Preliminary evidence suggests that swine flu may prove relatively mild, though scientists warn against drawing firm conclusions from on-the-fly early research.
Wired.com has learned that Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory computer scientists Jonathan Allen and Tom Slezak have found similarities between swine flu and historical strains that spread widely but not globally, and without catastrophic fatalities.
Their findings are based on just one complete sample and several fragmentary samples of swine flu, but fit with two other early analyses.
Taken together, all these findings fit the notion that more Mexicans are infected than was originally thought, that severe cases represent a fraction of the outbreak, and that mortality rates are lower than originally feared.
Researchers with the Great Britain?s National Institute for Medical Research say swine flu?s proteins suggest that it infects the upper rather than lower respiratory tract, reducing the damage it causes.
And two UK scientists have extrapolated a rough date for swine flu?s emergence, and calculated the rate at which it appears to spread and mutate.
?If the calculations are correct,? said Slezak, ?it?s indeed supportive of the other data that seems to agree that this is not going to be a catastrophic outbreak.?
Continue Reading ?Swine Flu Genes Show Virus May Be Weak? ?
Wired.com has learned that Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory computer scientists Jonathan Allen and Tom Slezak have found similarities between swine flu and historical strains that spread widely but not globally, and without catastrophic fatalities.
Their findings are based on just one complete sample and several fragmentary samples of swine flu, but fit with two other early analyses.
Taken together, all these findings fit the notion that more Mexicans are infected than was originally thought, that severe cases represent a fraction of the outbreak, and that mortality rates are lower than originally feared.
Researchers with the Great Britain?s National Institute for Medical Research say swine flu?s proteins suggest that it infects the upper rather than lower respiratory tract, reducing the damage it causes.
And two UK scientists have extrapolated a rough date for swine flu?s emergence, and calculated the rate at which it appears to spread and mutate.
?If the calculations are correct,? said Slezak, ?it?s indeed supportive of the other data that seems to agree that this is not going to be a catastrophic outbreak.?
Continue Reading ?Swine Flu Genes Show Virus May Be Weak? ?
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