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Dr Raoult Roars — new articles on findings and issues about HCQ + Cocktails for Covid-19

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IHU- Méditerranée Infection, Marseille, is a significant French research institute that has continued its work on CV 19. For the record, here are excerpts from some recent work, headlined from threads where such would be buried:

EXH 1: >>COVID-IHU #15

Version 1 du 27 Mai 2020
Early diagnosis and management of COVID-19 patients: a real-life cohort study of 3,737 patients, Marseille, France

Abstract

Background:
In our institute in Marseille, France, we proposed early and massive screening for coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Hospitalization and early treatment with hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin (HCQ-AZ) was proposed for the positive cases.

Methods:
We retrospectively report the clinical management of 3,737 patients, including 3,054 (81.7%) treated with HCQ-AZ for at least three days and 683 (18.3%) patients treated with other methods (“others”). Outcomes were death, transfer to the intensive care unit (ICU), ? 10 days of hospitalization and viral shedding.

Results:
By testing 101,522 samples by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) from 65,993 individuals, we diagnosed 6,836 patients (10.4%), including 3,737 included in our cohort. The mean age was 45 (sd 17) years, 45% were male, and the fatality rate was 0.9%. We performed 2,065 low-dose computed tomography (CT) scans highlighting lung lesions in 581 of the 933 (62%) patients with minimal clinical symptoms (NEWS score = 0). A discrepancy between spontaneous dyspnoea, hypoxemia and lung lesions was observed. Clinical factors (age, comorbidities, NEWS-2 score), biological factors (lymphopenia; eosinopenia; decrease in blood zinc; and increase in D-dimers, lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), creatinine phosphokinase (CPK), and c-reactive protein (CRP)) and moderate and severe lesions detected in low-dose CT scans were associated with poor clinical outcome. Treatment with HCQ-AZ was associated with a decreased risk of transfer to the ICU or death (HR 0.19 0.12-0.29), decreased risk of hospitalization ?10 days (odds ratios 95% CI 0.37 0.26-0.51) and shorter duration of viral shedding (time to negative PCR: HR 1.27 1.16-1.39). QTc prolongation (>60 ms) was observed in 25 patients (0.67%) leading to the cessation of treatment in 3 cases. No cases of torsade de pointe or sudden death were observed.

Conclusion
Early diagnosis, early isolation and early treatment with at least 3 days of HCQ-AZ result in a significantly better clinical outcome and contagiosity in patients with COVID-19 than other treatments. Long-term follow-up to screen for fibrosis will be the next challenge in the management of COVID-19.>>

EXH 2: >>Adjusting series of patients for trial comparisons for COVID –
19 treatments

Author list :
3Audrey GIRAUD -GATINEAU1,2,3,4 (PhD student); Jean Christophe LAGIER 1,4,5 (MD); 4 Yolande OBADIA 1
(MD); Hervé CHAUDET 1,2,3 (MD); Didier RAOULT 1,5* (MD)

Abstract:

Background
: SARS – COV-2 has emerged and spread around the world since December 2019. Studies initiated in Marseille by our hospital centre have suggested significant clinical effectiveness of treatment by combining hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin (HCQ+AZ). However, due to the
urgency of responding to the pandemic, they were not obtained through randomized controlled trials. Alternative assessment methods are therefore needed.

Methods:
We compared our data in silico with those published by two studies comparing 32 other antiviral drugs. For this purpose, random sampling was performed in our cohort to 33 obtain similar groups for disease severity, gender, age and comorbidities associated with 34 chronic diseases with patients included in the remdesivir and lopinavir-ritonavir trials.

