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Swine flu overtakes other flu strains

Put swine flu in a room with other strains of influenza, and it does not mix into a new superbug but rather takes over, researchers reported.

University of Maryland researchers deliberately co-infected ferrets to examine one of the worst fears about the new swine flu. But fortunately, the flu did not mutate. The researchers carefully swabbed the ferrets' nasal cavities and found no evidence of gene-swapping.

The animals who caught both kinds of flu, however, had worse symptoms. Also they easily spread the new swine flu, what scientists formally call the 2009 H1N1 virus, to their uninfected ferret neighbours but did not spread regular winter flu strains nearly as easily. In other words, it is no surprise that swine flu has become the world's dominant strain of influenza. It is not under evolutionary pressure right now to mix and mutate while it has a clear biological advantage over other kinds of flu, concluded the Maryland team led by virologist Daniel Perez.

Reinforces worry
The Maryland study, financed by the National Institutes of Health, reinforces worry about how easily swine flu might sweep through a country.

"The results suggest that 2009 H1N1 influenza may out-compete seasonal flu virus strains and may be more communicable as well," said Dr Anthony Fauci, director of NIH's National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. "These new data, while preliminary, underscore the need for vaccinating against both seasonal influenza and the 2009 H1N1 influenza this fall and winter," he said referring to the start of the autumn and winter seasons in the Northern Hemisphere.

The United States has watched closely how swine flu rapidly dominated the Southern Hemisphere's winter, as authorities here prepare for a resurgence in the coming months. In Australia alone, eight of every 10 people who tested positive for influenza had the new pandemic strain. While it seems no more deadly than seasonal flu, it claims different victims: Seasonal flu kills mostly people over 65. The new swine flu spreads most easily in children and young adults, and so far has killed mostly people in their 20s, 30s and 40s.

The study is posted on PLoS Currents: Influenza, a website operated by the Public Library of Science to rapidly share scientific flu information. – (Sapa, September 2009)

Read more:
Study shows how swine flu spreads
Swine flu spreads at 'unbelievable' rate

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