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Feb 08, 2012    03:36:53 AM                             


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Occasion2B  |  Main Topics  |  Pandemic Flu  |  Topic: Bacteria were the real killers in 1918 flu pandemic
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Bacteria were the real killers in 1918 flu pandemic
« Aug 05, 2008    09:41:32 AM »
www.newscientist.com

#  14:02 04 August 2008
# NewScientist.com news service
# Ewen Callaway

Medical and scientific experts now agree that bacteria, not influenza viruses, were the greatest cause of death during the 1918 flu pandemic.

Government efforts to gird for the next influenza pandemic – bird flu or otherwise – ought to take notice and stock up on antibiotics, says John Brundage, a medical microbiologist at the Armed Forces Health Surveillance Center in Silver Spring, Maryland.

Brundage's team culled first-hand accounts, medical records and infection patterns from 1918 and 1919. Although a nasty strain of flu virus swept around the world, bacterial pneumonia that came on the heels of mostly mild cases of flu killed the majority of the 20 to 100 million victims of the so-called Spanish flu, they conclude.

"We agree completely that bacterial pneumonia played a major role in the mortality of the 1918 pandemic," says Anthony Fauci, director of National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Disease in Bethesda, Maryland, and author of another journal article out next month that comes to a similar conclusion.
Double whammy

That pneumonia causes most deaths in an influenza outbreak is well known. Late 19th century physicians recognised pneumonia as the cause of death of most flu victims. While doctors limited fatalities in other 20th-century outbreaks with antibiotics such as penicillin, which was discovered in 1928, but did not see use in patients until 1942.

This is not to say that flu viruses do nothing, says Jonathan McCullers, an expert on influenza-bacteria co-infections at St Jude Children's Research Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee.

McCullers' research suggests that influenza kills cells in the respiratory tract, providing food and a home for invading bacteria. On top of this, an overstressed immune system makes it easier for the bacteria to get a foothold.

However, the sheer carnage of 1918 caused many microbiologists to reconsider the role of bacteria, and some pointed their fingers firmly at the virus.
'Unique event'

When US government scientists resurrected the 1918 strain in 2005, the virus demolished cells grown in a Petri dish and felled mice by the dozen.

"The 1918 pandemic is considered to be – and clearly is – something unique, and it's widely understood to be the most lethal natural event that has occurred in recent human history," Brundage says.

But to reassess this conclusion, he and co-author Dennis Shanks, of the Australian Army Malaria Institute in Enoggera, Queensland, scoured literature and medical records from 1918 and 1919.

The more they investigated, the more bacteria emerged as the true killers, an idea now supported by most influenza experts.

For instance, had a super virus been responsible for most deaths, one might expect people to die fairly rapidly, or at least for most cases to follow a similar progression. However, Shanks and Brundage found that few people died within three days of showing symptoms, while most people lasted more than a week, some survived two – all hallmarks of pneumonia.


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Morgan


Re: Bacteria were the real killers in 1918 flu pandemic
« Aug 05, 2008    04:45:45 PM »


I've heard many say that if the BF doesn't get you, the resulting pneumonia will because your body will be too weak to fight the bacteria
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Re: Bacteria were the real killers in 1918 flu pandemic
« Aug 06, 2008    12:34:35 AM »
promoted to front page

don't you feel special?

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Re: Bacteria were the real killers in 1918 flu pandemic
« Aug 06, 2008    03:23:04 AM »
:chuckle:
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