ADVERTISEMENT

404

Not Found

Is this what you were looking for?

tag avian flu disease medicine

Avian flu promotes Parkinson's?
Edyta Zielinska | Aug 9, 2009 | 2 min read
Avian influenza can cause a predisposition to Parkinson's disease, according to research linkurl:published;http://www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.0900096106 this week in the __Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.__ "It's an exciting finding," said linkurl:Malu Tansey;http://www.pdonlineresearch.org/members/profiles/266 from Emory University School of Medicine, who was not involved in the research. Influenza A virusImage: Wikimedia Commons, CDC, Erskine Palmer Epidemiological s
Experts Debate H5N1 Research
Megan Scudellari | Feb 17, 2012 | 1 min read
A 2-day meeting may decide how much and which parts of 2 controversial H5N1 flu studies will be published.
Genetic analysis of bird flu
Tabitha Powledge(tam@nasw.org) | Feb 26, 2003 | 4 min read
Latest avian flu virus to cause human deaths doesn't contain human flu sequences but could still be dangerous.
Bird Flu Spreads Between People
Dan Cossins | Aug 7, 2013 | 2 min read
The H7N9 avian flu strain appears to have been transmitted from human to human for the first time, but its ability to jump between people is limited.
H6N1 Can Affect Humans
Tracy Vence | Nov 14, 2013 | 2 min read
Taiwanese scientists confirm the first person to have been infected by the H6N1 strain of avian flu.
Readers respond
Alex Avery and Bruce L. Flamm | Feb 27, 2006 | 5 min read
Are we so sure wild birds aren?t the culprit with avian flu? And why dedicate years of work to exposing a suspected fraud?
EU underprepared for flu
Ned Stafford(scientistnews@yahoo.com) | Nov 1, 2004 | 3 min read
Europe has not done enough to ready itself for a possible pandemic, experts warn
Quick custom flu vaccines
Tabitha Powledge(tam@nasw.org) | Apr 8, 2003 | 2 min read
Technique used to craft new H5N1 vaccine could speed development for all new strains.
Gene Transfer Beats Some Flu Strains
Dan Cossins | May 31, 2013 | 2 min read
Mice and ferrets are protected from several deadly viruses when genes encoding “broadly neutralizing antibodies” are delivered into their nasal passages.
How Bad Will the Flu Season Get? Forecasters Are Competing to Figure it Out
Christina Reed | Nov 28, 2017 | 5 min read
From analyses of surface protein evolution to tweets on social media, scientists are gathering all the data they can to accurately predict influenza dynamics.

Run a Search

ADVERTISEMENT