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Flu Season

by Rob on February 11, 2009 · View Comments

in General Medical,Medical

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If you haven’t noticed, I have a separate page dedicated to the Flu. I have been regularly checking the US map on that page that shows the current distribution of influenza cases – with an increasing number happening in my own state.

Flu season has hit in my office (1 case yesterday, 2 so far this morning) and we are about to embark on the yearly deluge of miserable people.  Yesterday it was a little boy with a high fever who was lying quietly on the exam table (which mom said was pretty abnormal).  He simply said “ow” when his mother picked him up.  Today it was a woman with a long history of smoking who is having a fever and bad body aches (“I almost couldn’t get out of bed this morning”) and a young girl with fever, headache, and a persistent loose cough.

Since I am in the middle of seeing patients right now, I won’t go into detail about the illness (refer to my previous post about this).  Every year we are inundated with people with flu – it really is remarkable how many people get it in any given year.  It’s good for business (and doesn’t pay attention to the state of the economy), but the human suffering and death associated with it is very distressing.  The purpose of this post is to alert you to the onslaught, underline its seriousness, and tell you what I tell patients about it.

Flu is very serious.  The older patients (over 65), younger patients (5 and under), and patients with chronic disease (diabetes, asthma, and smoking-related lung conditions) are especially prone to complications of the flu.  The main symptoms of it are fever, body aches (often severe), headache, and cough.  The major complication of influenza is pneumonia – an especially bad pneumonia caused by staph aureus. The mortality rate for staph pneumonia is very high, so avoiding this complication is the main goal.  I have seen at least 3 deaths due to staph pneumonia in my practice, and suspect the mortality will now be higher with MRSA becoming more common.

There are antibiotics (antivirals, to be exact) for this illness that can shorten the course.  The best-known one is Tamiflu, which will shorten the course and lower risk of complications if caught early.  I don’t think that all people with flu should get Tamiflu.  If it has gone on more than two days, Tamiflu won’t help.  People who are not in the high-risk groups probably should not get it, as their risk of complications is not that high.  High risk people, however, should get put on antiviral therapy as early as possible.

Here are some other facts about influenza:

  • There are two main types of Influenza virus, A and B – A is more serious.  The few cases we have typed this year have been A.
  • It is spread through airborne particles, so direct contact is not necessary.
  • It typically lasts 1-2 weeks.
  • Vitamin C or “homeopathic” prevention/treatment don’t help and can delay needed treatment.
  • Fever can exceed 104 (one year my daughter had a temperature up to 106 with it).  The fever itself is not dangerous, but it may be a sign of more serious complications.
  • If you get the flu shot, the risk of dying of flu, being in the hospital for it, or even going to the doctors office is less.   Even in years when those predicting the strain in the vaccine get it wrong, the vaccine still decreases its severity.

I hope none of you get the flu, but many will.  I will be twittering any cases I see (http://www.twitter.com/doc_rob) and the map on my blog will automatically update.

Stay well.

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  • G'day Rob

    Basically, seeing them now is too late. What more can be done with vaccination programs to prevent it from occurring?
    Where I work influenza is considered to be a year round risk and re run our programs now right through the year. Our 2009 stocks arrived last week and we have already commenced work.

    Robbo
  • Rob
    Dead on, PCB. I read that warning. Agree that the "healthy people" with the flu are probably left untreated. In the exam room that is a hard-sell to people missing a lot of work. I do my best to only use antivirals in the very young or very old. Recommendation is to use either combination of Tamiflu and Flumadine or Ralenza alone.

    We did probably create this, but viruses are tricky anyhow. Tough to say it wouldn't have happened.
  • pcb
    dr rob,

    some issues with Tamiflu this year and type A influenza. treating empirically, or after positive A swab is now a bit more complicated.

    http://www.cdc.gov/flu/professionals/antivirals...

