نتایج جستجو برای: avian influenza vaccine

تعداد نتایج: 198546  

2015
Lei Deng Lorena Itatí Ibañez Veronique Van den Bossche Kenny Roose Sameh A. Youssef Alain de Bruin Walter Fiers Xavier Saelens

Human influenza viruses are responsible for annual epidemics and occasional pandemics that cause severe illness and mortality in all age groups worldwide. Matrix protein 2 (M2) of influenza A virus is a tetrameric type III membrane protein that functions as a proton-selective channel. The extracellular domain of M2 (M2e) is conserved in human and avian influenza A viruses and is being pursued a...

Journal: :iranian journal of virology 0
e saberfar research center of virus & vaccine, baqiyatallah (a.s.) university of medical sciences, tehran, ir iran. a najafi research center of molecular biology, baqiyatallah (a.s.) university of medical sciences, tehran, ir iran. h lashini research center of virus & vaccine, baqiyatallah (a.s.) university of medical sciences, tehran, ir iran.

abstract : avian influenza virus (aiv) infection is a major cause of influenza mortality in birds and can cause human mortality and morbidity. although the risk of infection with avian influenza virus (aiv) is generally low for most people, the pathogenic virus can cross the species barrier and acquires the ability to infect and be transmitted among the human population; therefore the rapid ide...

Journal: :Avian diseases 2007
Y J Lee H W Sung J G Choi E K Lee O M Jeong Y K Kwon J H Kwon C S Song J H Kimd

The 2004 Asian H5N1 epizootic outbreak indicates the urgent need for vaccines against highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) virus. The manufacture of inactivated whole-virus vaccines from HPAI viruses by traditional methods is not feasible for safety reasons as well as technical issues. The low pathogenic avian influenza A/wild bird feces/CSM2/02 (H5N3) virus was used as a heterologous neura...

Journal: :The Japanese journal of veterinary research 2001
Y K Lim A Takada T Tanizaki H Ozaki K Okazaki H Kida

Effective vaccinations against swine influenza reduce the economic loss of pig industries, and also may minimize the possibility of emergence of new pandemic viruses, since pigs are intermediate hosts to generate reassortant viruses among avian and mammalian influenza viruses. In this study, we showed that intranasal immunization of pigs with formalin-inactivated or ether-split influenza vaccin...

2007
Michael Lierz Hafez M. Hafez Robert Klopfleisch Dörte Lüschow Christine Prusas Jens P. Teifke Miriam Rudolf Christian Grund Donata Kalthoff Thomas Mettenleiter Martin Beer Timm Harder

Because fatal infections with highly pathogenic avian influenza A (HPAI) virus subtype H5N1 have been reported in birds of prey, we sought to determine detailed information about the birds' susceptibility and protection after vaccination. Ten falcons vaccinated with an inactivated influenza virus (H5N2) vaccine seroconverted. We then challenged 5 vaccinated and 5 nonvaccinated falcons with HPAI...

2015
Min-Yuan Chia Alan Yung-Chih Hu Yu-Fen Tseng Tsai-Chuan Weng Chia-Chun Lai Jun-Yang Lin Po-Ling Chen Ya-Fang Wang Sin-Ru Chao Jui-Yuan Chang Yi-Shiuh Hwang Chia-Tsui Yeh Cheng-Ping Yu Yee-Chun Chen Ih-Jen Su Min-Shi Lee

Avian-origin influenza A (H7N9) viruses emerged as human pathogens in China in early 2013 and have killed >100 persons. Influenza vaccines are mainly manufactured using egg-based technology which could not meet the surging demand during influenza pandemics. In this study, we evaluated cell-based influenza H7N9 vaccines in ferrets. An egg-derived influenza H7N9 reassortant vaccine virus was adap...

Journal: :Voprosy virusologii 2013
M V Sergeeva Iu R Romanova

Worldwide spreading of H5 and H7 highly pathogenic influenza viruses of the avian origin, which periodically infect and kill humans without prior adaptation, poses a constant threat of the new pandemic. The effectiveness of the pandemic prevention completely depends on the quality of the existing influenza vaccines. Typical methods of the vaccine production from the antigenically relevant strai...

Journal: :Journal of autoimmunity 2014
Tanya Gottlieb Tamar Ben-Yedidia

The development of vaccines has been one of the most important contributions of immunology to public health to date. Although several infectious diseases have all but vanished thanks to effective vaccines, the most common infectious disease, influenza, still represents a major threat to public health. This is more concerning than ever before in light of potentially virulent avian pandemic strai...

Influenza viruses continue to be a major health threat in human and bird populations. The improvements in formulation and production level of the current influenza vaccines are not sufficient to afford complete protection. The continuous antigenic drifts and emergence of endemic and zoonotic strains make influenza vaccine planning difficult. Concern about the emergence of new influenza pandemic...

Journal: :The Journal of infection 2000
J C De Jong G F Rimmelzwaan R A Fouchier A D Osterhaus

Novel influenza viruses continuously emerge in the human population. Three times during the present century, an avian influenza virus subtype crossed the species barrier, starting a pandemic, and establishing itself for one to several decades in man. As the 1997 H5N1 event in Hong Kong indicated, the occurrence of another pandemic in the near future cannot be excluded. Sufficient vaccine may no...

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