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To: THE ANT who wrote (203854)1/15/2024 9:27:14 PM
From: Pogeu Mahone  Respond to of 218033
 
Today's News:

What are severe capacity challenges?

Healey administration urges hospitals to discharge patients quickly amid ‘severe capacity challenges

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Message #203854 from THE ANT at 1/15/2024 12:10:55 PM

Yawn





To: THE ANT who wrote (203854)1/19/2024 10:46:51 AM
From: Pogeu Mahone  Respond to of 218033
 
Ant I will help you out:

study possibly paves way for tests and treatments
CORONAVIRUS

Long Covid explanation in new study possibly paves way for tests and treatments
Scientists say that drugs that calm a key part of the immune system should be studied in clinical trials as potential long Covid treatments.
Jan. 18, 2024, 2:02 PM EST / Updated Jan. 18, 2024, 3:11 PM EST
By Barbara Mantel

Scientists have identified a persistent change in a handful of blood proteins in people with long Covid that indicates that an important part of their immune system remains on high alert for months after an acute infection.

The findings, published Thursday in the journal Science, could help explain what causes the persistent fatigue, brain fog and other debilitating symptoms of long Covid, as well as pave the way for diagnostic tests and potentially, a long-awaited treatment, experts say.

The study followed 113 Covid patients for up to one year after they were first infected, along with 39 healthy controls. At the six-month mark, 40 patients had developed long Covid symptoms.

Repeated blood samples turned up important differences in their blood: A group of proteins indicated that a part of the body’s immune system called the complement system remained activated long after it should have returned to normal.

“When you have a viral or bacterial infection, the complement system becomes activated and binds to these viruses and bacteria and then eliminates them,” said Dr. Onur Boyman, a professor of immunology at the University of Zurich in Switzerland and one of the study’s investigators. The system then returns to its resting state, where its regular job is to clear the body of dead cells, he said.

But if the complement system remains in its microbe-fighting state after the viruses and bacteria are eliminated, “it starts damaging healthy cells,” he said.

“These can be endothelial cells that line the inner layers of blood vessels, the cells of the blood itself, and cells in different organs, like the brain or the lungs,” he continued. The result is tissue damage and microclots in the blood.

Previous studies have documented blood clotting and tissue damage in people with long Covid. “But this research gets at the molecular mechanism of how that might be initiated,” said Akiko Iwasaki, a professor of immunobiology and molecular, cellular and developmental biology at the Yale School of Medicine, who was not involved with the new study.

Tissue damage along with blood clots can lead to the disabling symptoms of long Covid, including an intolerance to exercise.

During exercise, the heart pumps more blood and agitates the endothelial cells inside blood vessels, which are everywhere in the body, Boyman said.

“In healthy people, normal endothelial cells can take these changes, but the inflamed endothelial cells in long Covid patients cannot,” he said.

Iwasaki noted that microclots can reduce the level of oxygen and nutrients delivered to different organs.

“If your brain, for example, isn’t getting enough oxygen, obviously there will be a lot of issues with memory, brain fog and fatigue,” she said.

A possible path to tests and treatments A little more than 14% of adults in the United States report ever having experienced long Covid, according to the most recent data from the U.S. Census Bureau’s Household Pulse Survey.

Dr. Monica Verduzco-Gutierrez, chair of rehabilitation medicine at the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio and head of its long Covid clinic, praised the new study.

“Understanding the mechanisms of long Covid is how we’re going to figure out treatments,” she said.

Other studies have also identified potential mechanisms. In one study, published in the October issue of the journal Cell, researchers suggested that remnants of the virus lingering in the gut of long Covid patients triggered reductions in the neurotransmitter serotonin. Lower serotonin levels, they said, could explain some neurological and cognitive symptoms. Another study, published in the journal Nature in September by Iwasaki and her colleagues, found that long Covid patients had significantly lower levels of the hormone cortisol than other Covid patients and healthy controls. Cortisol helps people feel alert and awake.

Verduzco-Gutierrez, Iwasaki and Boyman agree that the new research points the way toward developing diagnostic tests and treatment by focusing on the proteins of the complement system.

However, Boyman and his colleagues used cutting-edge, complicated methods for detecting the differences in these proteins that could not be used in a routine diagnostic lab.