Findings:
Dual HCQ+AZ therapy was associated with 3 times fewer deaths than
similar 37groups treated either with lopinavir-ritonavir(9% vs 20%, p-value = 0·03) or standard care 38 (8% vs 25·2%, p-value = 0·001). Compared with patients included in the remdesivir
study by 39 Wang et al., we also showed a significant difference in the clinical outcome (proportion of 40cured patients with negative viral load) in favour of HCQ+AZ (77.8% versus 58·2% p = 0·0001). 42 43

Interpretation:
Although comparison of HCQ+AZ with other antiviral drugs has limitations 44due to aggregated data, this study provides additional evidence showing that HCQ+AZ should 45 be the systematic treatment of choice after diagnosis of COVID -19 -positive cases. 46 47

Funding:
This work was supported by the French Government under the “Investments for theFuture” programme managed by the National Agency for Research (ANR), Méditerranée- Infection 10-
IAHU – 03 , and was also supported by Région Provence Alpes Côte d’Azur and European funding FEDER PRIMMI (Fonds Européen de Développement Régional -51 Plateformes de Recherche et d’Innovation Mutualisées Méditerranée Infection)>>

EXH 3: >>Assay
Randomised Controlled Trials during epidemic

Philippe Brouqui, Pierre Verger, Didier Raoult
Aix Marseille Université, IRD, MEPHI, VITROME,
ORS Paca, IHU-Méditerranée Infection, Marseille,
France

In epidemics there is an urgent need for new knowledge on drug efficacy to help policymakers fight the crisis. Yet the best research methodology to do this is a matter of de bate, write Philippe Brouqui, Pierre Verger and Didier Raoult .

The outbreak of an emerging infectious agent needs the rapid involvement of research to bring new knowledge. Past experience with Ebola virus outbreaks and, more recently SARS-CoV 2, have raised a question over the place of randomised controlled trials (RCTs) as the methodology of choice to
answer clinical questions in an novel epidemic situation. Drug safety and effectiveness is a long process which can take years. For antimicrobials, just 25% of drugs submitted to phase 1 succeed to Phase 3 and further licensing (1). This is why, in an epidemic, drug repurposing is often looked at, because drug toxicity has already been evaluated (2).

An RCT isdesigned to attempt to reduce bias, particularly in trials evaluating new drugs. The principle is to random assign volunteers into two or more treatment options and then compare them against a measured outcome. As RCTs reduce causality and spurious bias, they are considered to be the most reliable form of scientific evidence. For these reasons, they are required for market authorisation of a new pharmaceutical drug and cited by healthcare policies as a mandatory means for decision -making about treatments.

When gold standard becomes unethical

In emerging disease outbreaks, there is an urgent lack of treatments for the new pathogen. When a particular therapeutic option is supported by scientifically demonstrated efficacy in vitro and or in animal model, and supported further by clinical case reports and/or pilot series in humans, it is ethically difficult to argue that the data still needs to be confirmed in an RCT before it can be made available to patients. Especially if it seems “obvious” that control (untreated) subjects will have poorer outcomes than those receiving treatment. As one study mocked, there would be few volunteers for the placebo group in an RCT on the parachute’s effectiveness in avoiding death by jumping out of an airplane, unless the jump had an average height of 0.6 m (3).

When even imperfect scientific data show a particularly obvious effect, it is no longer ethical to perform an RCT since it forces patients to accept either not to be treated (in the control arm), or to be treated with a molecule known to be effective. Consider the advent of penicillin. It took five
patients before Sir Edward Abraham could definitively demonstrate that penicillin saved 100% of patients with staphylococcus or streptococcus infections. Nobody today would dare to test the efficacy of penicillin on pneumococcal pneumonia compared to placebo . . . >>

Food for thought, especially given the fiasco of the seemingly decisive Lancet paper which then had to be withdrawn. The remarks on the gold standard fallacies are particularly significant.

The underlying issue is that selective hyperskepticism is leading to ignoring of cumulatively adequate but somehow unwelcome findings, tracing to ethical weaknesses including the error of imagining skepticism an intellectual virtue and using it to substitute for prudence. We need to restore that due balance to our reasoning and decision-making.

