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Symptoms were different -- 39 percent had diarrhea or vomiting versus only 5 percent with regular flu. About 40 percent had pneumonia. Seven percent died, and all had been put on breathing machines.
About three-fourths of hospitalized patients were given Tamiflu or other anti-viral medicines, although most did not get these within the two days of first symptoms, as doctors recommend. Survival appeared to be better among those who got treatment quickly.
"The use of anti-virals is critical," Jain said. "Start them, start them early. The patients who are hospitalized should get them quickly."
Other experts caution against making too much of specific numbers from these early results.
"We don't know how good these numbers are. They've done a good job; it's the best that we've got," Osterholm said. "But there are deaths out there that are not being recognized as influenza -- only an autopsy would pick them up. And there are likely hospitalizations for flu that were missed as flu."
The Southern Hemisphere study involved 722 patients with confirmed cases of swine flu who were treated in intensive care units. More than 14 percent, or one in seven, died. That study also found a disproportionately large number of cases in pregnant women and the very obese.
___
On the Net:
New England Journal: http://www.nejm.org/
Swine flu information: http://www.flu.gov/
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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