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D&D Coronavirus thread

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout: Debate & Discussion' started by NewRoxFan, Feb 23, 2020.

  1. Gioan Baotixita

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    Keep calling people stupid just weakening your take man. Tell us what do hospitals give Covid patients?
     
  2. Amiga

    Amiga 10 years ago...
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    Rashmon, DFWRocket and No Worries like this.
  3. Amiga

    Amiga 10 years ago...
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    Potential effective antiviral against Covid

    A new antiviral drug, molnupiravir, prevented half of severe COVID-19 infections, a study found (usatoday.com)

    An experimental drug prevented half of COVID-19 infections that would otherwise have sent people to the hospital, according to a study released Friday, offering promise that the virus could soon be treated by a pill.

    In June, the Biden Administration allocated $3.2 billion toward the development of an antiviral, saying that the drugs would be a crucial part of the fight against the virus.

    “An easily administered oral antiviral drug would be an important part of our therapeutic arsenal that would complement the great success of our vaccine efforts," Dr. David Kessler, chief science officer for the Biden Administration’s COVID-19 response, said at the time.

    Of that funding, $1.2 billion was earmarked to buy 1.7 million doses of molnupiravir if the drug met the Food and Drug Administration's safety and effectiveness standards.

    Antivirals are drugs designed to keep a virus from replicating and taking hold in the body. They are used effectively to contain HIV in people who are infected and they are commonly taken to reduce the severity of a flu infection.

    For instance, Tamiflu, a commonly used antiviral against influenza, has been shown to shorten the course of the flu and can be used to prevent infection in someone who is exposed to the flu virus.

    These findings about molnupiravir suggest it is even more effective against SARS-CoV-2 than Tamiflu is against influenza, said Dr. Dean Y. Li, president of Merck Research Laboratories

    "This is a substantial impact that in other situations hasn't been seen," he said of the new trial results.

    A different trial is still evaluating molnupiravir's effectiveness in preventing sickness in people who have had known exposures to SARS-CoV-2

    The FDA agreed that it was appropriate to stop the trial, said Li, who leads Merck's worldwide human vaccines and therapeutics research and development organization.

    "The impact is quite important," he added.

    Trial participants came from all over the world, including Latin America, Europe, and Africa.

    The drug was effective against viral variants Gamma, Delta, and Mu, the study found.

    "We have incomplete data, but the viral sequencing data demonstrates that this impact is across the viral barrier," Li said. "That's extremely exciting."

    It's not clear how much molnupiravir would cost, but antivirals are generally inexpensive and presidential advisor Dr. Anthony Fauci has said he wants antivirals to be available to people in low- and moderate-income countries.

    The companies are in discussions with the FDA and plan to apply for emergency use authorization as quickly as possible.
     
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  4. Amiga

    Amiga 10 years ago...
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    Notice a pattern? Antifa at it again, from threatening election officials, to hospital workers to school board members.

    School board group asks US for help policing threats (apnews.com)

    A group representing school board members around the country asked President Joe Biden on Thursday for federal assistance to investigate and stop threats made over policies including mask mandates, likening the vitriol to a form of domestic terrorism.

    The request by the National School Boards Association demonstrates the level of unruliness that has engulfed local education meetings across the country during the pandemic, with board members regularly confronted and threatened by angry protesters.

    School board members are largely unpaid volunteers, parents and former educators who step forward to shape school policy, choose a superintendent and review the budget, but they have been frightened at how their jobs have suddenly become a culture war battleground. The climate has led a growing number to resign or decide against seeking reelection.

    “Whatever you feel about masks, it should not reach this level of rhetoric,” NSBA Interim Executive Director Chip Slaven told The Associated Press by phone.

    White House press secretary Jen Psaki said responsibility for protecting school boards falls largely to local law enforcement but “we’re continuing to explore if more can be done from across the administration.”

    “Obviously these threats to school board members is horrible. They’re doing their jobs,” she said during a press briefing.

    The association asked for the federal government to get involved to investigate cases where threats or violence could be handled as violations of federal laws protecting civil rights. It also asked for the Justice Department, FBI, Homeland Security and Secret Service to help monitor threat levels and assess risks to students, educators, board members and school buildings.

    “As these acts of malice, violence, and threats against public school officials have increased, the classification of these heinous actions could be the equivalent to a form of domestic terrorism and hate crimes,” the association wrote.


    The association represents more than 90,000 school board members in 14,000 public school districts.

