Infectious virus in exhaled breath of symptomatic seasonal influenza cases from a college community

Jing Yan(University of Maryland, College Park), Michael L. Grantham(University of Maryland, College Park), Jovan Pantelic(University of Maryland, College Park), P. Jacob Bueno de Mesquita(University of Maryland, College Park), Barbara Albert(University of Maryland, College Park), Fengjie Liu(University of Maryland, College Park), Sheryl H. Ehrman(University of Maryland, College Park), Donald K. Milton(University of Maryland, College Park), Walt E. Adamson, Blanca Beato-Arribas, Werner Bischoff, William Booth, Simon Cauchemez, Sheryl H. Ehrman(University of Maryland, College Park), Joanne Enstone, Neil M. Ferguson, John Forni, Anthony Gilbert, Michael L. Grantham(University of Maryland, College Park), Lisa A. Grohskopf, Andrew Hayward, Michael P. Hewitt(University of Maryland, College Park), Ashley Kang, Ben Killingley, Rob Lambkin‐Williams, Alex Mann, Donald K. Milton(University of Maryland, College Park), Jonathan S. Nguyen‐Van‐Tam, Catherine J. Noakes, John Oxford, Massimo Palmarini, Jovan Pantelic(University of Maryland, College Park), Jennifer Wang, Allan Bennett, Benjamin J. Cowling, Arnold S. Monto, Raymond Tellier
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
January 18, 2018
Cited by 564Open Access
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Abstract

per NP swab. Fine- and coarse-aerosol viral RNA were positively associated with body mass index and number of coughs and negatively associated with increasing days since symptom onset in adjusted models. Fine-aerosol viral RNA was also positively associated with having influenza vaccination for both the current and prior season. NP swab viral RNA was positively associated with upper respiratory symptoms and negatively associated with age but was not significantly associated with fine- or coarse-aerosol viral RNA or their predictors. Sneezing was rare, and sneezing and coughing were not necessary for infectious aerosol generation. Our observations suggest that influenza infection in the upper and lower airways are compartmentalized and independent.


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