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The problems in Russia and the UK have been getting overshadowed by the numbers in the US.
In a week, Russia has gone from 60,000 cases to 115,000 cases- almost doubling their case totals. Russia's PM Mikhail Mishustin was diagnosed with COVID-19 this week. Many of the healthcare workers in Russian hospitals are sick with COVID-19. In spite of this, Putin has put out statements which say everything is under control and that Russia has done a good job of stopping the spread of coronavirus. Russia is under lockdown and the lockdown has been extended through 11-May. The videos below are from earlier this week.
The UK is up to 167,000 cases. They're reported 26,000 deaths which would make their mortality rate 15% which does not comport with the 3-4% mortality seen in other countries. The death count would imply that the actual case count is probably closer to 1 million cases.
And I still don't believe the Russian numbers.
It also wouldn't be a great time to be one of Putin's enemies.
I suspect many of them will 'contract' cornoavirus.
I wonder how it is that the likes of the UK has been in lockdown for weeks but is still getting high numbers? Are people following the isolation rules? Or is the virus finding a way to get through despite very little contact between one another?
I wonder how it is that the likes of the UK has been in lockdown for weeks but is still getting high numbers? Are people following the isolation rules? Or is the virus finding a way to get through despite very little contact between one another?
I wonder how it is that the likes of the UK has been in lockdown for weeks but is still getting high numbers? Are people following the isolation rules? Or is the virus finding a way to get through despite very little contact between one another?
Coronavirus: Nicotine patches to be tested on patients after study suggests smokers less likely to catch COVID-19
https://news.sky.com/story/coronavi...mokers-less-likely-to-catch-covid-19-11977460
The researchers said that according to the latest official statistics in France, smokers make up 30% of those aged 45-54, and 8.8% of women and 11.3% of men aged 65-75.
The authors write: "Our cross-sectional study strongly suggests that daily smokers have a much lower probability of developing symptomatic or severe SARS-CoV-2 infection compared to the general population.
"The effect is significant, it divides the risk by five for ambulatory patients and by four for hospitalised patients. You rarely see that in medicine.
Was Hockney RIGHT? French researchers to give nicotine patches to coronavirus patients and frontline workers after lower rates of infection were found among smokers
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/...s-coronavirus-patients-frontline-workers.html
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In addition, the authors theorize nicotine could abate the immune system's overreaction to the virus, which leads to serious complications in some patients.
...
The paper focused on statistics but pointed to past research which suggested nicotine may alter receptors inside the body called ACE-2 receptors, which the coronavirus relies on as its gateway into the body.
A study published earlier this month by scientists in New York and Athens ... looked at 13 Chinese studies that had registered smoking as a precondition and found that the number of smokers across the whole sample of 5,300 patients was 6.5 per cent. An astonishingly small number in country where half of all men still smoke.
'This preliminary analysis does not support the argument that current smoking is a risk factor for hospitalization for COVID-19,' it reads.
'Instead, these consistent observations, which are further emphasized by the low prevalence of current smoking among COVID-19 patients in the US (1.3 per cent), raises the hypothesis that nicotine may have beneficial effects on COVID-19.'
...
They suggest that while the virus causes lung damage by depleting the numbers of those receptors - known as ACE-2 receptors - smoking can increase the number of them, reversing the effect.
ACE-2 receptors, which are found on cells in the airways and lungs, have been said to work as the coronavirus's doorway into the body and to 'facilitate' infection.
Therefore having more of them would seem to be a bad thing, but scientists say they have a protective effect in the lungs and low levels are linked to worse damage from viral infection.
...
Professor Balloux described the paper as 'puzzling' and added: 'Whilst the study design is far from perfect - and the authors are clear about its limitations - the evidence for a protective effect of smoking (or nicotine) against COVID-19 is bizarrely strong... actually far stronger than for any drug trialled at this stage...'
...
The study by Dr Farsalinos adds by way of explanation: 'It has been observed that decreased ACE-2 availability contributes to lung injury and acute respiratory distress syndrome development.
'Therefore, higher ACE-2 expression, while seemingly paradoxical, may protect against acute lung injury caused by COVID-19.'
This is a disputed area of science - there are studies which show smoking can both increase and decrease the levels of ACE-2 available on someone's lung cells.
An increase before infection could allow more of the viruses to get into the body in the first place, making someone more vulnerable to the disease.
A paper published by scientists at University College London offers the opposite view to Dr Farsalinos.
It said: 'SARS-CoV-2 has been shown to enter cells through the ACE-2 receptor.
'Some evidence suggests that gene expression and subsequent receptor levels are elevated in the airway and oral [cells] of current smokers, thus putting smokers at higher risk of contracting SARS-CoV-2
'Other studies, however, show that nicotine downregulates the ACE-2 receptor.'
Professor Jamie Brown, an addiction researcher at UCL and one of the authors who wrote that paper, told MailOnline the link is 'very difficult to understand'.
'Everything we know about other respiratory viruses and comorbidities [health problems] suggests smokers will suffer worse outcomes,' he said.
Only recently - a paper published this year claimed to be the first - have scientists started to record that smoking increases ACE-2 levels in the airways.
It had previously been reported to reduce levels, something that researchers have linked to worse lung damage in coronavirus infections.
