Submitted by number1dork t3_120rixo in askscience
im_thatoneguy t1_jdjlrq0 wrote
Reply to comment by yofomojojo in What happened to the old COVID variants, like Delta? Could they come back? by number1dork
Out of curiosity if H1N1 Spanish Flu == H1N1 Swine Flu, why was Swine Flu so much less virulent? The Spanish Flu was particularly deadly among younger people and no young people would have been exposed to the extinct Spanish Flu.
(I Had H1N1 and it was awwwwwffullll, but didn't shut the world down like Covid or Spanish Flu).
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EDIT: They're not the same:
>The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Friday the swine flu virus appears to be about as contagious as the average seasonal flu. In examining the virus, it also did not find the genes they think made the infamous 1918 flu so deadly.
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>https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=103728922
Edit edit:
>Model to Explain the 1918 Mortality Patterns.
>
>Elderly individuals may have been protected from the 1918 virus by childhood exposure to an H1N1-like virus (5). We estimate that H1 and the H2 + H5 lineage diverged from a common ancestor near the time of the 1830 pandemic (SI Appendix, SI Text and Figs. S13 and S14). Moreover, protection was clearly greatest in those born before 1834 (5) (Fig. 3A), implicating the 1830–1833 pandemic virus, which would have primed the majority of that age group. If an H1-like virus emerged in 1830, it would likely have been positioned near one of the orange stars close to the root of the tree in SI Appendix, Fig. S13. Those primed as children between 1830 and 1889 by this HA lineage would likely have had considerable protection against the 1918 HA, comparable to that exhibited during the 2009 H1N1 pandemic by those born before 1957 (32), based on the similar genetic distances separating the childhood and pandemic virus HA in each case
https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.1324197111#supplementary-materials
The tree here would indicate that H1N1 like Covid just continued to evolve and become endemic, it didn't die out. Nowhere is it claimed that the genomes are the same. In fact as the CDC mentions, we had a full sequence by 2005 of the 1918 flu and it didn't match.
hayalci t1_jdjswfg wrote
In addition to r/brown_felt_hat's answer, Spanish Flu was around World War I, ravaged economies, poverty, illness, and a general lack of resources probably would have confounded its effects.
brown_felt_hat t1_jdjn0u2 wrote
We are definitely a lot better at recognizing and treating illnesses these days. We have drugs to mitigate infection vectors (eg cough syrup prevents coughing, a massive transmission vector, decongestants limit mucus production so you're not sneezing snot everywhere), we have drugs to treat dangerous symptoms (anti pyretic drugs to prevent high fevers, repository drugs to prevent failure), and just much better overall awareness of how viral infections work and spread.
im_thatoneguy t1_jdjx0hg wrote
So if you didn't take any medication, you had pretty much the experience you would have in 1918--except you would probably take Paracetamol for fever and if your condition worsened you could receive tamiflu and other stronger medications?
Or like the difference between Alpha and Delta Omicron, they're the "same" but probably exhibited substantially different mortality?
[deleted] t1_jdk04dv wrote
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Atechiman t1_jdk1y5e wrote
HXNX is a way of indentfying large families of Orthomyxoviridae in particular alphainfluenza betainfluenza gammainfluenza and deltainfluenza, the four 'families' of bird/mammalian flus (often just called a,b,c,d) I forget off hand the exact proteins it refers to, but all of the viruses have one of four of them so H1N3 viruses tend to behave similar to each other but different from H1N2.
H1N1 is an alpha virus, that different strains have caused several major pandemics including the Swine Flu. It is an avian virus usually, but some strains are endemic in humans and it is often the flu-a vaccine for a year.
1918 flu is an outlier as was the '83? '82? Russian pandemic novel. The 2008 was slightly more lethal than normal but not more contagious.
mystlurker t1_jdk8n7n wrote
This article is pretty interesting:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3734171/
I found potential explanation #4 to be of particular interest. There is a theory that exposure to another flu strain in ~1890 may have caused a dysregulated immune response.
byerss t1_jdjw4rg wrote
H1N1/09 did hit younger people harder than older folks. I remember reading that one theory was that for 2009 older folks may have had more natural immunity because they were exposed to flu variants based on Spanish Flu.
Look up the death vs age graphs for swine flu.
yofomojojo t1_jdk0chr wrote
Re: your edit - I'm open to being rebutted here but, I think that clip might be a bit outdated. H1N1 is Swine Flu and Spanish Flu. If we're doing podcast links, RadioLab covered this topic again during early Covid. Current scientific papers and articles on the topic all seem to understand and accept that H1N1 is the virus in question in both cases.
im_thatoneguy t1_jdk1ror wrote
https://pubag.nal.usda.gov/download/26795/PDF
That radiolab is discussing the basis of a 2005 paper which included the entire genome. So a 2009 CDC analysis (which NPR cites) should be based on the fully sequenced H1N1-1918 genome from 2005.
Edit:
https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.1324197111#supplementary-materials
This states that H1N1 didn't go away, it continued to evolve into a seasonal H1N1. And that likely the 1918 H1N1 branched off into the H1N1 in pigs prior to the human outbreak.
[deleted] t1_jdjuvha wrote
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