Almost 90 years later, in 2008, researchers announced they’d discovered what made the 1918 flu so deadly: A group of three genes enabled the virus to weaken a victim’s bronchial tubes and lungs and clear the way for bacterial pneumonia. Since 1918, there have been several other influenza ...
transmission and spread of transmissible diseases [134]. When the “second wave” of Flu has been transformed into severe in 1918, Many nations have enforced stringent quarantine measures on all incoming carriers to prevent the propagation of the flu [6]. In most cases, these attempts failed. ...
Slow-progressive cases of the Spanish flu have been linked to bacterial pneumonia and neurological disorders later in life, emphasizing the need to reduce COVID-19 transmission. Third, the Spanish flu killed approximately 17 to 50 million people, and the lack of human response, overcrowding, and...