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H5N1 is the avian flu virus. There are some confined areas of the world that up to half the pig population is testing positive for H5N1, without showing any symptoms. Pigs can carry this as well as human flu viruses. There is some concern that if a pig is carrying both, the viruses can combine and mutate into a new strain that will be easily passed among humans.

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15y ago
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14y ago

They called it Swine Flu at first because laboratory testing showed that the first form of this virus was originally the same or similar to a viral influenza disease of North American pigs that was not zoonotic (did not move from other animal species to people). It was also a Type A H1N1 virus. But further study has shown that this new pandemic virus is very different from what normally circulated in North American pigs. It contains genetic material from more than one type of swine influenza (European, Asian, and North American), and also genetic material from Avian (bird) flu, and human influenza. That makes it a new kind of flu that people have not had exposure to prior to this, so the potential was for a pandemic (which is what has happened).

The proper name is influenza Type A-H1N1/09. See the related question below for more specific scientific names and other names this virus is called around the world today.

They changed the name because people wouldn't eat pork meat because they thought they were going to catch the disease by eating it and the pork producers didn't want this stigma placed on their product and it made it confusing and hard to differentiate from the prior types of "swine flu" when talking or writing about it. You can not get the pandemic A-H1N1/09 swine flu or other influenza types from eating pork. The influenza viruses are killed by normal cooking temperatures of 167-212°F (75-100°C).

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14y ago

They both are Type A Influenza viruses, subtype H1N1. And both originated in pigs. But they are very different strains. The 2009 Pandemic A-H1N1/09 is an entirely new strain that has never been seen before, and it contains genetic material that is very different from any prior or the other current H1N1 strains.

See the related questions below for more information.


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12y ago

Yes and no.

There are many different flu viruses called both H1N1 and swine flu, and this is very confusing because the same names are used for different things. In the type of swine flu that pigs get (the original "swine flu"), they are usually referring to the same virus, just called by different names. So in that sense, the answer to your question is: yes.

But there are H1N1 flu viruses that pigs do not get, and/or that are not the same virus. So then the answer would be: no, or at least it would be, not always.

For the "swine flu" that caused the pandemic of 2009, the names are interchanged often in common use, and that adds to confusion. To be specific and more correct in referring to this type of flu virus, it is best to not call it simply H1N1 or simply swine flu. To be more specific, it is called the A-H1N1/09 influenza virus and the pandemic swine flu. So the answer then is, no.

Please see the related question below that will help to clarify the terminology and names for the 2009 pandemic "swine" flu. That question has many other related questions connected with it for more information to help sort this out.

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Q: Why is H1N1 sometimes called Swine Flu?
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Related questions

What is the name of the microbes that cause swine flu?

The initial outbreak was called the "H1N1 influenza", or "Swine Flu"


What type of virus is the H1N1 classified as?

It is a Type A Influenza virus with RNA genome.Also called Swine Flu, the 2009 Pandemic Flu, 2009 Swine Flu, and A-H1N1/09.


How was the Swine Flu formed?

It is a desiease from pigs it is also called H1N1.


Is the Swine Flu caused by a virus or a bacteria?

It is caused by a virus called A-H1N1/09 influenza virus (aka swine flu).


Is the Swine Flu a joke?

No it's not a joke. The proper name for swine flu is H1N1 Flu.


Why is swine flu not called swine flu in Israel?

H1N1/09 pandemic swine flu is called by many different names in different places. See the related questions below for more information.


What is duration of Swine Flu?

h1n1


Is the swine flue a fungus?

Swine Flu A-H1N1/09 is caused by a virus, not by a fungus. The virus is a Type A Influenza strain named A-H1N1/09 or also called the Pandemic Swine Flu virus among other names around the world.


What is a nickname for Swine Flu?

"Swine Flu" is the nickname. It is the nickname in the US and some other countries for the A-H1N1/09 pandemic flu of 2009. Swine flu is called many other names across the world. See the related question below for information on more of these names H1N1/09 is called around the globe.


What are the two strains of the virus that cause Swine Flu?

There is currently only one strain of influenza virus that causes pandemic Swine Flu. It is called A-H1N1/09. There have been previous strains of H1N1 that were similar, and some were even called Swine Flu, but they were different than that which causes the Swine Flu of the 2009 pandemic. See related questions below.


Is the Swine Flu a fungus or a parasite?

Neither. The H1N1/09 "Swine Flu" is caused by a virus.


What does the H1M1 stand for?

The disease developed from Influenza known as Swine Flu (also Schwein) Edit: It is called H1N1, not H1M1.