Studies of biological rhythms in responses to influenza infection and vaccination

Peter Hayes Langlois, The University of Texas School of Public Health

Abstract

Three studies examined seasonal or circadian variations in selected responses to influenza infection or vaccination. The first, a seroepidemiologic study, evaluated temporal patterns of antibody titers to influenza A/Texas. Human umbilical cord bloods were sampled over a two-year period when the virus was not present in the community. No endogenous seasonal pattern was detected. The second study included three experiments on circadian rhythms in mice. Neither susceptibility nor protection from inactivated or attenuated vaccine varied significantly according to time of administration. A slight effect, however, was suggested with inactivated vaccine. Three human vaccine trials comprised the third study. Outcome variables included rise in antibody titer, final antibody titer, incidence of adverse reactions, and protection from community infection. Patterns in antibody response and protection variables were inconsistent, and generally not clinically significant. Local reactions to inactivated vaccine were more frequent if injections were received in the afternoon as compared to morning. This was true to adults that had been previously vaccinated.

Subject Area

Public health

Recommended Citation

Langlois, Peter Hayes, "Studies of biological rhythms in responses to influenza infection and vaccination" (1988). Texas Medical Center Dissertations (via ProQuest). AAI8914297.
https://digitalcommons.library.tmc.edu/dissertations/AAI8914297

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