A useful brief summary on prudence is:

Prudence is the virtue that disposes practical reason to discern our true good in every circumstance and to choose the right means of achieving it; “the prudent man looks where he is going.”65 “Keep sane and sober for your prayers.”66 Prudence is “right reason in action,” writes St. Thomas Aquinas, following Aristotle.67 It is not to be confused with timidity or fear, nor with duplicity or dissimulation. It is called auriga virtutum (the charioteer of the virtues); it guides the other virtues by setting rule and measure. It is prudence that immediately guides the judgment of conscience. The prudent man determines and directs his conduct in accordance with this judgment. With the help of this virtue we apply moral principles to particular cases without error and overcome doubts about the good to achieve and the evil to avoid.

Further food for thought, on seven indicative, inescapable first duties of responsible reason: to truth, to right reason, to prudence, to sound conscience, to neighbour, so to fairness and justice, etc. . END

Comments
Jerry That's the purpose of RCTs, to demonstrate the effectiveness of a proposed drug against a placebo or a known treatment. So there's not just one doctor, but hundreds if not thousands who were involved in these studies against HCQ. I do not want your 100k, but you may donate it to a reputable charity of your choicerhampton7
June 22, 2020
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Didier Raoult willingly brandishes the number of his articles as proof of his scientific seriousness. Researchers Yves Gringras and Mahdi Khelfaoui looked for The Conversation in a journal, New Microbes and New Infections, in which he has published extensively. “What is striking for a journal claiming to" cover almost the entire scientific world "is the fact that […] France represents 50% of the total of articles, whereas this country has produced only around 7% of publications global, " note the authors. On closer inspection, the researchers find that “the editor is based in Marseille, and among the six other French members of the associated editorial committee, composed of fifteen members, we find five researchers from Marseille. […] We do not know of prestigious scientific journals which accept that almost half of its editorial scientific committee is concentrated in the same city ” . This is a reminder that bibliometrics is an index that can be manipulated and in which blind trust should not be placed. https://www.liberation.fr/direct/element/derriere-les-impressionants-chiffres-de-publication-de-didier-raoult_115259/ https://theconversation.com/etre-juge-et-partie-ou-comment-controler-une-revue-scientifique-140595rhampton7
June 22, 2020
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RHampton continues to publish irrelevant fake news. The real news story is why did these hospitals use a drug when not warranted. But you do not see that. There was a 1960's song with lyrics, "When will they ever learn." From the song, "Where have all the Flowers Gone" which was about death. The same could be said today about the irresponsible medical behavior on treating the virus and the fake news reporting. From a American doctor, Dr. Richard Urso https://bit.ly/37RZI6R
I want one physician in the entire world who used HCQ early, to show me it didn’t work. It doesn’t work for docs who gave toxic doses, fabricated data and never saw pts before sepsis. Oh, and their sorry “scientific” fan club. 100k to anyone to prove me wrong.
And in the following comment RHampton publishes ad hominem arguments against Dr. Raoult Missed in Rhampton's searches https://bit.ly/3fRCgt5
HCQ beneficial as preventive drug: SMS doctors told ICMR
RHampton can cherry pick with the best but misses some of the best cherries. And another he missed https://bit.ly/37XWvCP
Pre exposure Hydroxychloroquine use is associated with reduced COVID19 risk in healthcare workers
jerry
June 22, 2020
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The COVID-19 pandemic continues to remind us just how messy and maddening science can be. At times, it seems that we’re making real headway, and then abruptly, the progress is stalled. Or worse. Three recent examples of high-profile reversals highlight the challenges of working on urgent problems at the cutting edge of medical science. The most recent, and perhaps most conspicuous reversal is the FDA’s recent revocation of the Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) it has originally issued for hydroxychloroquine (and chloroquine) on March 28. When data, including a gold-standard randomized-control study, revealed that the drug apparently offered no benefit to COVID-19 patients, the EUA was withdrawn. While most scientists agree with the latest decision, there is almost universal consensus that the original approval represented a political, rather than a scientific, decision. . . . Over time, we’re sure to learn more about Surgisphere, as well as the review processes that led two top journals to overlook such critically flawed papers. It’s possible that the editorial appeal of the conclusions—indictment of Trump’s favorite drug, acquittal of two common blood pressure medicines—helped speed things along. Because it turns out that Donald Trump is instinctively right about one thing: Science, as practiced, can be as political, as personal, and as petty as every other area of human endeavor. But science—unlike our chief executive—also tends to be self-correcting. And for all its flaws, science still remains our best hope to defeat this deadly virus. https://www.aei.org/articles/three-recent-reversals-highlight-the-challenges-of-covid-science/rhampton7