    Also raises the issue of how aggressively we should be using antivirals (due to resistance issues) in otherwise healthy people, due to the self limiting nature of the illness in the overwhelming majority of cases.
  • I had a flu shot in November. December 25th while visiting family out of town I got the flu. I was sick enough to go to a walk in clinic where the doctor promptly informed me that the current vaccine only covered two of three strains. Guess which one I got. Nevertheless I will get it again next year, maybe they will get it right...ciao
  • Dan
    A Very Concerning Sub-Microscopic Infectious Agent

    Influenza is the virus responsible for the disease that has its name. This virus created the last pandemic in the United States less than 100 years ago. When this occurred, the whole world experienced about 50 million deaths due to malicious virus.
    The Influenza pandemic that occurred before the 1918 Spanish Flu happened about thirty years before this one. Influenza epidemics, however, occur every 9 months or so, some say.
    The disease of Influenza is caused by this virus penetrating a host, which could be a human or an animal. Once infected, the virus replicates within the cell of the host in the cell’s cytoplasm. To survive, the influenza virus targets an enzyme called polymerase that directs the content of this cell to produce proteins the virus needs to survive.
    With the 1918 pandemic, it is believed that it was called the Spanish Flu because the first human case was identified in Spain. The pandemic ended up killing more than those that died during WWI.
    Understandably there was panic among people worldwide, as the influenza virus itself was not discovered until 1933, so the mystery was rather frightening of what was happening at that time.
    Those who survived have allowed others to obtain antibodies from them to develop other antibodies for future viral outbreaks that may occur with this type of virus.
    This last influenza pandemic also allowed others to obtain this virus from those who died as a result to create effective treatments and vaccines for viral outbreaks that may happen in the future as well.
    Nearly 700,000 people in the U.S. died as the result of the Spanish Flu- and those that did die was due often to a bacterial pneumonia that followed the viral invasion and damage. Specifically, the bacteria that killed those due to this flu is called strept pneumo. On average, it took about 9 days for one to die after being infected. Ultimately, this pandemic killed nearly 3 percent of humans infected. Normally, an influenza strain may kill less than one percent of those infected during a typical flu season.
    The Spanish Flu caused an unusually severe immune response in the human host which made it very deadly due to overkill of the cells of this host. The influenza virus has this ability on occasion, which makes it very deadly to its host.
    The influenza viruses are categorized as A, B, and C. The Influenza A virus is the one that historically has caused pandemics that have developed-, such as the Spanish Flu Pandemic.
    The other influenza pandemics primarily have occurred in countries in Asia.
    With influenza, it is understood that the disease influenza is a disease caused by a RNA virus that can now infect and kill both mammals and birds. In fact, at least one particular virus can mutate to where it can be shared between the two life forms and multiply within each one of them with ease.
    Unlike coryza, influenza expresses symptoms more severely, and usually lasts two weeks until one recovers who has the flu. Influenza, however, poses a danger to some with compromised immune systems, such as the chronically ill, so the recommendation is greater in such populations, along with women who may be pregnant during the flu season, residents of nursing homes or chronic care facilities.
    Health care personnel are encouraged to get the flu vaccine as well. However this vaccine, as will be described in a moment, offers no guarantee that the one immunized by this vaccine will not acquire the flu.
    Such populations of those recommended to receive the flu vaccination are those believed to need the protection the vaccine may offer the most. This is of concern, as Influenza can progress rapidly into the more serious illness of pneumonia.
    Symptoms of influenza usually start to express themselves symptomatically about two days or so after being infected with the virus. Over 10 percent of the population is infected with this virus every year- resulting in about 200,000 hospitalizations and nearly 40,000 deaths.
    This season’s first influenza case was identified in Delaware in November of 2008, and it was a type B influenza strain.
    The flu vaccination is trivalent- meaning it contains three viral strains of suspected viruses for flu outbreaks during a particular winter season, as determined by the World Health Organization, as well as the Centers for Disease Control, and other organizations.
    Yet one should keep in mind that these three strains of influenza may not even exist in a particular flu season. The vaccination is a guess, at best, yet is certainly better than the absence of a flu vaccination.
    Unfortunately, the influenza vaccine administered last flu season was largely ineffective due to unsuspected strains of the virus infecting others, although about 140 million injections of this vaccine were administered, and this proved to be pointless for preventative medicine.
    After giving the vaccination dose to one, it takes about 10 days for that person to build up the immunity for the disease of influenza. The months of October to December are recommended to receive this vaccine. And the vaccine is about 50 percent effective in offering protection from influenza, according to others, if one calculates the previous flu seasons with flu vaccinations.
