How is swine flu diagnosed?
Swine flu is presumptively diagnosed clinically by the patient's history
of association with people known to have the disease and their symptoms
listed above. Usually, a quick test (for example, nasopharyngeal swab
sample) is done to see if the patient is infected with influenza A or B
virus. Most of the tests can distinguish between A and B types. The test
can be negative (no flu infection) or positive for type A and B. If the
test is positive for type B, the flu is not likely to be swine flu. If
it is positive for type A, the person could have a conventional flu
strain or swine flu. However, the accuracy of these tests has been
challenged, and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC) has not completed their comparative studies of these tests.
However, a new test developed by the CDC and a commercial company
reportedly can detect H1N1 reliably in about one hour; the test was
formerly only available to the military. In 2010, the FDA approved a
commercially available test that could detect H1N1 within
four hours. Most of these rapid tests are based on PCR technology.
Swine flu is definitively diagnosed by identifying the particular
antigens associated with the virus type. In general, this test is done
in a specialized laboratory and is not done by many doctors' offices or
hospital laboratories. However, doctors' offices are able to send
specimens to specialized laboratories if necessary. Because of the large
number of novel H1N1 swine flu cases that occurred in
the 2009-2010 flu season (the vast majority of flu cases [about 95%-99%]
were due to novel H1N1 flu viruses), the CDC recommended only
hospitalized patients' flu virus strains be sent to reference labs to be
identified. H3N2v flu strains and other flu virus strains are
diagnosed by similar methods.
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