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U.S. flu season off to latest start in decades

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U.S. flu season off to latest start in decades

Feb. 17, 2012 11:32 AM

Associated Press

ATLANTA -- U.S. health officials say the flu season is finally here -- the slowest start in nearly 25 years.

Until this month, there weren't enough flu cases in the U.S. to signal the start of the season. This is the latest start to a flu season since the winter of 1987-1988.

Flu season usually starts in December or January. Often, it's half over by late February. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention officials don't know why this season was slow, but it could be a combination of factors.

On Friday, CDC officials said one state -- California -- has had widespread cases for the last two weeks, and Missouri has seen a spike in reports of flu-like illness.

So far the flu vaccine seems well-matched to the strains making people sick.


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Late flu season hits Illinois

By Trine Tsouderos, Chicago Tribune reporter

March 14, 2012

The breezes are balmy, green shoots are poking up through the dirt, people are wearing shorts. What could possibly put a damper on the bliss of spring?

The flu.

Off to its latest start in 29 years, influenza season has arrived in the U.S., including Illinois.

Flu viruses — no more than microscopic particles — are infecting people across the state, triggering fevers, violent shaking, extreme fatigue, painful body aches, virus-spreading coughs and general misery that can last a week or more.

As of March 3, Illinois was one of the hardest-hit states in the country, both in terms of geographic spread of the illness and amount of flu-like illness activity, according to data collected by theU.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

That said, this flu season is proving to be "pretty mild," said Melaney Arnold, spokeswoman for the Illinois Department of Public Health.

Local doctors echo that assessment. "We are seeing more patients with influenza in the past few weeks, but we haven't seen the volume that we usually see," said general internist Dr. Daniel Dunham, an associate professor of medicine at Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine.

Illinois health care providers reported very little flu activity until the first week of February, when two outbreaks were reported in long-term care facilities. Soon after that, another pair of outbreaks were reported in similar institutions.

By the beginning of March, flu was being reported across the state. Almost four dozen people were admitted to intensive care units with confirmed cases of influenza, Arnold said.

Many more likely have suffered at home, their cases unconfirmed and unreported. Outbreaks have been reported in long-term care facilities in Peoria, Edwardsville, West Chicago, Chicago and Cook County, Arnold said.

By this week last year, the flu season was wrapping up, apparently having peaked in late January and early February, according to state statistics. Experts are unsure why it started late this year, but say the most predictable thing about the influenza virus is its unpredictability.

"We can't predict the timing of peak activity in the United States nor when the season will end; nor can we predict how severe the season will ultimately be," said Dr. Joseph Bresee, chief of the epidemiology and prevention branch of the CDC's influenza division, in a late February conference call.

One possible reason for the late start could be that the flu viruses circulating this year — including the H1N1 strain that garnered so much notoriety in 2009 — are similar to those that sickened people last year, Bresee said. That could mean the overall population has higher levels of immunity to these strains this season, leading to less transmission and less disease, he said.

Also, he said, the vaccine is a good match to most of the strains circulating so far this season, and more people are getting the vaccine, so that also could lead to less disease.

A milder winter for parts of the U.S. might have played a role too. Some research indicates that transmission of the influenza virus may be enhanced in colder, drier weather. And in colder weather people spend more time indoors, perhaps aiding transmission, Bresee said.

Still, he said, any role weather may have played in the current pattern remains unclear.

Besides being later than normal, the activity this year isn't dramatically different than a typical season so far, said Dr. Michael David, flu historian and assistant professor of medicine for University of Chicago Medicine. "If transmission continues at a high rate into April, then I will have something to discuss," wrote David, who is also an infectious diseases specialist.

Whatever the cause, for some Illinois residents, these warm, sunny days will be spent inside, racked with pain and fever and coughs, and not outside on a bike or strolling at the lakefront.

So how to tell whether what's slowed you down is a cold, which is also caused by a virus, and not the flu?

"What separates flu from colds is fever, first and foremost," said Dr. Kenneth Alexander, chief of pediatric infectious diseases at Comer Children's Hospital at University of Chicago Medicine. "The average cold doesn't give you a lot of fever."

The difference between the two is key to understanding what makes the flu such a miserable ordeal.

An influenza virus is a tiny particle that infects cells lining the respiratory tract, essentially using them to make more particles while destroying the cells in the process. This can lead to serious damage to protective cells lining the lungs, leaving a person more susceptible to additional infections.

But, Alexander said, "you begin to wonder, if the flu virus is only in my lungs, why does my hair hurt?"

Most of the symptoms a person suffers during the flu come not from the direct effect of the virus particles replicating in the lungs, but from the body's immune response. Upon detecting the influenza virus, the body produces a torrent of cell-signaling proteins called cytokines that help fight the infection. But the cytokines also cause the characteristic sleepiness, lethargy, fever and muscle pain.

By contrast, cold viruses infect the sinuses, provoking a less intense immune response. "It is the difference between having a robber on your front step versus a robber in your living room," Alexander said.

And so the cold virus generates annoyance, but usually does not lead to true misery, stays in intensive care units or death.

The most effective way to avoid getting so sick is to get the flu vaccine each year, the physicians agreed. And don't assume that getting the vaccine a few years ago will be protective.

"If you haven't gotten the flu vaccine yet or your loved ones haven't gotten theirs yet, get your vaccine now," Bresee said. "It's not too late."

ttsouderos@tribune.com

Twitter @chicagoscience

 

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