Gill P W, Murphy A M
Med J Aust. 1985 Jan 21;142(2):94-8. doi: 10.5694/j.1326-5377.1985.tb133042.x.
When the H1N1 subtype of influenza reappeared in the Northern Hemisphere during 1977, after a 20-year absence, it behaved very differently from the H3N2 subtype still in circulation. In Sydney, we studied the incidence of both subtypes of laboratory-proven influenza type A in 287 unvaccinated volunteers whose serum antibody titres were measured before and after each winter, to facilitate the detection of subclinical as well as clinical infection. During a 1977 epidemic, the A/Victoria/3/75 strain of the H3N2 subtype attacked participants of all age groups, whereas during epidemics of 1979 and 1981, the A/USSR/90/77 and A/Brazil/11/78 strains of the H1N1 subtype attacked only subjects born after 1950. The older participants apparently possessed homologous protection, acquired as a result of exposure to H1N1 more than 20 years earlier and not dependent upon strain-specific haemagglutination inhibition antibody.