    Vaccines are a catalyst for antibody production in humans, which protect them against the virus, if it happens to present itself within them.
    Influenza vaccines can be given by injection or nasally.
    Anti-virals, on the other hand, decrease greatly the ability for viruses to reproduce once established in a human. That seems like it should be a focus during viral seasons instead of any vaccination that exist today regarding the disease of influenza.
    The flu season that is now occurring was supplied with 150 million vaccines in the United States. However, some studies have shown that this vaccine is rather ineffective based on incidences of the acquisition of the influenza virus by others anyway.
    The influenza season peaks between the months of January and March. The vaccine for this influenza season is manufactured by 6 different companies.
    Yet the strains chosen contain what are speculated influenza viruses, so this does not eliminate the chance of a new and dominant influenza viral strain that possibly could cause a pandemic regardless if one is vaccinated for influenza. Also, it takes manufacturers about 6 months to make and formulate the influenza vaccination.
    There is a vaccine for this illness that is produced every year according to which type of virus types that may be prevalent during a particular flu season. If influenza occurs in a human host, the results may be the patient acquiring pneumonia or meningitis is possible, as well as their ability to transmit such a virus to another.
    The presence of influenza can be widespread in certain states, yet not others. The vaccination is recommended to be administered to those who are at high risk, such as the chronically ill.
    Also, it is recommended that those under 18 years of age get the vaccine, as well as those people over the age of 50. Furthermore, those people who regularly take aspirin should receive the vaccine, as the influenza disease can become a catalyst for what is called Reye’s Syndrome.
    Pregnant women should receive the vaccine as well- as there are many vaccines available to hopefully prevent this potentially dangerous viral disease in this form.
    However, the Avian influenza presented itself in China in 1997. Called the H5N1 virus, it has the potential to be the next flu pandemic. The virus responsible for the 1918 pandemic was an avian influenza. This virus, unlike the human influenza virus, has a longer incubation period- about 5 days. Also, H5N1 has the ability to mutate more rapidly, as well as replicate at a similar speed. Avian influenza viruses are highly pathogenic.
    For an influenza pandemic to occur, which means a global disease existence and presence, the virus must emerge from another species to humans without a strong immune system- as well as the ability to make more humans ill than normal due to the constant mutation of the influenza virus.
    Also, the virus must be highly contagious for a pandemic to occur. This particular virus that has been identified is just that.
    The H5N1 Avian influenza virus seems to have become progressively more pathogenic in the past decade, according to others. The letters H and N, by the way, are the letters of proteins that protrude from the viral shell.
    It is these proteins that mutate so often with the influenza virus, and which is why we continue to be infected with this virus.
    With the Avian Influenza existing with the H5N1 strain, millions of birds have been slaughtered due to the danger and unpredictability of this strain.
    The first recorded incidence of human-to-human transmission of the H5N1 virus was believed to be in Thailand in 2004. In 2006, it was discovered that the H5N1 had split into two separate strains globally.
    There have been outbreaks of Avian flu in about 15 countries in the world so far- with Indonesia being the worst. Migratory birds spread this influenza virus between continents.
    The pathogenic strength of the H5N1 strain varies due to constant re-assortment or switching of genetic material between the viruses- essentially creating a hybrid of what it was before this occurs.
    So far, about 400 people worldwide have been infected with this strain- and about half have died from the infection. Vaccinations are being developed and reformulated constantly at this time due to the pandemic threat of the H5N1 Influenza virus. ---- Dan Abshear
    http://www.hhs.gov/pandemicflu/plan/appendixh.html
    www.cdc.org/flu/weekly
  • Wow...given that I had a tangle with mere cellulitis from MRSA that landed me a week and a half in the hospital a couple of years ago, this commentary makes me even more relieved I decided it would be smart to go get one of the free flu shots offered by the hospital system I work for....I'd heard that getting MRSA in your respiratory tract could be particularly horrific, but I didn't know there was a flu connection. Now I'll be getting that sucker every year, thanks to this little piece of information! I think your PSA posts (this is kind of reminiscent of that type of message, only far less obnoxious) are quite helpful. If you convince a few more people to get the shot, you just might save them from serious problems. Of course, nothing's foolproof, but if you think about it the way you talk in this post, getting a flu shot is just about a no-brainer.
  • MA doc
    Here in MA, so far the strains of influenza A circulating are 99% resistant to Tamiflu. This is pretty scary!
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