2009-11-23

Hemorrhagic Pneumonia: CDC Issues Alert to Physicians for Heightened Surveillance

This report is preliminary and will be reviewed for corroboration as the official documents become available.

Although confirmation is not yet complete on this item, the American CDC has apparently issued an alert to physicians concerning hemorrhagic pneumonia in the United States.  The North Carolina Medical Society has published a description of the CDC alert and has identified a reporting point in their state. 

The PF11 viral reservoir is extending and revising in important areas concerning trait enhancements.  Since the early part of the pandemic, this viral reservoir has exhibited exceptional abilities to damage the human body due to Influenza Flux; however, we may now be moving into deeper water if this alert is validated.  While no one may say exactly where this virus is going, we are able to track the genetics and the human clinical outcomes correlated to those genetics.

Deep lung involvement appears to be supported as a trait enhancement via the D225G polymorphism on the viral Hemagglutinin.  225G is not a new incursion into ΣPF11, but now paired with 206T is becoming a higher concern.  The US and Mexico demonstrated 225G with 206S early in the pandemic.  206T, as predicted, has now become fixed or consensus in many geographies.  Recent studies on the Ukraine, Russia, China and Norway show 225G in the Hemagglutinin to be circulating alongside the dangerous 225E and the wildtype 225D bearing strains.

Heightened surveillance is being required from the medical community while the general public is receiving communications with an alternate message?  Moms and Dads will want to get ahead of this issue by gathering accurate and complete information as soon as possible.  PF11 will be with us for a long time.

Gather and Solve.

For additional background on the clinical and epidemiological observational facts concerning Pandemic Influenza H1N1, please refer to the Table of Contents for PF11 Trends & Issues, Mid-Term.


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