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Pandemic Flu Turns Fatal By Over-Reactive Response By Youngsters

Today, the youngsters have been found to be the most over-reactive victims of flu.

by VR Sreeraman on December 8, 2010 at 3:17 PM

Today, the youngsters have been found to be the most over-reactive victims of flu. It has been claimed in a new study conducted so far in this context that such behavior has developed a strong immune response amongst youngsters. Such attitude in young adults may spread further if not controlled in proper perspective and can prove fatal. People become critically ill even killed by their own immune system.


Fernando Polack at Vanderbilt and colleagues in Argentina and Nashville suggest that people are made critically ill, or even killed, by their own immune response.

A molecule called C4d, a product of this biochemical cascade (the complement system), is a marker for the strength of immune response. In adults who died during the 2009 H1N1 pandemic, high levels of C4d in lung tissues suggest a massive, potentially fatal activation of the complement system.

"C4d is part of the inflammatory cascade, and while it's really good at killing organisms and protecting us, it's sort of the slash and burn approach, capable of causing lots of tissue damage," said Joyce Johnson, professor of Pathology with VUMC.

As to why infants and the frail elderly escaped this mechanism of death in the H1N1 pandemic, Polack said, "We found in 2009, the elderly had good immunity because they had seen a very similar virus sometime before 1957. Babies hadn't seen many viruses at all so there was no trigger. It came down to the young adults - primed with an ineffective response. Their bodies already had defenses against previous influenza viruses that look like this one but weren't close enough."

"It suggests this (immune over-reaction) is what happens with pandemic to make young healthy adults seriously ill. There are other things that contribute to threat, but this is one of the main things for this age group," Polack said.

The study is published Dec. 5 in Nature Medicine.

Source: ANI

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