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Nzoner's Game Room>***NON-POLITICAL COVID-19 Discussion Thread***
JakeF 10:28 PM 02-26-2020
A couple of reminders...

Originally Posted by Bwana:
Once again, don't come in this thread with some kind of political agenda, or you will be shown the door. If you want to go that route, there is a thread about this in DC.
Originally Posted by Dartgod:
People, there is a lot of good information in this thread, let's try to keep the petty bickering to a minimum.

We all have varying opinions about the impact of this, the numbers, etc. We will all never agree with each other. But we can all keep it civil.

Thanks!

Click here for the original OP:

Spoiler!

[Reply]
TLO 02:30 PM 07-03-2020
Originally Posted by Wisconsin_Chief:
6 Wisconsin Badger football players test positive. Here we go, let’s see how this is handled.

https://www.foxsports.com/wisconsin/...Ylfpjf5VTRaDLM
This is happening at colleges and universities across the country.
[Reply]
Wisconsin_Chief 02:35 PM 07-03-2020
Originally Posted by TLO:
This is happening at colleges and universities across the country.
Yep, this is not looking good.
[Reply]
TLO 02:55 PM 07-03-2020
Pete what's our number to stay under today? It's hard to get to it on mobile.
[Reply]
petegz28 02:59 PM 07-03-2020
Originally Posted by TLO:
Pete what's our number to stay under today? It's hard to get to it on mobile.
663
[Reply]
TLO 03:42 PM 07-03-2020
Originally Posted by petegz28:
663
At 495 right now.
[Reply]
Bugeater 03:44 PM 07-03-2020
Originally Posted by Donger:
The border with Mexico (and Canada) has been and remains closed to non-essentials.
:-)
[Reply]
Discuss Thrower 03:45 PM 07-03-2020
Originally Posted by 'Hamas' Jenkins:
There are some peculiar things in their data sets.

Those started on azithromycin alone were quite a bit sicker on average. Those started on hydroxychloroquine were healthier on average.

More people on hydroxychloroquine were admitted to the ICU, where mortality is highest, yet overall mortality was substantially lower than those who took neither hydroxychloroquine or azithromycin. Those on hydroxychloroquine or hydroxychloroquine + azithromycin spent more time on a vent, where mortality is again increased, and more were on a vent overall.

But here's the real difference:

Those on hyroxychloroquine were given steroids 78.9% of the time. Those on both hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin were given steroids 74.3% of the time. Those on neither hydroxychloroquine nor azithromycin were given steroids 35.7% of the time.

Given what we know about the dexamethasone trials, that is your likely culprit for decreased mortality.
What mechanism is at play if, all things being equal, XYZ drug is administered as aprophylactic in a confirmed non-infected person and administered as soon as a person is confirmed infected if XYZ has no effect as a prophylactic but does have an effect as a treatment?
[Reply]
Kiimo 04:14 PM 07-03-2020

Thread on that new HCQ study. I'd add that these two results are red flags. White race was an independent predictor of mortality (1.7-2.1x the risk), and BMI ≥ 30 had a protective effect (0.62-0.96x the risk). That is not what anyone else's data shows. https://t.co/q4KIfEF8ID pic.twitter.com/egmwIJMmwT

— Max Kennerly (@MaxKennerly) July 3, 2020

[Reply]
Ninerfan11 04:22 PM 07-03-2020

More evidence from Europe. Stay-home kills. Go outside! Get that vit D!https://t.co/gupkmRiH8H pic.twitter.com/NSSV1SJzN2

— Phil Kerpen (@kerpen) July 3, 2020

[Reply]
kgrund 04:55 PM 07-03-2020
I wish people here beat reported numbers up as much as clinical trials
[Reply]
'Hamas' Jenkins 05:15 PM 07-03-2020
Originally Posted by Discuss Thrower:
What mechanism is at play if, all things being equal, XYZ drug is administered as aprophylactic in a confirmed non-infected person and administered as soon as a person is confirmed infected if XYZ has no effect as a prophylactic but does have an effect as a treatment?
Depends entirely upon the pathophysiology of the disease in question, the mechanism of the drug, and how one defines "infected".

