Showing posts with label Weather. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Weather. Show all posts

Influenza Virus Survival At Opposite Ends Of The Humidity Spectrum

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Photo Credit PHIL (Public Health Image Library)

 

 

# 6763

 

Although just about everybody knows that winter heralds the arrival of influenza season, one of the enduring mysteries about influenza is why it is predominantly a winter phenomenon – at least in temperate zones of the world.


Numerous theories abound, including;

 

  • During the winter people tend to gather indoors, with less outside ventilation.
  • Diminished sunlight exposure may reduced Vitamin D levels (see Study: Vitamin D And Flu-Like Illnesses)
  • With schools in session, millions of children co-mingle and more efficiently share viruses

 

While these may be factors, they don’t satisfactorily explain our yearly winter flu season. Nor are they very helpful in explaining why the flu transmits pretty well in the tropics, where there is little temperature variability. 

 

In recent years, researchers have been looking at relative humidity (RH) and absolute humidity (AB)as factors in aiding influenza virus survival (IVS). 

 

In 2007, we looked at a study (see Cold And Dry Statistics) that appeared in  PLoS Pathogens  entitled  Influenza Virus Transmission Is Dependent on Relative Humidity and Temperature  by Anice C. Lowen, Samira Mubareka, John Steel,  and Peter Palese. 

 

Using a guinea pig as a model host, they showed that airborne spread of the  influenza virus was at least partially dependent upon both ambient relative humidity and temperature.

 

The link was significant, but not overwhelming.

The following year researchers Jeffrey Shaman and Melvin Kohn and found an even stronger correlation between the AH (Absolute Humidity) and the survival, and transmission of the influenza virus (see It's Not So Much The Heat, It's The Humidity).

 

Absolute humidity modulates influenza survival, transmission, and seasonality

Jeffrey Shaman, and Melvin Kohn

 


In early 2010, Jeffrey Shaman returned – joined by Virginia E. Pitzer, Cécile Viboud, Bryan T. Grenfell and Marc Lipsitch – to pen a study published in PLoS Biology called:

 

Absolute Humidity and the Seasonal Onset of Influenza in the Continental United States

(Excerpt)

Here we extend these findings to the human population level, showing that the onset of increased wintertime influenza-related mortality in the United States is associated with anomalously low absolute humidity levels during the prior weeks. We then use an epidemiological model, in which observed absolute humidity conditions temper influenza transmission rates, to successfully simulate the seasonal cycle of observed influenza-related mortality.  

 


During the summer, ambient air often contains 4 times as much water as it does on a cool dry winter's day. This, increasingly, is beginning to look as if it is a significant factor in the spread of influenza viruses.

 

As a side note, the Chinese have long boiled vinegar in their homes to ward off respiratory ailments, such as influenza.  

 

The noxious odor was supposed to `purify' the air inside the home, and newspapers still recommend this practice during their influenza season.

 

It may well be that the `active ingredient' is really the water vapor being released, raising the absolute humidity in their homes to an unfavorable level for influenza virus survival and transmission.

 

All of which is neat and tidy until you consider that flu transmits readily in the tropics, where the atmosphere is often nearly saturated with water vapor.

 

Enter researchers from Virginia Tech who have found that both extremely low and extremely high levels of humidity appear to aid and abet the viability of the flu virus – at least when it resides in mucus and respiratory fluids like those found in your nose, throat, or lungs.

 

This is an open access article, available from PloS One.

 

Relationship between Humidity and Influenza A Viability in Droplets and Implications for Influenza’s Seasonality

PLoS ONE 7(10): e46789. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0046789

Wan Yang, Subbiah Elankumaran, Linsey C. Marr

Abstract (excerpts reparagraphed for readability)

Humidity has been associated with influenza’s seasonality, but the mechanisms underlying the relationship remain unclear. There is no consistent explanation for influenza’s transmission patterns that applies to both temperate and tropical regions.