June 22, 2020
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A fast-tracked clinical trial exploring the potential benefits of hydroxychloroquine in treating COVID-19 has concluded as abruptly as it began. The study, announced in early April, enrolled nearly 500 patients being treated for COVID-19 at 34 hospitals, with the largest share at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, which was the study’s lead site. Half received hydroxychloroquine and half took a placebo. The early findings showed no harm and no benefit, “so there’s no reason to keep going,” says investigator Wesley Self, an emergency physician at VUMC. “We decided the answer was there in our data on Friday night. So literally, immediately, we’re beginning to push those answers out to the public,” Self says. https://www.wknofm.org/post/vanderbilt-led-study-promising-covid-19-treatment-closes-showing-no-benefitrhampton7
June 22, 2020
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KUALA LUMPUR, June 22 — The Health Ministry has stopped administering malaria medication hydroxychloroquine on Covid-19 patients, seeing that it has no effect on those infected with the pandemic. Director-general Datuk Dr Noor Hisham Abdullah said that the ministry was using it on Covid-19 patients as an off-label medication because it has anti-inflammatory properties but after around 500 cases, data has proven that it was ineffective. “We used it because it has anti-inflammatory properties for the beginning stages of Covid-19. But when we collect the data, after around 500 cases, we found that there was no positive effect of the medication. “When there is no effect, we stop using it. At the same time, we were informed that there was a 30 per cent complication rate on using the medication — it can affect the heart and so on, so we had to monitor its usage. https://www.malaymail.com/news/malaysia/2020/06/22/health-ministry-stopped-using-hydroxychloroquine-to-treat-covid-19-patients/1877828rhampton7
June 22, 2020
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F/N: A reminder: https://forecasters.org/blog/2020/06/14/forecasting-for-covid-19-has-failed/ >>Forecasting for COVID-19 has failed John P.A. Ioannidis1, Sally Cripps2, Martin A. Tanner3 COVID-19 is a major acute crisis with unpredictable consequences. Many scientists have struggled to make forecasts about its impact [1]. However, despite involving many excellent modelers, best intentions, and highly sophisticated tools, forecasting efforts have largely failed. Experienced modelers drew early on parallels between COVID-19 and the Spanish flu [2] that caused >50 million deaths with mean age at death being 28. We all lament the current loss of life. However, as of June 8, total fatalities are ~410,000 with median age ~80 and typically multiple comorbidities. Predictions for hospital and ICU bed requirements were also entirely misinforming. Public leaders trusted models (sometimes even black boxes without disclosed methodology) inferring massively overwhelmed health care capacity (Table 1) [3]. However, eventually very few hospitals were stressed, for a couple of weeks. Most hospitals maintained largely empty wards, waiting for tsunamis that never came. The general population was locked and placed in horror-alert to save the health system from collapsing. Tragically, many health systems faced major adverse consequences, not by COVID-19 cases overload, but for very different reasons. Patients with heart attacks avoided visiting hospitals for care [4], important treatments (e.g. for cancer) were unjustifiably delayed [5], mental health suffered [6]. With damaged operations, many hospitals started losing personnel, reducing capacity to face future crises (e.g. a second wave). With massive new unemployment, more people may lose health insurance. The prospects of starvation and of lack of control for other infectious diseases (like tuberculosis, malaria, and childhood communicable diseases for which vaccination is hindered by the COVID-19 measures) are dire [7,8] . . . . Failure in epidemic forecasting is an old problem. In fact, it is surprising that epidemic forecasting has retained much credibility among decision-makers, given its dubious track record. Modeling for swine flu predicted 3,100-65,000 deaths in the UK [11]. Eventually only 457 deaths occurred [12]. The prediction for foot-and-mouth disease expected up to 150,000 deaths in the UK [13] and led to slaughtering millions of animals. However, the lower bound of the prediction was as low as only 50 deaths [13], a figure close to the eventual fatalities. Predictions may work in “ideal”, isolated communities with homogeneous populations, not the complex current global world..>> The professionals were responsible to inform policymakers and their advisors of limitations. The public also has a right to know. This is a governance failure not just a technical one, and it has implications attendant on economic disruption. KFkairosfocus
