Johannesburg

Saturday

Sunny. Cool.

1°C
16°C

7 day forecasts

Protection against deadly flu

2008-08-18 16:44

Washington- Nearly a century after history's most lethal flu faded away, survivors' bloodstreams still carry super-potent protection against the 1918 virus, demonstrating the remarkable durability of the human immune system.

Scientists tested the blood of 32 people aged 92 to 102 who were exposed to the 1918 pandemic flu and found antibodies that still roam the body looking to strangle the old flu strain.

Researchers manipulated those antibodies into a vaccine and found that it kept alive all the mice they had injected with the killer flu, according to a study published online on Sunday in the journal Nature.

There's no pressing need for a 1918 flu vaccine because the virus has long since mutated out of its deadly form and is extremely unlikely to be a threat anymore, experts said. What's more important in this research, they said, is that it confirms theories that our immune system has a steel-trap memory.

"It's incredible. The Lord has blessed us with antibodies our whole lifetime," said study co-author Dr Eric Altschuler at the University of Medicine and Dentistry in New Jersey. "What doesn't kill you makes you stronger."

This is the longest that specific disease-fighting cells have lasted in people, said study lead author Dr James Crowe, a professor of microbiology and immunology at Vanderbilt University Medical Centre in Nashville, Tennessee.

But these antibodies don't just survive; they have mutated tremendously and now bind tighter to disease cells than other antibodies. That makes them more potent, he said.

Crowe said he hopes to use similar techniques to boost the potencies of vaccines that would be more useful now against newer bird flu strains that could become epidemics.

Lost to the world

The 1918 flu killed about 50 million people worldwide and nearly everybody else was exposed to the virus, Crowe said. The specific 1918 virus was lost to the world for decades, until it was reconstructed about three years ago using genetic material from victims.

When scientists tested the antibodies from survivors on infected mice, they did so in a high level biosecurity lab at the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta.

The idea for the new study came from an old TV show, said Altschuler. In an episode of the since-cancelled TV series Medical Investigation, a town improbably gets infected with the 1918 flu and the doctors treat everyone with the reluctantly donated blood of an old butler who survived the original pandemic, he said.

That prompted Altschuler, a professor of rehabilitation medicine who doesn't normally study flu, to look into the idea of testing people more than 90 years old for antibodies.

The National Institutes of Health, which paid for much of the study, connected Altschuler with experts in the field and he found the elderly antibody donors.

The findings make sense, said Dr Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute for Allergies and Infectious Diseases in Bethesda, Maryland, who wasn't involved with the study. Recent studies have estimated that the human immune system should last many decades, but this gives real proof, he said.

- SAPA

inside news24

Cpt: 13-16°C Showers early. Afternoon clouds. Cool. Pta: 4-20°C Sunny. Refreshingly cool.
Jhb: 1-16°C Sunny. Cool. Bloem: 3-18°C Sprinkles late. More sun than clouds. Cool.
Dbn: 15-26°C Sunny. Pleasantly warm. PE: 15-22°C Sprinkles late. Afternoon clouds. Mild.
7 day forecasts...
Western Cape Eastern Cape Kwazulu Natal Gauteng

Edenvale - 19:06:36 PM Lane closures for roadworks on the N3 Highway bridge More traffic reports...

Cape Town - Here are the winning Lotto numbers from the Wednesday, July 8 draw.

7, 10, 21, 30, 37, 39 Bonus 8

Lotto Plus: 2, 5, 14, 16, 19, 44 Bonus 23

SMS the word Lotto to 31222 to get lotto numbers sent directly to your phone.
 
More lotto numbers...

Jobs - Find your dream job

Sales Director

KwaZulu Natal
The Unlimited World

Java Developer

Western Cape - Cape Town
Quiglies Solutions

Snr. Developer

Western Cape - Cape Town
BDCE Staffing Solutions
R30,000-40,000 Per MonthMarket Related Negotiable

Cars - Search 1000's of new and used cars

AUDI

A4’s From R199 000

VOLKSWAGEN

New Golf GTI From R317 300

VOLKSWAGEN

Polo 1.9 TDi 3-dr Dsl
2004
105990

TOYOTA

Camry 220 GL
2002
129990

VOLKSWAGEN

CitiGolf 1.4i 5-dr Phase II
2008
68990

Property - Find a new home

MOOIKLOOF

Single Residential 11,200,000

KLEINBRON ESTATE

Single Residential 2,250,000

PARADYSKLOOF

Single Residential 4,250,000

Travel - Look, Book, Go!