The H1N1 virus does not typically lay dormant in the human body like some other viruses, such as herpes viruses. Instead, it usually causes an acute respiratory infection that the body clears relatively quickly. After infection, the immune system generally eliminates the virus, and any remaining antibodies provide protection against future infections. However, like other influenza viruses, H1N1 can mutate, leading to new strains that may evade immune protection.
eight genes are present in h1n1 virus
Swine Flu or scientifically pronounced (H1N1)
No, the H1N1 vaccine won't make you sicker or healthier if you already have H1N1.
85 people were affected by H1N1
The H1N1 virus, otherwise known as "swine flu" originated from none other than swine.
No, the H1N1 virus does not contain carcinogens.
No the A-H1N1/09 is a new strain of flu that has genetic material from three types of swine influenza viruses, avian flu virus and human flu virus. The "swine flu" in the mid 1970's was also an A-H1N1 influenza virus but quite a bit different than the pandemic strain.
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.
Lytic Cycle
The family practitioner doesnt actually identify the H1N1 virus. If a local test shows up as positive, they send those results to a more specialized hospital to determine if that result is of the flu or the H1N1 virus.
H4N1 Virus is an user in Plug.DJ and Youtube
Germs of pigs do think of theyself.