| H1N1 Swine Flu Death Reported In Lake County, Florida |
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| Saturday, 03 September 2011 06:58 | |||
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Signs and symptoms of flu include a body temperature above 100o F (37.8o C), sore throat, headache, cough, aches throughout the body, chills, malaise and fatigue. Some people may also have vomiting and diarrhea. However, other illnesses have similar symptoms; having them does not necessarily mean it is flu. If you have developed these symptoms, see your doctor. Medical Executive Director of Lake County Health Department, Dr. Claude Jones, said:
Seasonal flu vaccines have included protection against the 2009 influenza A H1N1 since 2009. H1N1 influenza is the most common subtype of swine flu. Other types include H1N2, H3N1, and H3N2. The 2009 pandemic was with the H1N1 subtype. Bird flu (avian flu), as well as human seasonal flu viruses can also infect pigs. The virulent H3N2 subtype is thought to have come from pigs. H3N2 went on to infect human beings. Pigs can be infected with more than one subtype at the same time. When this occurs, the genes of the various viruses have a chance to mingle, which increases the likelihood of the creation of a new virus, a reassortant virus (contains genes from several sources). Swine flu normally just infects pigs. It can, however, jump the species barrier and infect human beings. A virus that came from pigs can cause outbreaks of human infection. Signs and symptoms of swine flu are similar to those of seasonal human influenza. In some cases an infected person may have no symptoms at all, while others might develop complications, such as pneumonia. Because seasonal human flu and swine flu symptoms are so similar, those infected with swine flu are frequently not detected or diagnosed properly - when it is detected, it is generally by chance through seasonal influenza surveillance. Put simply, unless a doctor is a swine flu expert, they are unlikely to detect it. Consequently, it is hard to say accurately what the human swine flu rate is. Humans can become infected through contact with infected pigs (common) or contact with infected humans (less common).
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