AN EPIDEMIC OF INFLUENZA A IN INFANTS AND CHILDREN
- 17 June 1944
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in JAMA
- Vol. 125 (7) , 473-476
- https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.1944.02850250013005
Abstract
Acute upper respiratory infections, together with their complications and sequelae, vary amazingly in symptomatology, localization and severity from the common cold at one end of the series through an endless maze of possibilities to a fatal septicemia at the other end. There is no sharp line of cleavage as to classification, pathology or determinable etiology, according to Brennemann.1Recent progress, however, in the field of research on upper respiratory diseases has revealed two filtrable viruses, influenza A and B,2both of which may be isolated and identified. Either of these viruses may be the etiologic agent responsible for a portion of these illnesses. Moreover, reliable serologic tests have been perfected for the diagnosis of infection by these viruses.3 It has been possible to diagnose a recent epidemic of influenza among infants and children in the University of Minnesota Hospitals by isolating influenza A virus directly from unfilteredThis publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- THE QUANTITATIVE DETERMINATION OF INFLUENZA VIRUS AND ANTIBODIES BY MEANS OF RED CELL AGGLUTINATIONThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1942
- A New Type of Virus from Epidemic InfluenzaScience, 1940
- FOUR RECENT INFLUENZA EPIDEMICS: AN EXPERIMENTAL STUDYJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1940
- A Comprehensive Study of Influenza in a Rural CommunityPublic Health Reports®, 1940
- Observations on the ætiology of influenzaThe Journal of Pathology and Bacteriology, 1937
- THE INCIDENCE OF NEUTRALIZING ANTIBODIES FOR HUMAN INFLUENZA VIRUS IN THE SERUM OF HUMAN INDIVIDUALS OF DIFFERENT AGESThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1936
- TRANSMISSION OF INFLUENZA BY A FILTERABLE VIRUSScience, 1934