 

This study aimed to determine the relationship between ambient humidity and viability of the influenza A virus (IAV) during transmission between hosts and to explain the mechanisms underlying it.

 

We measured the viability of IAV in droplets consisting of various model media, chosen to isolate effects of salts and proteins found in respiratory fluid, and in human mucus, at relative humidities (RH) ranging from 17% to 100%.

 

In all media and mucus, viability was highest when RH was either close to 100% or below ~50%. When RH decreased from 84% to 50%, the relationship between viability and RH depended on droplet composition: viability decreased in saline solutions, did not change significantly in solutions supplemented with proteins, and increased dramatically in mucus.

(Continue. . . . )

 

 

Essentially, these researchers inoculated droplets of simulated respiratory fluids (containing salts & proteins) with influenza viruses, and tested their survivability at different humidity levels.

 

  • At low humidity (< 50%) the droplets evaporated quickly, and the virus survived well in a dry environment.
  • At high humidity (near 100%), the droplets were stable, and the virus survived as well.

 

But at humidity levels in-between, the droplets slowly dried out, increasing the concentration of salts and proteins to which the viruses were exposed, decreasing their survival rate.

 


As these experiments were conducted on relatively large droplets, how these findings would relate to viruses carried by smaller, aerosolized particles (that would desiccate much faster, even at higher humidities) remains untested.

 

Still, it’s fascinating research, and it adds incrementally to our understanding of how the influenza virus survives outside of a host.

 

You may recall I featured another study by these same researchers in early 2011 (see Why Size Matters) where they analyzed the amount of influenza virus suspended in the air in several environments, including a daycare center, a healthcare waiting room,  and aboard commercial aircraft.

 

They found airborne virus particles in half of the air samples tested, and in quantities they believe sufficient to enable transmission of the virus.

 

Many of these virus particles were very small, less than 2.5 micrometers, which can remain aloft on a room’s air currents for hours. Larger droplets would settle far sooner, and theoretically present less of a threat.

 

"As a whole," the three authors concluded in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface, "our results provide quantitative support for the possibility of airborne transmission of influenza in indoor environments."

 

All of which makes the influenza virus a formidable foe, and highlights the importance of maintaining good flu hygiene (hand washing, covering coughs & sneezes & staying home when sick), and the wisdom of getting that flu shot every year.

»» Read More

The Biggest Weather-Related Killer

 

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Today’s Heat Forecast – Credit NOAA 

 

# 6411

 

 

While less dramatic than a hurricane, tornado, or blizzard – heat waves kill more Americans during an average year than all three of those put together. And once again today (and through this weekend) heat indexes will be dangerously high across much of the eastern half of the country.

 

Counting the number of fatalities due to excessive heat is difficult, since many of those who succumb are elderly, and have other medical conditions.

 

As Rupa Basu and Jonathan M. Samet wrote in the Journal Epidemiological Reviews (see Relation between Elevated Ambient Temperature and Mortality: A Review of the Epidemiologic Evidence):

 

An average of 400 deaths annually are counted as directly related to heat in the United States, with the highest death rates occurring in persons aged 65 years or more (3). The actual magnitude of heat-related mortality may be notably greater than what has been reported, since we do not have widely accepted criteria for determining heat-related death (4, 5–7), and heat may not be listed on the death certificate as causing or contributing to death.

 

This disparity between counted and estimated heat-related deaths can be illustrated by the reports from the infamous heat wave of 1980, which `officially’ claimed `more than 1250 lives’ (cite NOAA  Heat Wave: A Major Summer Killer) but which unofficially may have killed as many as 10,000  (Tracking and Evaluating U.S. Billion Dollar Weather Disasters, 1980-2005 (Lott and Ross, 2006).

 

Eight years later, a heat wave across the central and eastern part of the nation killed as many as 7,500 people (cite). More recently, in 1999, a prolonged heat wave along the Eastern seaboard is believed to have killed 500 (cite).

 

And in Europe and across Russia a prolonged heat wave in 2010 may have contributed to tens of thousands of deaths (see Recent Heat Waves Likely Warmest Since 1500 in Europe).