    The letter documents more than 20 instances of threats, harassment, disruption, and acts of intimidation in California, Florida, Georgia, New Jersey, Ohio and other states. It cites the September arrest of an Illinois man for aggravated battery and disorderly conduct for allegedly striking a school official at a meeting. In Michigan, a meeting was disrupted when a man performed a Nazi salute to protest masking.

    “We are coming after you,” a letter mailed to an Ohio school board member said, according to the group. “You are forcing them to wear mask—for no reason in this world other than control. And for that you will pay dearly.”

    It called the member “a filthy traitor.”

    Last week, a crowd of up to 200 protesters who banged on doors and shouted at police shut down a school board meeting in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, where members planned to consider a temporary COVID-19 mask mandate.

    At a U.S. Senate committee hearing on Thursday, Education Secretary Miguel Cardona decried the hostility against school board members and praised their “unwavering support” to reopen schools safely. He said the lack of civility in some meetings is disappointing and, in some places, it has been “very dangerous.”

    He made the comments in response to questions from Sen. Mike Braun, R-Ind., a former school board member who said contentious meetings are a part of civic engagement.

    The threats have gone beyond board meetings.

    The father of an Arizona elementary school student was arrested after he and two other men brought zip ties to the campus, threatening to make a “citizen’s arrest” on the school principal over a COVID-19 quarantine. In California, a parent barged into his daughter’s elementary school and punched a teacher in the face over mask rule.
     
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  5. cdastros

    cdastros Member

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  6. Commodore

    Commodore Contributing Member

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  7. Rileydog

    Rileydog Contributing Member

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    What’s to say the same idiots who shun vaccines will have any different view of this drug
     
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  8. Gioan Baotixita

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  9. J.R.

    J.R. Member

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  10. DFWRocket

    DFWRocket Member

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  11. LosPollosHermanos

    LosPollosHermanos Houston only fan
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    You should go back and read what I've stated and done in this thread and others. Again, not my responsibility to waste my time here and answer something for you that you can look up. I'll give you a hint, its a combined regimen from symptom onset
     
  12. rocketsjudoka

    rocketsjudoka Contributing Member
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    This happened this past week at a school board meeting in a suburb of Minneapolis.
     
  13. bobrek

    bobrek Politics belong in the D & D

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  14. rocketsjudoka

    rocketsjudoka Contributing Member
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  15. LosPollosHermanos

    LosPollosHermanos Houston only fan
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    @Gioan Baotixita calling it a horse dewormer to get a rise out of folks, we’ve had trolls before but this dude just sucks and is a loser lmao
     
  16. ThatBoyNick

    ThatBoyNick Member

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    Shout out to Portugal for having the highest vaccination rate in the western world, with over 87% of the population having at least one shot, over 85% fully vaccinated, 98% of everybody eligible (12+ years old). There's no inherent reason why a relatively poorer country like that should head and shoulder above everybody else, but there they are.



    Also big shocker in the movement of countries like Portugal, Denmark, Norway doing away with nearly all domestic restrictions once they reached really high vaccination rates. Joe Rogan swears the boogie-man authoritarian gov would never give that power back once it has it.
     
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  17. Rashmon

    Rashmon Contributing Member

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    Maybe a lot of these people are just playing possum...

    How COVID-19 can damage all five senses
    Considering how sick he was, Michael Goldsmith seemed like one of the lucky ones, because he survived. After becoming severely ill with COVID-19 in March 2020, he spent 22 days on a ventilator in the ICU. Fortunately, Goldsmith’s condition improved, and he was moved to an intermediate level of care in the hospital as he recovered. That’s when he began to realize he had lost most of his hearing in his left ear.

    “Anything I did hear had to be loud, and then it sounded like Charlie Brown’s teacher,” says Goldsmith, now 35, referencing the nonsensical noises the teacher made in the popular cartoon show.

    He also had a static sound in that ear that turned out to be tinnitus. After he fully recovered from the infection and went back to his home in Bergenfield, New Jersey, the IT security analyst and father of two saw one doctor after another, seeking relief for his hearing problems. He tried several different prescription medicines, and still he was no better off.

    It’s easy to take our senses for granted—until there’s a problem with one of them. This is something many people who suffered from COVID-19 discovered when they unexpectedly lost their senses of smell and taste. More recently, though, it has become apparent that a COVID-19 infection can also affect sight, hearing, and touch.

    In the short term and the long run, this virus can affect all the ways we perceive and interact with the world.

    Though not life-threatening, “it’s disarming to lose any of these senses, especially as suddenly as happens in the context of this infection,” says Jennifer Frontera, a professor of neurology at the NYU Grossman School of Medicine.

