The Pretorius study is interesting - I'm trying to understand it. I haven't read the whole paper yet.
They looked at the blood of
- healthy volunteers (13)
- people with acute Covid (15)
- people with type 2 diabetes (10)
- patients with Long Covid (11)
The definition of Long Covid was
These patients suffered from persistent Long COVID/PASC symptoms for at least 2 months after they have recovered from acute COVID-19.
2 months is a pretty short time, especially as some of these patients were very sick with acute Covid-19 (6 were hospitalised and given oxygen, one of those was on a ventilator). Maybe some of the symptoms attributed to Long Covid are really just the result of recovering from having a significant illness?
And they did not look at the blood of people who recovered from Covid-19 and who do not have Long Covid symptoms. So, we can't be sure that anything that is found in the Long Covid patients would not also be found in other people who had Covid-19 not long ago
and don't have ongoing symptoms.
In the results section there is a section about
Platelet poor plasma (PPP): Amyloid fibrin(ogen) protein and anomalous clotting in platelet poor plasma samples, before and after two trypsin digestion protocols
They say that they have previously shown that platelet poor plasma from healthy controls and type 2 diabetes patients have significantly less 'anomalous Microclots' than that from people with Covid-19. They use a marker, thioflavin, to bind to the clots. And they say that they have found that people with Long Covid have a similar amount of microclots as the people with acute Covid-19.
So in Figure 3, they are looking at platelet poor plasma (PPP)
before trypsin was added to digest the microclots. Pictures A and B are from one individual who donated a blood sample when healthy, and then went on to get Covid-19 and developed Long Covid symptoms. And C is pictures from other Long Covid patients.
Then, they add trypsin, to, they say, 'digest', the microclots. And that seems to work in the platelet poor serum of the controls and diabetes patients (Pictures A and B in Figure 4). But it doesn't work in platelet poor serum of the Covid-19 patients (Pictures C in Figure 4), or of the Long Covid patients (Figure 5).