The Manila Times

Swine flu on the rise among India’s young

- The Michigan Strain TNS

THE first half of 2017 has seen a spurt in the number of deaths and infections caused by Influenza A (H1N1), popularly referred to as swine flu in India.

Till July 9, H1N1 affected 12,460 people and caused 600 deaths as against 1,786 infections and 265 deaths in the whole of last year.

Experts are also alarmed at the number is high among young adults. About 40 percent of the deaths and 50% of the infections are among people in the 2050 years age group, with no co-morbid conditions.

Pradeep Awate, MD, state surveillan­ce officer of Maharashtr­a, said this could be because young people move a lot, and are therefore vulnerable to swine flu, which is an air-borne infection. His state has topped the list in the country with 2,324 cases and 284 deaths so far.

Authoritie­s blamed it on indiscrimi­nate testing — even when unnecessar­y — by private laboratori­es.

“Flu outbreaks offer people a herd immunity that lasts for a year or two. Since Maharashtr­a had fewer cases in 2016, there is a higher number this year,” Awate said.

What is encouragin­g, according to experts, is that the situation no longer demands isolating H1N1-positive people as was done to contain the spread in 2009, when the virus was new to India and affected close to 50,000 people and killed more than 2,700.

Antigenic Shift

The National Institute of Virology, Pune, ruled out mutation theory and some experts believe that the jump in numbers could be attributed to two factors: antigenic drift and the spread of a different strain (sub-type of virus) of H1N1 virus.

According to the US Center of Disease Control, “antigenic drift are small changes in the genes of influenza viruses that happen continuall­y over time as the virus replicates. These small genetic changes usually produce viruses that are closely related to one another… and an immune system exposed to a similar virus will usually recognize it and respond. But these small genetic changes can accumulate over time and result in viruses that are anti-genically different.... When this happens, the body’s immune system may not recognise those viruses.”

Chand Wattal, MD, honorary consultant in clinical microbiolo­gy at New Delhi’s Sir Ganga Ram Hospital, however, said antigenic drift was not a major issue. “If the virus mutates, then we consider it a problem.”

On the other hand, the studies point towards a new strain of H1N1 virus: the Michigan strain, which has been in circulatio­n since the end of 2016 and has replaced the earlier California strain.

NIV says it is not more virulent than the California strain. “Before the H1N1 came to India in 2009, H3N2 was the dominant flu strain since 1919. Now it is H1N1, and till everyone has immunity, waxing and waning of cases and deaths will happen,” said a researcher from National Center for Disease Control.

“Also, if we compare deaths reported due to communicab­le diseases such as TB or diarrhea, the swine flu-related deaths are much lower,” he said. The World Health Organizati­on ( WHO) has also recommende­d a vaccine for the new strain, named as A/Michigan/45/2015 to replace A/California/7/2009.

Testing for Flu

The government’s guidelines do not recommend anyone with fever to be randomly tested, and divides cases in three categories —A, B and C, wherein category “A” is of people who experience mild symptoms, category “B” is people with moderate symptoms and “C” are those with severe symptoms. They recommende­d use of medicines in category “B” and “C” patients, as those with mild symptoms are capable of recovering at home with symptomati­c treatment, and treatment if symptoms are serious and the person has difficulty breathing.

On the new vaccine recommende­d by WHO, Soumya Swaminatha­n, MD, director of the Indian Council of Medical Research said it was needed as the current one “may be ineffectiv­e.”

Though no vaccine provides 100-percent protection, it is advisable to take a shot if one is at high risk, especially if suffering from diabetes, hypertensi­on, on immunosupp­ressants, cancer treatment, among others.

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