    Diminished hearing
    Like Goldsmith, many people who recovered from COVID-19 continued to experience some auditory loss. In the March issue of the International Journal of Audiology, researchers reviewed published case studies and other reports of COVID-19 symptoms, and they estimate that hearing loss has occurred in about 8 percent of patients who had COVID, while about 15 percent developed tinnitus.

    The mechanisms aren’t completely understood, but experts suspect the disease may affect the eustachian tube, which connects the middle ear with the throat. “With any viral infection, you can have eustachian tube dysfunction, which can lead to fluid build-up in the middle ear—this acts as a mechanical dampener on the ear drum,” explains Elias Michaelides, an associate professor of otolaryngology at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago.

    Once someone recovers from the illness, the eustachian tube drains and hearing returns to normal in most cases, though it can take a couple of weeks, he says. In the meantime, taking an oral decongestant and using a nasal steroid spray may help hasten drainage, says Michaelides.

    But if the virus damages the sensory neurons in the inner ear or cochlea, sudden hearing loss may occur, and it may be permanent. Exactly how this nerve damage happens isn’t clear, though it may have to do with COVID-19’s ability to trigger a cascade of inflammatory effects and small blood vessel damage.

    Because Goldsmith’s hearing didn’t improve in his left ear after he fully recovered and tried various prescription medications, he went to see J. Thomas Roland, Jr., chair of the department of otolaryngology-head and neck surgery at NYU Langone Health. Roland told him he was a good candidate for a cochlear implant, a small electronic device that can directly stimulate the auditory nerve and generate signals that the brain registers as sound.

    “The inner ear is a very delicate organ and very susceptible to microvascular problems and inflammation, so I’m not surprised people have experienced hearing loss or tinnitus related to COVID,” says Roland.

    In September 2020, Goldsmith had a cochlear implant surgically placed in his left ear. It has made a world of difference, he says. “I now have 80 percent recognition of single words, and it’s even higher with full sentences in my left ear.” And when the device is on, his tinnitus disappears completely. “I wish I didn’t need this,” Goldsmith says, “but I’m glad I had it.”

    Blurred sight
    Other people who’ve had COVID-19 have reported problems with their vision. A study published last year in BMJ Open Ophthalmology found that light sensitivity, sore eyes, and blurred vision are among the more common eye disorders experienced by patients. And in a study involving 400 COVID-19 patients who were hospitalized, researchers found that 10 percent had eye disorders, including conjunctivitis, vision changes, and eye irritation.

    “There is definitely a viral load in the eye that causes symptoms, but that doesn’t mean it necessarily causes long-term diseases in the eye,” says study co-author Shahzad I. Mian, a professor of ophthalmology and visual sciences at the University of Michigan Medical School.

    Still, some doctors are finding that the SARS-CoV-2 virus can increase the risk of blood clots throughout the body, including in blood vessels in the retina, which can cause blurry vision or some degree of vision loss, explains Julia A. Haller, ophthalmologist-in-chief at the Wills Eye Hospital in Philadelphia.

    If someone experiences any vision changes possibly related to COVID-19, it’s important for them to see an ophthalmologist as soon as possible, the experts say. “Some forms of vision loss are treatable with medications, depending on how much damage has occurred,” Haller says.

    Tingling and numbness
    A person’s sense of touch also can be affected by a COVID-19 infection, since the disease has been shown to cause persistent neurologic symptoms.

    In a study published in May 2021, researchers evaluated 100 people who weren’t hospitalized for COVID-19 but had ongoing symptoms. They found that 60 percent had numbness and tingling six to nine months after the onset of their illness. Sometimes these symptoms were widespread throughout the body; in other instances, they were localized to the hands and feet.

    The exact mechanisms behind these stubborn symptoms aren’t well understood, but they most likely relate to local inflammation and local infection with COVID-19 virus in the nerves, explains Igor Koralnik, a professor of neurology at the Northwestern Feinberg School of Medicine and chief of the division of neuroinfectious diseases and global neurology at Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago.

    “In most cases, [the numbness and tingling] improves over time,” he says. “Everybody goes at their own pace.” And in some cases, tingling and other symptoms of neuropathy can be treated with medications like gabapentin, a drug that is used to prevent seizures and relieve nerve pain.

    continued
     
  18. Rashmon

    Rashmon Contributing Member

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    continued

    Loss of smell and taste
    Perhaps the most recognizable effect COVID-19 has on the senses is the one-two punch of lost smell and taste. Elizabeth DeFranco, a medical sales rep in Cleveland, Ohio, experienced both sensory changes shortly after developing a mild COVID-19 infection in June 2020.

