Antigenic Drift

Antigenic drift refers to mutations in the influenza virus over time. Such mutations occur almost yearly in the influenza virus. For this reason, vaccination is required on a yearly basis. In influenza mutations happen frequently because the virus is highly unstable and has no way of checking its DNA for errors. Even a tiny error in the DNA is permanent. Antigenic drift has been responsible for large outbreaks in the past, like the outbreak of influenza A Fujian(H3N2) in the 2003 - 2004 flu season. All influenza viruses experience some form of antigenic drift, but it's most pronounced in the influenza A virus. Antigenic drift is not the same as antigenic shift, which is a major change in the surface proteins on the virus.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
niigata university
conservationist
multichannel audio
cole suprieure de commerce de paris
michael strunge
tenth crusade
caronia
surrey hills, victoria
wise use
harald zwart
sachs
bert millichip
shears
showtune
blackwood class frigate
frog legs
2
m48 motorway
m49 motorway
georges hall
avro anson
formiciinae
charles sturt university
rudolf sremec
don dunstan
maxthon
aenictogiton
charles kingston
sajkaca
asian flu
movement action plan
gary shipman
generative music
ultramarathon
solange knowles
texas southern university
large amateur telescope
18 u.s.c. 2257
anti science
british 1st army tank brigade
tugela river
comrades marathon
erkki sven tr
tribal class frigate