The possibility of future avian influenza pandemic influenza is very contagious and it is a dangerous virus that can harm the population if it breaks out. A common influenza virus well known to humans is human influenza. Researchers and scientists are worried about H5N1, a particularly threatening influenza strain, commonly known as avian influenza. Influenza is mainly susceptible to wild birds, but there are also epidemics showing that humans are also infected.
Taubenberger's findings suggest that other avian influenza viruses such as H5N1 avian influenza prevalent in Southeast Asia and H7N9 influenza currently causing sporadic human infections in China are suddenly also devastating causes There is a possibility. Pandemic. It also raises the question of why the Spanish influenza should be reinstated if the virus escaped the laboratory and came to the hands of terrorists. In order to prevent this, the FBI taught other scientists in contact with the Tau Ben burger and the refrigerator containing the virus, like medical staff worn while Ebola was in vogue in West Africa, with gloves, gas masks and whole body suit I had to wear it. . They also have to undergo an iris scan. "This is truly equal to the best secret," he said.
The H1N1 virus that caused the 1918 world epidemic began with avian influenza virus. As influenza viruses do, it mutates and develops the ability to infect humans and spread easily and quickly between humans. We still do not know why it happens or how it happens (or how it keeps going on), we know only what it happened. Influenza in 1918, like a typical high-risk group, was particularly serious as it affected young and healthy people. Adults between the ages of 20 and 50 die from becoming ill with influenza in 1918 than any other group. Influenza is not the most serious and healthy adult, usually for babies, the elderly, people with chronic health problems.
Initial tests showed that the avian influenza virus is more than 1,000 times more infective than a typical human influenza virus. Its mortality rate is about 60%. Robert Webster, the author of the "Flush Textbook", initially began investigating avian influenza, but he was walking along the coast and discovered that many birds were dying along the coastline. He expressed the H5 virus and its cousin H7 as "a messy bastard." Fukuda 's team visited the school of Lamhuika, bent knees wiped out the floor. But the sample came back. "I do not know how a boy was infected," Fukuda said. They began collecting blood samples inevitably from other children in the new world - more than 2,000 in total - to see if Ramhuika is zero in emerging pandemics