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seasonal influenza

TWiV 480: The PFU in your achoo

11 February 2018 by Vincent Racaniello

Scott Hensley joins the TWiVites to review the current influenza season and presence of the virus in exhaled breath of symptomatic cases.

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Scott Hensley of the University of Pennsylvania helps us summarize the current influenza season so far. Bottom line: it’s a very serious season with a great deal of morbidity and mortality. As usually, serious disease and deaths occur in unvaccinated individuals. Although there is a mismatch between the influenza vaccine and this year’s H3N2 strain, which is causing most of the infections, vaccination still reduces disease severity cause by this strain, as well as by the circulating H1N1 and influenza B viruses. Next we discuss an interesting study of symptomatic college students with influenza. The goal was to determine which mode of influenza transmission is likely to be important: contact, or aerosols produced by speaking, coughing, or sneezing. The results show that simple breathing leads to virus in the breath – small aerosols that can travel distances to infect others. Coughing, but not sneezing, was a major observed sign of infection, but neither was needed for infectious aerosol generation.

Filed Under: This Week in Virology Tagged With: aerosol transmission, antigenic drift, exhaled breath, Gesundheit-II, H3N2, influenza, seasonal influenza, tidal breath, vaccine, viral, virology, virus, viruses

TWiV 89: Where do viruses vacation?

4 July 2010 by Vincent Racaniello

Hosts: Vincent Racaniello and Alan Dove

On episode #89 of the podcast This Week in Virology, Vincent and Alan review recent findings on the association of the retrovirus XMRV with ME/CFS, reassortment of 2009 pandemic H1N1 influenza virus in swine, and where influenza viruses travel in the off-season.

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Subscribe to TWiV (free) in iTunes , at the Zune Marketplace, by the RSS feed, or by email, or listen on your mobile device with Stitcher Radio.

Links for this episode:

  • Conflicting XMRV papers on hold
  • Leak of PNAS paper
  • CDC study on XMRV in CFS patients (Retrovirology) and Science update
  • Where influenza viruses travel in the off season (EurekaAlert! and PLoS Pathogens)
  • NPR article on Ebola siRNA treatment (thanks, Andreas!)
  • Priming mechanism for reovirus entry (thanks, Agyeman-Badu!)
  • Wired article on science PR (thanks, Dan!)
  • Letters read on TWiV 89

Weekly Science Picks

Alan – Tree of Life graphic
Vincent
– TEDx Oil Spill

Send your virology questions and comments (email or mp3 file) to twiv@microbe.tv or leave voicemail at Skype: twivpodcast. You can also post articles that you would like us to discuss at microbeworld.org and tag them with twiv.

Filed Under: This Week in Virology Tagged With: CFS, chronic fatigue syndrome, Ebola, ebolavirus, entry, H1N1, influenza, mecfs, pandemic, reassortment, reovirus, retrovirus, seasonal influenza, siRNA, swine, swine flu, viral, virology, virus, xmrv

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by Vincent Racaniello

Earth’s virology Professor
Questions? virology@virology.ws

With David Tuller and
Gertrud U. Rey

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