While higher levels of the receptor may offer some protection in theory, they also offer more doorways through which the virus can enter the body.
The study in the European Respiratory Journal said: 'While the up-regulation of ACE-2 may be useful in protecting the host against acute lung injury, chronically, this may predispose individuals to increased risk of coronavirus infections, which uses this receptor to gain entrance into epithelial cells.'
Professor Brown added that, considering how smoking influences other lung infections, he would be 'very surprised' if it didn't make COVID-19 worse.
Helen Salisbury: What might we learn from the covid-19 pandemic?
https://www.bmj.com/content/368/bmj.m1087/rr-0
Conclusion: In patients infected with COVID 19, the use of ACE inhibitors and angiotensin II receptor blockers should be effective. ACE2 receptor downregulation can be achieved with nicotine and Covid19-cell interaction may be somewhat broken. Nicotine band therapy may be a treatment option for patients who are not infected
Comment from e-cigarette-forum
"Territoo says: As I read the article, and others, nicotine doesn't block the ACE receptors. It down regulates them, i.e. causes there to be fewer of them. Fewer ACE receptors mean fewer sites that the coronavirus has to attack. An ACE inhibitor blocks the receptors that are present.
Think of the virus as an evil intruder and those spikes are its keys to your doors. An ACE inhibitor is like one of those door locks that landlords put on the door to keep the key from being used. Nicotine is like bricking up the doors so they no longer exist. Each one is helpful, but used together they're more powerful. Plus, the effects of ACE inhibitors on blood pressure limits the dose in those without hypertension. Nicotine's addiction potential is a drawback for it. You are going to have nonsmokers addicted to gum and lozenges."
The polls are saying that a majority of Americans don't feel secure enough to go to places with crowds. They are worried about sending their children to school. They are worried about lessening of the restrictions too early. And in all these instances, when asked about the financial impacts, they're choosing their health over their financial risk.
Germany is one country that has reduced their rate of replication (R[sub]0[/sub]) to less than 1 which means that the number of cases is decreasing as fewer people have been passing along the virus. But here's a breakdown for Germany's new cases for the past 10 days.
20-Apr 1,964
21-Apr 1,322
22-Apr 1,388
23-Apr 2,276
24-Apr 2,664
25-Apr 1,661
26-Apr 1,673
27-Apr 1,054
28-Apr 977
29-Apr 1,721
30-Apr 1,060
Now that they've been backing off on some of their restrictions, the numbers are increasing. Even with measures in effect and an R[sub]0[/sub] less than 1, they are still getting over 1,000 new cases per day. Germany has 161,539 cases.
The US has 1,040,488 cases with 25,000 new cases per day and the US' cases are increasing at 4 times the rate of Germany's. Guess what is going to happen in the US?
No, the goal is always containment and elimination. The opportunity to do that was in February. America blew that opportunity, so now we're in mitigation and reduction, trying desperately to get that R[sub]0[/sub] under 1 so that we don't have 25,000 new cases every day.
SARS-CoV-2 will require >70-80% immunity to attain "herd immunity", assuming that there is a persistence of immunity beyond 24 months past recovery. At a 30% rate of infection, you'll have about 60 million adults who are infected. If you assume a mortality of 3%, that's 1.8 million dead. Does that sound like a good idea?
If hospital capacity isn't stressed and individuals are young and healthy, I'm not convinced transmission isn't an acceptable risk.
...I think I've seen different estimates of what % immunity will be required to attain herd immunity, but I'm unsure. I need to look at that.
..I definitely wouldn't yet assume a mortality of 3%. Honestly, that sounds pretty scary.
The latest information that I've seen, given the most recent, reasonable seroprevalence studies, is that mortality is less than one percent.
The current recommendation for relaxing mitigation measures was 14 days of decreasing cases. Since mitigation was not enforced in many areas and no State has demonstrated 14 days of decreasing case curves, what States are doing by prematurely relaxing mitigation measures is not following the CDC recommendations.zoltanspawn said:I find the idea of 18-24 months of totally repressed transmission extremely dangerous.
Downward trajectory of documented cases within a 14-day period or downward trajectory of positive tests as a percent of total tests within a 14-day period (flat or increasing volume of tests)
The end of April brings grim statistics: Canada’s number of COVID-19 cases topped 54,000, with 3,300 deaths, but there is some good news: the national rate of new cases has slowed to three per cent, down from 17 per cent at the beginning of the month
And Alberta where the total case numbers are lower than Ontario and Quebec but they've had higher percentage increases.We just aren't getting there yet. I suspect that because of Quebec..
What I'm looking for is a point at which the number of new infections is less than the number of newly recovered patients.I have to thank you for your stats each day which must be time consuming. But I ask what is the qualifying criteria for a country to be 'recovering'? Thanks for all your efforts. (that was meant for Karabulut - I thought i clicked on reply with quote).
A reminder that it's not just older people who have severe complications from COVID-19: Nick Cordero, a Tony Award nominated musical theater performer has been on a ventilator in a Los Angeles hospital since early April. His lungs have been severely damaged by the virus and they have had to amputate one of his legs because of a clotting disorder that seem to affect some people with COVID-19.
Cordero is just 41 years old. He and his wife just had their first child.
Nick Cordero's wife says his lungs are 'severely damaged' [CNN]
