http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/01/17/AR2007011701113.html?referrer=email1918 Flu Virus Limited The Immune System
Body's Effort to Fight Was Often Deadly
By David Brown
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, January 18, 2007; A10
...Experiments in monkeys reveal that the 1918 virus came with the pre-packaged capacity to limit the immune system's ability to fight back in the first few days after infection. As the virus grows unchecked, the body attacks it with increasing quantities of highly toxic substances, which over time do as much harm to the host as to the invader. The result is often lethal damage to the lungs, where most influenza virus growth occurs.
The research provides further evidence that the 1918 virus had traits not found in other flu viruses and that it was the body's frantic effort to fight it that ultimately killed many victims...The virulence of the 1918 virus has always been a mystery. It was most lethal in young adults, the segment of the population usually most able to fight off severe infections. Many died a week or more after falling ill, with autopsies showing they had pneumonia caused by bacteria that had opportunistically infected virus-damaged lungs.
There were many reports, however, of people who died more quickly, occasionally even with a day of first symptoms. They presumably succumbed to the viral infection alone, and at autopsy their lungs were flooded with bloody fluid...While many of the victims of bacterial pneumonia would be saved today with antibiotics, which didn't exist in 1918, there are still few treatments for the overwhelming viral pneumonia seen in Spanish flu. Consequently, understanding how it occurs on a molecular level is a high priority. That is especially true now, because the H5N1 "bird flu" strain of virus circulating in Southeast Asia has killed some of its 267 victims with viral pneumonia reminiscent of Spanish flu.
The experiment was done in a Canadian biosafety Level 4 lab, where researchers work in the equivalent of space suits. Kawaoka's team does not have permission to experiment with the virus in the United States.
Because of its extreme hazard, only a single group of U.S. researchers, at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, is currently allowed to use whole, living reconstructed versions of the pathogen that killed at least 50 million people nearly a century ago.
In the new experiment, Darwyn Kobasa, a scientist in a Canadian government microbiology lab in Winnipeg, Manitoba, synthesized the 1918 virus from scratch and infected seven macaque monkeys with it. Three other animals were infected with a modern, far less virulent strain from the same large family of influenza A/H1N1 viruses...The monkeys infected with the 1918 virus were so sick within eight days that they had to be euthanized. "Profuse watery and bloody liquid" filled 60 to 90 percent of the their lung tissue, "greatly reducing lung function," the researchers reported.