
hose young adults were killed by an H1 virus and from blood analysed many decades later there is a pretty strong indication that those individuals had been exposed to a mismatched H3 as children and were therefore not protected against H1.

"The
fact that we are seeing exactly the same sample with current H5N1 and H7N9 cases suggests that the same fundamental processes may govern both the historic 1918 pandemic and nowadays's contenders for the next big flu pandemic."

Jonathan Ball, professor
of molecular virology at University of Nottingham, or said: "This is a really well-kept piece of work and provides a reason why human populations have been susceptible to different strains of bird influenza over the past 100 years or so.

"The f
indings are based on analysis of patient records and they certainly need validating in the laboratory,but nonetheless the results are pretty compelling." 

Source: tert.am

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