 

Forecasters base their decision to issue heat warnings based on the heat index, a combination of heat and relative humidity, using the chart below:

 

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Excessive heat alert warnings are usually issued when the forecast anticipates a heat index that exceeds 105°-110°F for at least 2 consecutive days. As you can see, when it is extremely humid, actually temperatures don’t have to get much above 90 to become dangerous.

 

In anticipation of this weekend’s heat wave, the CDC has posted some helpful information on beating the heat on their Have You Heard?  website.

 

Learn more about heat-related illness and how to stay cool and well in hot weather

Sunglasses on a sand dune

June 29, 2012

Getting too hot can make you sick. You can become ill from the heat if your body can't compensate for it and properly cool you off. Heat exposure can even kill you: it caused 8,015 deaths in the United States from 1979 to 2003. These are the main things affecting your body's ability to cool itself during extremely hot weather: high humidity and personal factors.

<Snip>

More Information

 

For more information, the Excessive Heat Events Guidebook was developed in 2006 by the EPA, the NWS, the CDC, and the DHS to provide the best practices for saving lives during heat waves in urban areas.

 

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Some handy advice for this weekend, or anytime the heat index is excessively high:

 

 

Quick Tips for Responding to Excessive Heat Events

For the Public

Do

  • Use air conditioners or spend time in air-conditioned locations such as malls and libraries
  • Use portable electric fans to exhaust hot air from rooms or draw in cooler air
  • Take a cool bath or shower
  • Minimize direct exposure to the sun
  • Stay hydrated – regularly drink water or other nonalcoholic fluids
  • Eat light, cool, easy-to-digest foods such as fruit or salads
  • Wear loose fitting, light-colored clothes
  • Check on older, sick, or frail people who may need help responding to the heat
  • Know the symptoms of excessive heat exposure and the appropriate responses.

Don’t

  • Direct the flow of portable electric fans toward yourself when room temperature is hotter than 90°f
  • Leave children and pets alone in cars for any amount of time
  • Drink alcohol to try to stay cool
  • Eat heavy, hot, or hard-to-digest foods
  • Wear heavy, dark clothing.
»» Read More

NOAA: The 2011 Atlantic Hurricane Season in 4.5 Minutes

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2011 Tropical Storm Tracks – Source Wikipedia

#5985

 

Today – November 30th - marks the official end of the 2011 Atlantic Hurricane season.

 

NOAA has released a 4 minute video that compresses the 6 month Altantic Hurricane season into 4 minutes and 41 seconds. It comes from the NOAA Environmental Visualization Laboratory, and requires Adobe Flash Player to view.

 

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(Click image to view)

 

This description from the NOAA webpage. A hat tip to  @JustinNOAA for tweeting this link.

 

 

 

The 2011 Atlantic Hurricane Season in 4.5 minutes

The 2011 Atlantic hurricane season officially ends on Nov. 30 and produced a total of 19 tropical storms of which seven became hurricanes, including three major hurricanes. This level of activity matched NOAA’s predictions and continues the trend of active hurricane seasons that began in 1995.

 

From Arlene to Sean, Hurricane Season 2011 has been very active, leading to 120 fatalities and causing more than $11 billion in property and infrastructure damage. Surprisingly, none of the first eight tropical storms reached hurricane status, a record since reliable reports started in 1851.

 

(Continue .  .  . )

 

 

Once again, despite an unusually busy tropical season, the United States was largely spared due to favorable steering currents which kept most of these storms out to sea.

 

Only two named storms made landfall in the United States during the 2011 season; Tropical Storm Lee in Louisiana and Hurricane Irene in New England.

 

But every hurricane season is different, and what happened this year, or the year before, doesn’t tell us much about what lies in store for 2012.

 

Even with this relatively mild hurricane season, the United States has sustained a record number of Billion Dollar Plus weather-related disasters this year, proving the need for year-round preparedness, and in all areas of the nation.