June 21, 2020
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Apple, On Friday, said it would shut 11 stores, seven in Arizona, two in Florida, two in North Carolina and one in South Carolina, that it had reopened just a few weeks ago. It's not clear whether other retailers will follow en masse, although one analyst expects hard-hit stores to stay open unless forced to close by local authorities. Many other businesses, including manufacturing, travel, dining, and entertainment, have been steadily reopening where they can while taking health precautions. But some have recently pulled back or paused their plans. Because US efforts to contain the pandemic haven't been particularly successful, the situation "could ultimately lead to a need for more prolonged shut-downs" that would reduce consumer spending and cost jobs, said Eric Rosengren, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston. In public remarks Friday, Rosengren said he expected the economic rebound this year would be less than what was initially hoped for at the pandemic's outset, and that the unemployment rate would remain in double-digits. https://www.freepressjournal.in/world/coronavirus-in-us-fearing-spread-of-covid-19-apple-re-closes-some-stores-washington-raises-economic-concernsrhampton7
June 20, 2020
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A report by the Coronavirus National Information and Knowledge Center said Israel is experiencing a second wave of coronavirus and that hundreds of people could die from COVID-19 this summer. The report, published on the backdrop of a continual spike in cases, comes as the government approved resuming cultural events and ahead of another meeting of the coronavirus cabinet, set to take place on Sunday. “If no action is taken and the current growth rate does not decrease significantly,” the report states, “then in a month, the number of new daily infections will be over 1,000 and the number of dead will reach many hundreds.” It added that, “this situation could lead to exceedingly difficult financial decisions, to the point of closure.” https://www.jpost.com/health-science/israel-is-in-coronavirus-second-wave-dead-could-reach-hundreds-report-632147rhampton7
June 20, 2020
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Earlier this week, researchers in the United Kingdom announced preliminary results from a clinical trial that showed a low-cost steroid called dexamethasone appeared to lower the risk of death in patients with COVID-19. But details of the study did not accompany the announcement. And the announcement followed several prominent revisions in the advice that researchers have given around the coronavirus in recent weeks. Which is why Dr. Kirsten Lyke, an infectious disease specialist at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, warns that a premature endorsement for the treatment can carry risks. Lyke, who is running a coronavirus vaccine trial, said that, particularly when dealing with a new kind of virus, we “need to be extremely cautious” when rolling out treatments that have not gone through a rigorous vetting process. “Many of us would like to see the peer review paper to understand how these people were randomized, who was not randomized. That’s important to know,” Lyke said. https://www.opb.org/news/article/npr-doctor-warns-of-risks-in-rush-to-embrace-a-covid-19-treatment/rhampton7
June 20, 2020
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The National Institutes of Health said Saturday it would halt its hydroxychloroquine trial after a study showed no harm or benefit from the malaria drug's use for COVID-19. The "Outcomes Related to COVID-19" study, which the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, part of the NIH, conducted, found that the drug provided no benefit compared to a placebo in hospitalized COVID-19 patients, a statement said. A data and safety monitoring board recommended the NHLBI stop the study, prompting the halt. The board "determined that while there was no harm, the study drug was very unlikely to be beneficial to hospitalized patients with COVID-19," the NIH said in the statement. https://www.upi.com/Top_News/US/2020/06/20/NIH-halts-hydroxychloroquine-trial-study-showed-no-harm-or-benefit/6531592679738/rhampton7
June 20, 2020
