Why flu may affect some more severely than others

Tue, May 5 02:00 PM

Washington, May 5 (ANI): With the swine flu turning into a global pandemic,
scientists have now discovered important clues about why influenza is more
severe in some people than it is in others.

Researchers at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, have
shown that the influenza virus can actually paralyse the immune systems of
otherwise healthy individuals, which could lead to severe secondary
bacterial infections, such as pneumonia.



Also, this immunological paralysis could be long-lived, which is important
to know while developing treatment strategies to combat the virus.



"We have a very limited understanding of why some people who get influenza
simply have a bad cold and other people become very sick and even die. The
results of this study give us a much better sense of the mechanisms
underlying bacterial infections arising on top of the viral infection," said
Dr. Kathleen Sullivan.



For the study, the researchers enrolled paediatric patients with severe
influenza, and examined the level of cytokines, which serve as the first
line initiators of immune response, in the blood plasma.

Although the researchers found elevated levels of cytokines, they also found
a decreased response of toll-like receptors, which activate immune cell
responses as a result of invading microbes.



Their findings suggested that the diminished response of those receptors
could lead to the paralysis of the immune system, and ultimately cause
secondary bacterial infections.



The influenza patients were compared with patients with moderate influenza,
respiratory syncytial virus, and a control group of healthy individuals.



It was found that the immune paralysis could have specifically resulted from
influenza infection and was not seen in patients with respiratory syncytial
virus.



The researchers say that their work might explain why one quarter of
children who die from influenza, die from a bacterial infection occurring on
top of the virus.



The study has been published online in the Journal of Leukocyte Biology.
(ANI)

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