 


(See Weathering Heights: Billion-Dollar-Plus Weather Disasters)

 

Like death and taxes, disasters are inevitable. A few of my general preparedness blogs include:

 

When 72 Hours Isn’t Enough

In An Emergency, Who Has Your Back?

An Appropriate Level Of Preparedness

 

To become better prepared as an individual, family, business owner, or community to deal with hurricanes, tornadoes, floods, or any other type of disaster: visit the following preparedness sites.

 

FEMA http://www.fema.gov/index.shtm

READY.GOV http://www.ready.gov/

AMERICAN RED CROSS http://www.redcross.org/

»» Read More

Weathering Heights: Billion-Dollar-Plus Weather Disasters

 

 

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Credit NOAA - Link

# 5762

 

Yesterday on Twitter, Justin Kenney (@JustinNOAA  NOAA’s director of communications and external affairs) tweeted a link on the National Climatic Data Center site to a detailed report that shows there have already been 9 billion-dollar-plus weather disasters in the United States this year.

 

The site is :

 

Billion Dollar U.S. Weather Disasters

 

And there you’ll find a sobering, yet fascinating 30+ year history of weather disasters that have caused more than 1 billion dollars in damage in the United States.  

 

Going down the list, I find that I’ve been directly impacted (albeit sometimes marginally) by at least 6 of them.  Which may partially help explain my penchant for preparedness.

 

Some of these events are well remembered, like the devastation of New Orleans by Hurricane Katrina in 2005, and the Oklahoma City Tornadoes of May 1999.

 

But how many people are aware that in 1980, it is estimated that as many as 10,000 people may have died from heat and drought conditions across the United States?

 

Droughts, floods, tornadoes, hurricanes, blizzards, ice storms . . .  they all are capable of claiming both lives and property.

 

Already this year – with more than 4 months left to go – we’ve matched the previous high mark (9, set in 2008) for billion-dollar + disasters in one year.

 

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2005 still remains the most expensive year for weather disasters by far, with hurricanes Rita, Wilma, Dennis, and Katrina all making landfalls in the United States.

 

As far as billion-dollar-plus disasters In 2011, we’ve already seen:

 

  • Upper Midwest Flooding, Summer, 2011
  • Mississippi River flooding, Spring-Summer, 2011
  • Southern Plains/Southwest Drought, Heatwave, & Wildfires, Spring-Summer, 2011
  • Midwest/Southeast Tornadoes, May 22-27, 2011
  • Southeast/Ohio Valley/Midwest Tornadoes, April 25-30, 2011
  • Midwest/Southeast Tornadoes, April 14-16, 2011
  • Southeast/Midwest Tornadoes, April 8-11, 2011
  • Midwest/Southeast Tornadoes, April 4-5, 2011
  • Groundhog Day Blizzard, Jan 29-Feb 3, 2011

 

Combined, the total damage from these 9 events exceeds 35 billion dollars.

 

The most recent summary of these disasters has been released, current through mid-August, 2011.  This is a 4 page PDF file with brief summaries of more than 100 weather disasters since 1980.

Text listing of the billion dollar events
Printable Copy of This Report, 1980-2011

 

While we may not be able to prevent weather-related disasters, we can become better prepared to deal with them. Which is why September is designated National Preparedness Month, and agencies like NOAA, FEMA, and READY.GOV work year round to promote awareness and action.

 

Truly, the time to prepare for a disaster – weather related or otherwise – is now

 

Like death and taxes, disasters are inevitable. A few of my general preparedness blogs include:

 

When 72 Hours Isn’t Enough

In An Emergency, Who Has Your Back?

An Appropriate Level Of Preparedness

 

To become better prepared as an individual, family, business owner, or community to deal with hurricanes, tornadoes, floods, or any other type of disaster: visit the following preparedness sites.

 

FEMA http://www.fema.gov/index.shtm

READY.GOV http://www.ready.gov/

AMERICAN RED CROSS http://www.redcross.org/

»» Read More