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As a physician, I cannot state with any confidence if hydroxychloroquine is effective for treating COVID-19. But I have stated vociferously that decisions regarding the off??label use of any drug to treat any condition should be up to health care practitioners and their patients. Politics and central planning only lead to negative unintended consequences. In the case of hydroxychloroquine, politics and central planning impeded empirical treatment and the collection of evidence on its use in COVID-19 infections. It also distorted the production and supply of hydroxychloroquine and caused needless, wasteful stockpiling. Meanwhile, empiric use and clinical trials of off??label dexamethasone for COVID-19 has been uninvolved with politics. Perhaps we should be grateful that President Trump hadn’t heard about it. https://nationalinterest.org/blog/reboot/dexamethasone-vs-hydroxychloroquine-race-coronavirus-cure-shows-why-politics-and-sciencerhampton7
June 20, 2020
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The US no longer cares about covid-19. The IFR is so low and OTC supplements can help defeat it. The only people who have to worry are those who are already on their way out or who have underlying health issues.ET
June 20, 2020
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Rhampton7 June 19, 2020 at 3:55 pm As coronavirus patients recover from the illness, doctors and patients are discovering that COVID-19 is leaving the “recovered” with long-term debilitating physical, cognitive and psychiatric damage, sometimes even in people who only suffered mild symptoms.
That’s what I’m most worried about. In my age group I’m not too likely to die from the virus, but some people seem to recover but lose 20 or 30% of their lung capacity. Or have strokes. This virus is awful.Retired Physicist
June 20, 2020
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My friend who works at the Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville says they’re working overtime to “stage” because they expect ICUs to be overwhelmed in about 2 weeks.Retired Physicist
June 20, 2020
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Here in Florida we had 3,822 new cases yesterday. It’s not a second wave, we’re still in the first wave because we reopened about a month ago.Retired Physicist
June 20, 2020
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This chart puts the US response to COVID-19 into perspective. https://twitter.com/aslavitt/status/1273973204047069184?s=21Ed George
June 19, 2020
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Professor Didier Raoult, the main promoter of a controversial treatment against Covid-19, said that the epidemic was "ending" on May 12. The doctor no longer rules out a second wave. The doctor at the IHU in Marseille, at the heart of the controversy surrounding hydroxychloroquine as a treatment with Covid-19, has reversed his previous predictions and is now considering the seasonal return to the epidemic. A new predictive analysis that contradicts his much sharper comments from May 12. Professor Raoult then explained, still on video, that "Nowhere is there a second wave, or the back of a camel". "The epidemic is coming to an end," he said then. The Minister of Health Olivier Véran had denounced media outings "not very responsible". http://www.lefigaro.fr/flash-actu/coronavirus-didier-raoult-se-contredit-et-evoque-desormais-une-deuxieme-vague-epidemique-20200619rhampton7
June 19, 2020
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Swiss drugmaker Novartis is halting its trial of malaria drug hydroxychloroquine against COVID-19 after struggling to find participants, as data emerged from other studies raising doubts about its efficacy. Novartis' trial began in April and sought to test the drug in 440 hospitalised patients. But the project only managed to recruit a handful. The Basel-based company said its study, so far, raised no safety issues and drew no conclusions about the drug's efficacy. Novartis had donated up to 130 million doses of hydroxychloroquine, including millions in the United States, and chief executive Vas Narasimhan two months ago pegged it as the company's biggest hope against the new coronavirus. https://www.news.com.au/world/breaking-news/novartis-halts-trials-of-malaria-drug/news-story/c86a1de1d5c464462037eaeac14ae0d0rhampton7
June 19, 2020
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Not ACE2, but... The researchers studied more than 700 blood samples of patients admitted at the medical centre during the first Covid wave in Israel. “We took blood samples from 80 patients in Hadassah’s Outbreak Department (in Jerusalem) and found a high concentration of alpha defensin … The sicker the person, the higher the concentration of this peptide,” Dr Higavi said. The results indicated that alpha defensin speeds up blood clot formation which can cause pulmonary embolism (the blockage of arteries in the lungs by a substance that has moved through the bloodstream), heart attacks or a stroke. Moreover, when a clot is formed in the alveoli, which are tiny air sacs in lungs that exchange oxygen and carbon dioxide molecules in the bloodstream, it can lead to distress in breathing and eventual intubation.rhampton7
