| Cocktail of flu, HIV drugs appears to help fight coronavirus: Thai doctors 
 BANGKOK  (Reuters) - Thai doctors have seen success in treating severe cases of  the new coronavirus with combination of medications for flu and HIV,  with initial results showing vast improvement 48 hours after applying  the treatment, they said on Sunday.
 
 A  man wears a mask to prevent the spread of the new coronavirus as he  walks near the Grand Palace at Bangkok, Thailand February 2, 2020.  REUTERS/Soe Zeya Tun
 
 The doctors  from Rajavithi Hospital in Bangkok said a new approach in coronavirus  treatment had improved the condition of several patients under their  care, including one 70-year-old Chinese woman from Wuhan who tested  positive for the coronavirus for 10 days.
 
 The drug treatment  includes a mixture of anti-HIV drugs lopinavir and ritonavir, in  combination with flu drug oseltamivir in large doses.
 
 “This is  not the cure, but the patient’s condition has vastly improved. From  testing positive for 10 days under our care, after applying this  combination of medicine the test result became negative within 48  hours,” Dr. Kriangska Atipornwanich, a lung specialist at Rajavithi,  told reporters.
 
 “The outlook is good but we still have to do more study to determine that this can be a standard treatment.”
 
 Chinese  health officials have already been administering the HIV and flu drugs  to fight the coronavirus. The use of the three together in a cocktail  seemed to improve the treatment, the Thai doctors said.
 
 Another  doctor said that a similar approach in two other patients resulted in  one displaying some allergic reaction but the other showed improvement.
 
 “We  have been following international practices, but the doctor increased  the dosage of one of the drugs,” said Somsak Akkslim, director-general  of the Medical Services Department, referring to the flu medicine  Oseltamivir.
 
 Thailand  has recorded 19 cases of coronavirus. Of the Thai patients, eight have  recovered and gone home while 11 are still under treatment in hospitals.
 
 Somsak said the health ministry will meet on Monday to discuss  the successful treatment in the case of the 70-year-old but said it is  still too soon to say that this approach can be applied to all cases.
 
 “Initially we will apply this approach only to severe cases,” he said.
 
 reuters.com
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