“We need companies already active in diagnostics that have sufficient manpower and financial power” to develop a simplified test, he said.

Once a test is developed, or with rigorous screening for long Covid patients, pharmaceutical companies could begin clinical trials of potential treatments, Boyman said. Drugs already exist to modulate and inhibit the complement system for very rare immune diseases that affect the kidneys, muscles or nervous system, and they could be tested in long Covid patients, he said.

New drugs could also be developed, Iwasaki said.

“I think there are a lot of things that we can try in the future,” she said. But first, the results of this study need to be replicated, as with any research, she added.

Verduzco-Gutierrez said she would like to see any future studies follow patients for a longer period of time. “What about people who have had long Covid for three years? We don’t know what their blood looks like,” she said.


Barbara Mantel
Barbara Mantel is an NBC News contributo



To: THE ANT who wrote (203854)3/2/2024 10:47:43 AM
From: Pogeu Mahone  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 218033
 
Covid 'pandemic babies' show two 'fascinating' biological changes, study finds
  • Babies born during pandemic-era lockdowns have an altered gut microbiome
  • Only 17% of infants born during lockdown needed antibiotics by one year of age
  • READ MORE: DO YOU have tokophobia? Experts explain Helen Mirren's fear
By CAITLIN TILLEY, HEALTH REPORTER FOR DAILYMAIL.COM

PUBLISHED: 17:14 EST, 1 March 2024 | UPDATED: 19:32 EST, 1 March 2024
Lockdowns during the Covid pandemic led to two 'fascinating' changes in babies bodies that may have protected them against disease and allergies, a study has found.

Researchers from University College Cork in Ireland found that children born while the world was locked down during Covid had an altered gut microbiome - the ecosystem of 'good' and 'bad' bacteria in the gut that aid in digestion, destroys harmful bacteria and helps control the immune system.

The biome was found to be more beneficial in the infants.

Top Storiesby Daily Mail00:2801:00
Researchers believe this led 'Covid babies' to have lower than expected rates of allergic conditions, such as food allergies, compared to pre-pandemic babies, the scientists found.

They also required fewer antibiotics to treat illnesses.


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Babies born during a lockdown have an altered gut microbiome, researchers from University College Cork in Ireland found

Researchers analyzed fecal samples from 351 Irish babies born in the first three months of the pandemic, between March and May 2020, and compared them to samples from babies born before the pandemic.

Online questionnaires were used to collect information on diet, home environment and health to account for variables.

Long Covid may lower your IQ by up to SIX points



Long Covid may cause sufferers' IQ to drop by six points, a major study suggests.

Stool samples were collected at six, 12 and 24 months and allergy testing was performed at 12 and 24 months.

The Covid newborns were found to have more of the beneficial microbes gained from their mother after birth, which could act as a defense against allergic diseases.

If individuals have a disrupted gut microbiome, this may lead to the development of food allergies.

Babies born in the pandemic had lower allergy rates: About five percent of the Covid babies had developed a food allergy at age one, compared to 22.8 percent in the pre-Covid babies.

Researchers said that mothers had passed on the beneficial microbes to their babies while pregnant, and they gained additional ones from the environment after they were born.

The study also found that babies born during lockdowns had fewer infections because they were not exposed to germs and bacteria.

This meant they needed fewer antibiotics - which kill good bacteria - leading to a better microbiome.

The lockdown babies were also breastfed for longer, which provided additional benefits.

Of the Covid babies, only 17 percent of infants required an antibiotic by one year of age.

In the pre-pandemic cohort, meanwhile, 80 percent of babies had taken antibiotics by 12 months.

This was 'fascinating outcome,' joint senior author Liam O'Mahony, professor of immunology at the University College Cork, said, and 'correlated with higher levels of beneficial bacteria such as bifidobacteria.'

Professor Jonathan Hourihane, consultant pediatrician at Children's Health Ireland Temple Street and joint senior author of the study, said: 'This study offers a new perspective on the impact of social isolation in early life on the gut microbiome.

'Notably, the lower allergy rates among newborns during the lockdown could highlight the impact of lifestyle and environmental factors, such as frequent antibiotic use, on the rise of allergic diseases.'

The researchers hope to re-examine the children when they are five years old to see if there are any long-term impacts of the early changes in gut microbiome.

The study was published in the journal Allergy.

Coronavirus Lockdowns