There is an on going debate about the future of the current pandemic. This debate is portrayed superbly in the following articles by the BBC. The first was published on May the 1st and the second only five days later. It is important to understand that scientific knowledge cannot predict the evolution of the virus; this is why the global scientific community is monitoring the progress of the pandemic in such an intense manner.
What scientists know about swine flu
Emma Wilkinson Health reporter, BBC News 13:17 GMT, Friday, 1 May 2009 14:17 UK
Preliminary analysis of the swine flu virus suggests it is a fairly mild strain, scientists say.
It is believed that a further mutation would be needed in order for the H1N1 virus to cause the mass deaths that have been estimated by some.
But at this point, it is impossible to predict with any accuracy how the virus will continue to evolve.
UK experts at the National Institute for Medical Research outlined on Friday the work they are due to start on samples of the virus sent from the US.
The research, being done at the World Influenza Centre in Mill Hill, will be vital for working out the structure of the virus, where it came from, how quickly it is capable of spreading and its potential to cause illness.
Structure
Analysis done so far suggests what they are dealing with is a mild virus and nowhere near as dangerous as the H5N1 avian flu strain that has caused scientists so much concern over the past decade.
Influenza A viruses are classified according to two proteins on the outer surface of the virus - hemagglutinin (H) and neuraminidase (N).
The swine flu strain is a H1N1 virus, the same type as seasonal flu which circulates throughout the world every year, and kills roughly 0.1% of those infected or higher in an epidemic year.
Professor Wendy Barclay, chair in influenza virology at Imperial College London says initial indications suggest there is nothing about the genetic make-up of the new virus which is a cause for particular concern.
The key to its potential lies largely in the H1 protein.
"There are two aspects - one is which receptors the virus tends to bind to and what we see is that it is binding to the upper respiratory tract rather than deep in the lungs."
When a flu virus binds to the upper respiratory tract, it tends to cause mild illness but can be easily spread as people cough and sneeze, Professor Barclay explains.
If a virus binds further down in the lungs, it tends to cause much more severe illness, as in the case of the H5N1 avian flu virus which has caused concern in recent years.
"With the H1 gene we also look at the cleavage site," she adds.
"The virus has to be cut into two pieces to be active and it uses an enzyme in the host to do that.
"Most influenza viruses are restricted to the respiratory tract because they use enzymes in the lungs.
"But some, like H5 viruses can evolve to cut into two pieces outside the lungs, so they can replicate outside the respiratory tract."
Analysis
These initial indications are largely guesswork from looking at the genetic sequence of the virus and comparing that to what is known from work on other influenza viruses.
It will take weeks and months of biological analysis to properly get a handle on the potential of the H1N1 virus.
The team at Mill Hill, one of four World Health Organisation's centres for influenza research will be working in close collaboration with the Health Protection Agency who are carrying out testing in the UK, and their findings will also feed into the development of a potential vaccine.
Soon, the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute in Cambridge will begin the genetic sequencing of the virus and will also be monitoring any mutations or changes in how virulent it is.
However, there is one other reassuring aspect about what is known so far.
That is there seems to be nothing unusual as yet in another protein in the centre of the virus, called NS1, which is linked to the strength of the immune response the virus produces.
In some more pathogenic viruses, it is this NS1 protein which initiates a "cytokine storm", a particularly severe immune reaction that can be fatal in even healthy young people.
Predictions
Scientists have also played down concerns that the milder H1N1 virus, could combine with the more dangerous H5N1 avian flu virus, causing a super virus that has the ability to both spread easily between humans and cause severe illness.
This is unlikely - or at least just as unlikely as it ever was and the H5N1 virus has been around for a decade without combining with normal seasonal flu.
Professor Jonathan Ball, an expert in molecular virology at the University of Nottingham said: "The chance of swine H1N1 combining with H5N1 is as likely as any other strain recombining.
"What this outbreak does highlight is how difficult it is to predict new pandemic strains.
"Many people suspected that H5N1 was the most likely candidate for the next pandemic strain, but now it appears that this was a mistake - but that's not to say H5N1 or another reassortment containing parts of H5N1 may not happen in the future.
"That's the trouble - you can't predict."
'Too early' to say flu virus mild
16:55 GMT, Tuesday, 5 May 2009
Sir Liam, who updated the government's weekly cabinet meeting on the flu situation, told BBC News: "We may see an apparent peak in the incidents over the next month or so, but that doesn't mean it's gone away.
"It could be that we'll see a resurgence of the virus in the autumn and winter when the normal flu season starts.
"We must not be complacent. We know that flu viruses can change their character very rapidly as they move through populations."
He added: "These next few months are vitally important in understanding what sort of virus we're dealing with."
The latest case of swine flu, confirmed on Tuesday, was in an adult from the Slough area of Berkshire, the South Central Strategic Health Authority said.
'Quarantine rooms'
The individual, who is associated with travel to Mexico, is responding well to antiviral drugs, the authority added.
It brings the overall totals to 24 in England and four in Scotland. (5/5)
Meanwhile Department of Health leaflets, stressing the importance of good hygiene, are being delivered across the UK.
A spokesman said: "It is right that we are preparing for the possibility of a global pandemic.
"The UK's arrangements are continuing to ensure that we are well-placed to deal with this new infection."
Five UK schools hit by the virus have begun rescheduling GCSEs and A-levels as the summer exam season begins.
Three of the schools are in London, with one in Devon and one in South Gloucestershire. Four are secondary schools.
The latest to be hit by the virus is Alleyn's School in Dulwich, London, where five year-seven pupils were diagnosed on Monday.
A sixth pupil from the independent school, who visited the US during the Easter holidays, was diagnosed with the virus on Sunday.
The school said it was rescheduling A-level exams in art, biology and foreign languages for next week.
In a statement it said: "In line with procedure, the school will be writing to the examination boards who are always sympathetic to students in these circumstances."
Nine out of 10 of the parents had now collected the Tamiflu anti-viral medication offered by the Health Protection Agency, the school added.
More than 1,200 private schools have been given legal advice by the Independent Schools Council, which suggests setting up "quarantine rooms" for pupils suspected of having the virus.
It also says schools should provide a policy on what to do in case of a pandemic.
Governors at Dolphin School in Battersea, London, closed its doors as a precaution after it emerged that two pupils - siblings of pupils at Alleyn's - had been confirmed with the virus.
Swine flu has already closed South Hampstead High School in north west London, Downend in South Gloucestershire and Paignton Community and Sports College in Devon.
Around 300 other people in the UK are currently awaiting the results of tests to determine whether they have the virus.
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