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  • The fluhas become a slang term that refers to almost any ailment

  • where you juuuust don’t feel quite right.

  • But influenza proper is a handful of specific viruses that invade the respiratory lining,

  • evade the immune system, and mutate at a rate that even the world’s most brilliant doctors,

  • scientists, and health organizations struggle to keep up with.

  • So what is Influenza exactly,

  • and why does it always seem to be one step ahead of us?

  • Some of the confusion around the termflumay stem back to the word’s roots: “Influenza

  • is an Italian word that just means,  ‘influence.'

  • Because, back 500 years ago, people didn't know about germs then.

  • They thought if you got this disease, you were under the influence, perhaps of the stars

  • or something else.

  • My name is David Morens.

  • I'm a medical doctor and an epidemiologist, and a virologist, and a historian, at the

  • National Institutes of Health, and an officer in the United States Public Health Service,

  • and I'm here today to talk about one of my favorite subjects: influenza.

  • Influenza presents with such iconic symptoms

  • that many other diseases are classified by their similarity to it.

  • Tell your doctor youre experiencingflu-like symptoms,’ and theyll know exactly what

  • you mean: coughing, fever, head and muscle aches, fatigue, and well, just generalmalaise...”

  • which kind of means just feeling really bad.

  • Anybody who's ever had flu knows what it is.

  • But while many illnesses are similar to influenza, there’s only one True Flu.

  • Well, four, actually... and trying to put a finger on its countless variations and mutations

  • is actually where influenza starts to get the better of us.

  • Depending on how you cut the cake, there are billions and trillions and zillions of different

  • types of influenza.

  • But to start, we categorize them into four categories: Influenza A, B, C, and D. The

  • ones we're most interested in because they affect humans every year are A and B. C also

  • infects humans, but it's pretty much a minor disease that affects children, and D is mostly

  • an animal disease that people generally don't get, or at least they don't get symptoms from it.

  • Influenza A, B, and C for the kiddos, start by entering your upper respiratory tract,

  • either when you breathe contaminated air, or touch your nose and mouth after coming

  • into contact with the virus.

  • The only cells it really infects are what we call respiratory epithelial cells, a one-cell

  • layer of cells that kind of protect the breathing tubes and the lungs, all the way down to the

  • bottom, where we have air sacs.

  • Those lining cells are the ones that get infected.

  • Once they reach your respiratory lining, the viruses attach to a specific kind of cell

  • receptor, called sialic acid.

  • If you could see them up close, they'd look like branches of trees.

  • They stick out and they go in all different directions.

  • They kind of capture things, and by binding to it, it can be dragged inside the cell,

  • where it causes the infection.

  • The influenza virus then makes its way through your respiratory passages, in rare cases,

  • reaching all the way to the bottom of the lungs, and leading to severe pneumonia.

  • All this suspicious activity would normally cause your body to launch an immune response.

  • And usually, it tries to.

  • But this is complicated by the fact that the virus and the immune cells coming to the rescue

  • are separated by that epithelial barrier.

  • That's one of the reasons it makes it hard to develop strong immunity to flu, and to

  • raise strong immunity by using a flu vaccine.

  • And as if that weren’t enough, even if you are able to mount a defense of some sort against

  • the virus, influenza has already invented several thousand more versions of itself,

  • before you can blink an eye.

  • Influenza viruses are not stable things.

  • They're always moving and changing, day-to-day, hour-to-hour, minute-to-minute.

  • Mutation is all they can do.

  • There is no state of their existence in human beings that is not constantly mutating.

  • This is because of a machinery in their RNA that causes consistent errors in gene replication.

  • But, unlike for humans, theseerrorsactually works to the virus’s advantage.

  • They're good errors that help them to survive.

  • Even in your own body, if you are infected with an influenza virus today, you're not

  • going to be infected by one virus.

  • You're going to be infected by let us say 1,000 or 10,000 viruses.

  • And it’s this rapid-fire mutation that makes whipping up a vaccine for this set of viruses

  • a pretty tall order.

  • Each year, researchers from the World Health Organization and around the world develop

  • one vaccine for the Northern Hemisphere, and one for the Southern.

  • These vaccines are released six months apart, to coincide with winter’s ‘flu season

  • in each area.

  • Their recipe is slightly different each time, and can be tailored for specific types of

  • patients, like the elderly.

  • The current vaccines have four viruses: two influenza A, and two influenza B.

  • And it may or may not work.

  • Because in the meantime, the viruses circulating around the world may have mutated to the point

  • where your best guess vaccine is worthless.

  • So, the scientists have to guess now, what vaccine they're going to need

  • six months from now.

  • It's like looking into a crystal ball.

  • And in addition to this seasonal cycle, every three decades or so, the stakes ramp up, and

  • the disease is dramatically more hostile, causing a pandemic.

  • The years we have a pandemic, as many as 50% or 60% of all people might be infected

  • within a year.

  • That virus causing a pandemic can come at any time of year.

  • Eventually, we don't call it a pandemic anymore - we call it a seasonal virus.

  • But all over the world, research continues on influenza, and the hope of a universal

  • vaccine could be in sight.

  • A lot of scientists, including NIH and CDC, are working very hard on this.

  • Every year, all over the world, thousands of influenza viruses are being taken from

  • patients, and sequenced.

  • This gives an idea about what directions the evolution of this virus is going.

  • By learning how the body can successfully control influenza, we have a better idea how

  • we can mimic that with a vaccine.

  • But in the meantime

  • Don't walk, run and get your flu shot, every year.

The fluhas become a slang term that refers to almost any ailment

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