June 19, 2020
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As coronavirus patients recover from the illness, doctors and patients are discovering that COVID-19 is leaving the “recovered” with long-term debilitating physical, cognitive and psychiatric damage, sometimes even in people who only suffered mild symptoms. Dr. Itzik Levy, an expert in infectious diseases at the Sheba Medical Center in Tel Aviv, said he believes these problems are caused by the effects of the virus on the brain. “We know that corona causes disruptions in the blood vessels and in clotting, and so it can cause brain trauma, even mild forms, that you won’t even see on a scan, that won’t show up as a stroke or something,” he told Channel 12. “But it can be manifested as cognitive disruptions, or in some cases as changes in personality.” “We don’t really know if it is reversible or not, or how long will it last,” he added. The long term effects of COVID-19 are not just cognitive and mental, the TV report highlighted, but also include debilitating physical damage. Noting that reports from China showed that some patients ultimately need lung transplants, Onn added, “We are talking about a disease that we have no idea how it it behaves.” https://www.timesofisrael.com/recovered-covid-19-patients-suffer-major-ongoing-physical-cognitive-problems/rhampton7
June 19, 2020
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A team of researchers at the Hadassah University Medical Centre in Jerusalem have found the source of blood clots in coronavirus patients
MedCram has about 3-4 videos on this and the probable cause. It has to do with the epithelial cells of blood capillaries having ACE2 receptors and are attacked by the virus which then cause the cells to deteriorate and this then releases substances that cause clotting behind the epithelial cells.
The breakthrough, which the team will report in the journal Nature, means that doctors can immediately start treating hospitalized patients with dexamethasone.
While there was a lot of hype for this drug, apparently it had no effect of those not on ventilation. In other words it was no better than HCQ, But for more advanced in the virus and on ventilation, it did reduce deaths. MedCram 85 covers dexamethasone as well as different types of oxygen enhancing (ventilation) in detail. Again RHampton reports irrelevant information from the hospitals in San Antonio. The psychological effects due to clotting that RHampton commented on in the following comment would not show up if the virus was treated early. There would be no progression to clotting issues. I suggest RHampton watch the videos from MedCram and report on them. The comments will be more relevant once he understand the issues. MedCram covers the issues he brings up in the previous and next couple comments that he makes.jerry
June 19, 2020
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When San Antonio’s hospitals began seeing COVID-19 patients in March, they were in uncharted territory. Early on, many doctors were treating coronavirus patients with hydroxychloroquine and chloroquine. on Monday, the FDA revoked its emergency authorization for the drugs, citing a different randomized study of hospitalized patients that found no improvements to mortality rates or recovery times. “That squares with our experience with it,” said Jones, of Methodist. “We were giving it and really weren’t seeing anything with it.” Other experimental but promising treatments have risen to take its place. One, the antiviral remdesivir, was tested on COVID-19 patients in San Antonio as part of a national study. Doctors are now also administering convalescent plasma collected from those who have recovered from COVID-19 to some of their sickest patients. Transfusions of blood plasma have long been used for diseases without a cure to equip the ill with disease-fighting antibodies. The use of both therapies are supported by data from strong clinical trials, said Dr. Marc Chalaby, a pulmonologist and chief of intensive care medicine at Christus Santa Rosa Hospital in the Medical Center. https://www.expressnews.com/news/local/article/Here-s-what-San-Antonio-doctors-have-learned-15352708.phprhampton7
June 19, 2020