    “I was eating salt and vinegar potato chips, and I couldn’t taste anything,” recalls DeFranco, 58. Then she realized she couldn’t smell anything, either. These losses remain with her to this day, though once in a while she gets a brief whiff of an odor like freshly cut grass.

    Viral-induced smell loss existed before anyone had ever heard of COVID-19, but the percentage of people who experience smell dysfunction or loss is much higher with this virus than with other types of infections, experts say. A review of studies published in 2020 found that of 8,000 subjects with confirmed COVID-19, 41 percent experienced problems with smell and 38 percent reported problems with taste. When people who contract COVID-19 lose their sense of smell, a condition called anosmia, they lose it across the board, not just with one type of scent.

    Generally speaking, there are two major types of smell loss. Conductive smell loss can occur when nasal congestion or obstruction prevents odor molecules from passing into the nasal cavity. Sensorineural smell loss involves damage or dysfunction to the olfactory neurons, which seems to be what’s happening with COVID-19.

    “With COVID-19, most people don’t have a lot of nasal symptoms, and yet smell loss can be fairly severe,” says Justin Turner, an associate professor of otolaryngology-head and neck surgery at Vanderbilt University Medical Center and director of the Vanderbilt Smell and Taste Center. “We believe this stems from damage to sustentacular cells that live way up in the nose and are particularly susceptible to infection by the virus.”

    As people recover from COVID-19, regenerating cells can spring into action and make new functional neurons, Turner explains. This allows most people to regain their sense of smell six to eight weeks after infection—but not everyone does. At that point, doctors may prescribe systemic or topical steroids and sometimes smell conditioning, which involves repeated exposure to essential oils that have different scents. It’s like the olfactory equivalent of physical therapy.

    “What you’re doing is exposing the olfactory system to these odorants and helping the brain form new connections,” Turner explains. “Once the damage [to neurons] has been done, we’re relying on regenerative capacity in the olfactory system to help people regain their sense of smell.”

    Losing the sense of taste usually goes hand in hand with the loss of smell, says Michael Benninger, professor and chair of the department of otolaryngology-head and neck surgery at the Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine.

    “We are not seeing people who have truly lost their sense of taste [with COVID-19 infection]. When people lose their sense of smell, their taste is diminished”—meaning, their ability to discriminate between different flavors is lost. “If the sense of smell comes back, taste comes back, too,” Benninger says.

    Since she recovered from COVID-19, DeFranco has tried numerous interventions—including steroid medications, antibiotics, cryotherapy, craniosacral therapy, supplements, homeopathic remedies, and smell retraining. Nothing has helped. So she has found ways to work around these limitations to protect her safety. She installed additional smoke detectors in her home because she wouldn’t be able to smell smoke. She throws all her food out by the “best by” date and often has a neighbor smell food from her fridge to make sure it hasn’t spoiled.

    The worst part: “It is very depressing to think that this anosmia could be forever. I have no enjoyment of food,” she says. “I may never be able to appreciate the taste of wine or chocolate or the smell of a barbecue or cookies baking in the oven or the salt in the air when I go to the ocean. No one can really empathize unless it happens to them.”
     
  19. Rashmon

    Rashmon Contributing Member

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    Has he even Googled it?

    Common question
    How is ivermectin used in humans?

    Ivermectin is an anti-parasitic drug that is used to treat river blindness and intestinal roundworm infection in humans and to de-worm pets and livestock. Lotions and creams containing ivermectin are also used to treat head lice and rosacea.

    Try this: https://www.webmd.com/drugs/2/drug-1122/ivermectin-oral/details

    Ivermectin
    GENERIC NAME: IVERMECTIN
    This medication is used to treat certain parasitic roundworm infections. Curing parasitic infections helps to improve your quality of life. In people with weakened defense (immune) systems, curing roundworm infections can reduce the risk of developing a severe or life-threatening infection. Ivermectin belongs to a class of drugs known as antihelmintics. It works by paralyzing and killing parasites.

    Nothing about Covid...

    Maybe he has roundworms.
     
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  20. foh

    foh Member

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    If nothing else, it can save lives and free up hospitals.

    And if it doesn't involve dna and administration of a shot by an evil liberal nurse, then it might be looked upon as the less invasive alternative?

    One can only hope - this pandemic crap is getting pretty annoying/political - Desantis being able to get reelected via spurring mandates is a proof of that.

    Although it does help to derail Nets (with Kyrie not getting a shot), which is good for us! Ooops. I'm getting off topic here..
     
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