Clinical Presentation
Epidemiology
Pathophysiology
Structure of virus
Life Cycle
100

Which symptoms most commonly distinguish influenza from the common cold?

Sudden onset of high fever, myalgia, and profound fatigue.

100

Which influenza type can infect both humans and animals?

Influenza A.

100

Which part of the respiratory tract does influenza primarily infect?

Upper and lower respiratory epithelium.

100

What type of nucleic acid is in the influenza genome?

Single-stranded negative-sense RNA.

100

What receptor does hemagglutinin bind to on host cells?

Sialic acid receptor.

200

What is the typical duration of influenza symptoms in healthy adults?

About 5–7 days.

200

Why does influenza B not cause pandemics?

It has no animal reservoir; only infects humans.

200

What host immune response contributes to flu symptoms like fever and myalgia?

Cytokine release (e.g., IL-1, TNF-α).

200

How many segments make up the influenza genome?

Eight RNA segments.

200

Where in the host cell does influenza replication occur?

In the nucleus (unique for an RNA virus).

300

Which populations are at highest risk of influenza complications?

Elderly, young children, pregnant women, and immunocompromised patients.

300

What global event does influenza A cause approximately every 10–40 years?

Pandemics due to antigenic shift.

300

How does viral destruction of epithelial cells affect the respiratory system?

Impairs mucociliary clearance, predisposing to secondary bacterial infections.

300

Name the two major surface glycoproteins of the influenza virus.

Hemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA).

300

What process allows influenza to leave the host cell after replication?

Budding, assisted by neuraminidase.

400

What complication is more associated with influenza B, especially in children?

Reye’s syndrome (when aspirin is used).

400

Which hemisphere experiences flu season from May to October?

The Southern Hemisphere.

400

What is the main difference in pathophysiology between influenza A and B?

A can reassort its genome with animal strains (shift), while B cannot.

400

What is the function of the M2 protein?

Acts as an ion channel aiding in viral uncoating.

400

Which step in the life cycle is blocked by amantadine?

Uncoating (via inhibition of M2 ion channel).

500

Describe how the clinical presentation differs between influenza A and B.

Influenza A often more severe and widespread (pandemics); Influenza B typically milder and seasonal.

500

Explain the difference between epidemic and pandemic influenza.

Epidemic = localized outbreak; pandemic = global spread due to major antigenic change (shift).

500

What secondary infection is a common cause of death following influenza?

Bacterial pneumonia (often Streptococcus pneumoniae or Staphylococcus aureus).

500

Which structural feature of the virus allows antigenic shift to occur?

Segmented genome enables reassortment between strains.

500

Why must influenza bring its own RNA-dependent RNA polymerase?

Because host cells cannot transcribe negative-sense RNA.

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