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A team of researchers at the Hadassah University Medical Centre in Jerusalem have found the source of blood clots in coronavirus patients that causes rashes, swollen legs and sometimes sudden death. The researchers have also revealed a treatment for the clots. According to several global studies, at least 30 per cent of patients who test positive for coronavirus develop clots that block the flow of blood to their kidneys, heart, lungs and brain. Dr Higavi had published a paper in the American Society of Hematology journal Blood, about alpha defensin, which is a peptide or a short chain of amino acids. They found that alpha defensin increases the speed of creation of blood clots and prevents their disintegration. The researchers found that administering a drug called colchicine to mice inhibited the release of alpha defensin. Colchicine is used in the prevention and treatment of gout attacks, which are caused by an excess of uric acid in blood. While the tests conducted on mice proved the be successful, Dr Higavi and his team are waiting for approvals for human trials. The clinical trials will investigate the use of colchicine in severe and mild or moderate cases of Covid-19. https://theprint.in/health/jerusalem-researchers-find-whats-causing-blood-clots-in-covid-cases-possible-treatment-too/444494/rhampton7
June 19, 2020
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On June 16, 2020, scientists at the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom announced the first drug proven to reduce mortality in people with severe COVID-19. The breakthrough, which the team will report in the journal Nature, means that doctors can immediately start treating hospitalized patients with dexamethasone. This is a cheap, readily available steroid that has been in widespread use for decades. Drugs with a proven safety record, such as dexamethasone, have a clear advantage over novel treatments and vaccines; after a relatively swift clinical trial, national drug regulators can immediately approve their use. https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/amp/articles/duo-of-antiviral-drugs-strongly-inhibits-sars-cov-2-in-the-labrhampton7
June 19, 2020
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I am very thankful to Jerry for pointing out the MedCram videos. My household is well prepared to take on the virus and defeat it in its initial stages if one of us should become infected. And the cool thing is it is the same regimen we use to fight influenza with the addition of quercetin. Also it is very telling that "flu season" just happens to coincide with shorter days which leads to lower vitamin D blood concentrations (unless supplementation of D3 is added).ET
June 19, 2020
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I never said that vitamin D cures udders. That's just udderly ridiculous. I never said is was an "utter cure", either. Vitamin D concentrations of 40ng/mL increases survivability. Especially in those who are otherwise healthy- i.e. no underlying health issues. Obesity runs rampant in our societies, though. Sugar is killing us, slowly. Smoking and drinking put huge dents in our immune system. So eating healthy would include severely reducing or eliminating smoking, sugar and alcohol. Your body does need glucose. It would also include daily physical activity.ET
June 19, 2020
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Jerry, I'd suggest they are credibly significantly effective treatments. The real restoration of health is coming from the body, starting with the immune system (that is kept from going into a deadly storm). KFkairosfocus
June 19, 2020
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But they are not the utter cure you claimed.
But zinc and HCQ might be the cure and may be the best along with Azithromycin. And there could be several others. But a good immune system will likely prevent the virus taking hold. One of the top Korean doctors dealing with C19 said back in mid March that the immune system starts going south about 60. Obviously varies by individual. And this is what is causing the extremely elderly susceptibility to the virus. Why don't you watch the MedCram videos on Vitamin D. It is video 83 and also is amazing in that it points to high fructose syrup as a culprit. Everyone should look at 82 first since it discusses the disparity by race in Vitamin D and how it might be affecting response to the virus. Seheult who runs the MedCram site is a living breathing doctor and a good reporter on the current science affecting the treatment and spread of the virus. He has been working several days a week in the ICU with C19 patients since the start. He as well as many other sites have been part of the information shared on this site for the last 3 months. This site is generally very good source of good information about the virus and other things. But one of the obvious things is that people who comment here fail to read the links and then fail to understand the issues involved with the virus as its various stages.jerry
June 19, 2020
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COVID-19 Deaths Are Being Linked to Vitamin D Deficiency. Here's What That Means:
Preliminary results from a yet-to-be-peer-reviewed study carried out by scientists from the Queen Elizabeth Hospital Foundation Trust and the University of East Anglia have linked low levels of the hormone vitamin D with COVID-19 mortality rates across Europe.
ET
June 19, 2020
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