Clinicopathologic Study of Thirty-Three Fatal Cases of Asian Influenza
- 12 March 1959
- journal article
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 260 (11) , 509-518
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm195903122601101
Abstract
THE 1957 pandemic of Asian influenza was associated with a high attack rate and excess pneumonia mortality1; influenza-associated deaths were most common at the extremes of life. Although case fatality rates were low, the course of some cases was fulminant2 3 4 5 and comparable with the rapidly lethal variety of influenza observed in the pandemic of 1918–206 and in several subsequent epidemics.7 Recent reports of deaths associated with Asian influenza2 3 4 5 , 8 9 10 11 12 describe explosive, rapidly progressive and unresponsive respiratory failure frequently associated with staphylococcal infection, primary influenzal pneumonitis, neurologic and cardiac involvement, the rare isolation of Haemophilus influenzae from the respiratory tract and . . .Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- INFLUENZAL ENCEPHALOPATHY AND POSTINFLUENZAL ENCEPHALITISThe Lancet, 1958
- Deaths from Asian Influenza, 1957BMJ, 1958
- ASIAN INFLUENZA AND MITRAL STENOSISJAMA, 1958
- Sudden Death Due to Fulminating InfluenzaBMJ, 1958
- THE SIGNIFICANCE OF PULMONARY HYALINE MEMBRANES IN NEWBORN INFANTSJAMA, 1958
- FULMINATING ABACTERIAL INFLUENZAThe Lancet, 1957
- POST-MORTEM FINDINGS IN 46 INFLUENZA DEATHSThe Lancet, 1957
- DEATH FROM ASIATIC INFLUENZA IN THE NETHERLANDSThe Lancet, 1957
- FULMINATING INFLUENZAThe Lancet, 1957
- ACUTE MYOCARDITIS IN INFLUENZA A INFECTIONSThe Lancet Healthy Longevity, 1945