Antibody responses to influenza virus immunizations were examined among junior high school students. The students received two doses of a commercial split-product vaccine containing influenza A H1N1 during a 2-year period following the first appearance of H1N1 virus in the winter of 1977–78. In haemagglutination-inhibition (HI) tests, the students who had been infected with H1N1 virus in 1977–78 showed a better response and wider cross-reactivity to the drift strain than the students who had not experienced earlier H1N1 influenza infection. Neuraminidase-inhibition (NAI) antibody titres after immunization depended upon a history of natural infection with H1N1 virus, since students not previously infected showed no significant NAI antibody rise after immunization. © 1981, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Yamane, N., Hiratsuka, M., Arikawa, J., Odagiri, T., & Ishida, N. (1981). Antibody responses after repeated influenza A virus immunizations among schoolchildren in Japan. Journal of Hygiene, 87(3), 383–392. https://doi.org/10.1017/S002217240006962X
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