(Swine Influenza A [H1N1 and H3N2v] Virus)
symptoms, precautionary measures and after diagnosing how to cure.
Swine flu (H1N1
and H3N2v influenza virus) facts
- Swine flu is a respiratory disease caused by influenza viruses that infect the respiratory tract of pigs and result in
a barking cough, decreased appetite, nasal secretions, and listless behavior.
- Swine flu viruses may mutate (change) so that they are easily transmissible among humans.
- The 2009 swine flu outbreak was due to infection with the so-called H1N1 virus and was first observed in Mexico.
- Symptoms of swine flu in humans are similar to most influenza infections: fever (100 F or greater), cough, nasal secretions, fatigue, and headache.
- Two antiviral agents, zanamivir (Relenza) and oseltamivir (Tamiflu),
have been reported to help prevent or reduce the effects of swine flu
if taken within 48 hours of the onset of symptoms.
What is the swine flu?
Swine flu (swine influenza) is a respiratory disease caused by viruses (influenza
viruses) that infect the respiratory tract of pigs, resulting in nasal
secretions, a barking
cough,
decreased appetite, and listless behavior. Swine flu produces most of
the same symptoms in pigs as human flu produces in people. Swine flu can
last about one to two weeks in pigs that survive. Swine influenza virus
was first isolated from pigs in 1930 in the U.S. and has been
recognized by pork producers and veterinarians to cause infections in
pigs worldwide. In a number of instances, people have developed the
swine flu infection when they are closely associated with pigs (for
example, farmers, pork processors), and likewise, pig populations have
occasionally been infected with the human flu infection. In most
instances, the cross-species infections (swine virus to man; human flu
virus to pigs) have remained in local areas and have not caused national
or worldwide infections in either pigs or humans. Unfortunately, this
cross-species situation with influenza viruses has had the potential to
change. Investigators decided the 2009 swine flu strain, first seen in
Mexico, should be termed novel H1N1 flu since it was mainly found
infecting people and exhibits two main surface antigens, H1
(hemagglutinin type 1) and N1 (neuraminidase type1). The eight RNA
strands from novel H1N1 flu have one strand derived from human flu
strains, two from avian (bird) strains, and five from swine strains.
Swine flu is transmitted from person to person by inhalation or
ingestion of droplets containing virus from people sneezing or coughing;
it is not transmitted by eating cooked pork products. The newest swine
flu virus that has caused swine flu is
influenza A H3N2v (commonly termed H3N2v) that began as an outbreak in
2011. The "v" in the name means the virus is a variant that normally
infects only pigs but has begun to infect humans.
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