BSIP pictures as beautiful as life
# 0119706 © BSIP/CDC/JIM GATHANY
TERRENCE TUMPEY

Dr Terrence Tumpey (National Center for Infectious Diseases, CDC) shows the flask containing the virus H1N1, responsible for the deadly pandemy of Spanish flu in 1918. In 2005, this researcher succeded in rebuilding this virus from an avian influenza transmissible between human beings. His study will permit to understand better the modes of transmission of the virus H5N1 of the current avian influenza virus.

This 2005 photograph of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Dr. Terrence Tumpey, one of the organization’s staff microbiologists and a member of the National Center for Infectious Diseases (NCID), showed him examining reconstructed 1918 Pandemic Influenza Virus inside a specimen vial containing an orange-colored supernatant culture medium.

Dr. Tumpey, here seen in a Biosafety Level 3-enhanced laboratory setting, was working beneath a flow hood, which pulls air from outside the hood into the hood’s confines, and is then filtered of any pathogens before being re-circulated inside the self contained laboratory atmosphere.

Dr. Tumpey recreated the 1918 influenza virus in order to identify the characteristics that made this organism such a deadly pathogen. Research efforts such as this, enables researchers to develop new vaccines and treatments for future pandemic influenza viruses.

The 1918 Spanish flu epidemic was caused by an influenza A (H1N1) virus, killing more than 500,000 people in the United States, and up to 50 million worldwide. The possible source was a newly emerged virus from a swine or an avian host of a mutated H1N1 virus. Many people died within the first few days after infection, and others died of complications later. Nearly half of those who died were young, healthy adults. Influenza A (H1N1) viruses still circulate today after being introduced again into the human population in the 1970s.
NCID
CDC   
   Organism
BSIP 34, rue Villiers-de-l'Isle-Adam 75020 Paris  international@bsip.com  Tel 33-(0)1.43.58.69.87