Take something like HIV. There are multiple stages in the viral life cycle, many of which provide specific targets for therapy.

There are drugs you can use for pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), post-exposure prophylaxis, and treatment. Once you are past the stage of acute infection where viral reservoirs are established in places like memory cells and the DNA of T-cells, dendrites, etc, you can only treat for the remainder of the patient's life, but outside of a bone marrow transplant for someone with two alleles of the CCR5 delta 32 mutation, you aren't going to eliminate the virus.

AZT has a 30+ year history of efficacy in preventing transmission from mother to child, but is only effective for treatment of seropositive individuals when used in combination with other agents.

In the case of COVID, if you had a therapeutic that could prevent fusion of the viral spike to the ACE2 receptor, you might be able to prevent enough replication in the initial phases to prevent the virus from establishing a foothold within the body. However, past a certain phase, that same therapeutic may not have equal efficacy, because drugs are not always evenly distributed in all tissues and fluids of the body--the blood brain barrier being the best example, but there are several others (you don't want to use an antibiotic that has poor concentration in the urine in treating a UTI).

In contrast, the proposed beneficial mechanism for steroids is reduction in cytokine storm and acute inflammation as part of the disease process. Their use will not help with infection (and use over a week will cause both adrenal and immune suppression), but they can lessen the damaging sequelae of the disease.
[Reply]
'Hamas' Jenkins 05:25 PM 07-03-2020
Originally Posted by Ninerfan11:
That looks like cherry-picked data missing clear matching examples and with the wrong inputs.

CFR and IFR should be used if analyzing the protective effect of Vitamin D, not deaths/million, because a country with no infections and a prevalence of Vitamin D deficiency will have far better numbers than a country with infections and no Vitamin D deficiency.

If you are going to include Norway and Finland, why not include Sweden, where the deaths/million are 10x greater, especially given their other similarities?
[Reply]
BleedingRed 05:33 PM 07-03-2020
Originally Posted by TLO:
This is happening at colleges and universities across the country.
45 million Americans got the swine flu, COVID will not go away till herd immunity
[Reply]
TLO 05:42 PM 07-03-2020
If anyone has some time to look at an article, (Hamas) I'd like to know what your opinion is on this. I don't give a shit about the hydroxycloriquine part. I think their "risk factors" seem wonky.

https://link.springer.com/article/10...05983-z#citeas
[Reply]
Discuss Thrower 06:28 PM 07-03-2020
Originally Posted by 'Hamas' Jenkins:
Depends entirely upon the pathophysiology of the disease in question, the mechanism of the drug, and how one defines "infected".

Take something like HIV. There are multiple stages in the viral life cycle, many of which provide specific targets for therapy.

There are drugs you can use for pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), post-exposure prophylaxis, and treatment. Once you are past the stage of acute infection where viral reservoirs are established in places like memory cells and the DNA of T-cells, dendrites, etc, you can only treat for the remainder of the patient's life, but outside of a bone marrow transplant for someone with two alleles of the CCR5 delta 32 mutation, you aren't going to eliminate the virus.

AZT has a 30+ year history of efficacy in preventing transmission from mother to child, but is only effective for treatment of seropositive individuals when used in combination with other agents.

In the case of COVID, if you had a therapeutic that could prevent fusion of the viral spike to the ACE2 receptor, you might be able to prevent enough replication in the initial phases to prevent the virus from establishing a foothold within the body. However, past a certain phase, that same therapeutic may not have equal efficacy, because drugs are not always evenly distributed in all tissues and fluids of the body--the blood brain barrier being the best example, but there are several others (you don't want to use an antibiotic that has poor concentration in the urine in treating a UTI).

In contrast, the proposed beneficial mechanism for steroids is reduction in cytokine storm and acute inflammation as part of the disease process. Their use will not help with infection (and use over a week will cause both adrenal and immune suppression), but they can lessen the damaging sequelae of the disease.
Thanks. Makes sense with whatever biology lessons I've received over the years.
[Reply]
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