Hoopoe
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Can you give a reference for that?
Cats can infect each other with coronavirus, Chinese study finds
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...ch-other-with-coronavirus-chinese-study-finds
Can you give a reference for that?
https://eu.usatoday.com/story/news/...apy-5-us-patients-covid-19-donors/5090946002/In New York and Houston, pints of straw-colored convalescent plasma have dripped into the veins of five U.S. coronavirus patients. Hundreds more there and across the nation are set to follow.
Whether the plasma, derived from the blood of people who recovered from COVID-19, will help them fight off the devastating disease caused by the new coronavirus that has killed more than 5,100 Americans is unknown. In less than three weeks, the effort to find out has gone from an idea to a worldwide program entirely self-organized by medical researchers.
Like so much about the desperate efforts to fight the COVID-19 pandemic, it’s seat-of-the-pants medicine. Doctors don’t know whether it will work but hope to find out in weeks, not the years it typically takes for studies to yield answers.
The proposal is a biologic that blocks 2019-nCoV entry using a soluble version of the viral receptor, angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2), fused to an immunoglobulin Fc domain (ACE2-Fc), providing a neutralizing antibody with maximal breath to avoid any viral escape, while also helping to recruit the immune system to build lasting immunity.
In this report, we generated a novel recombinant protein by connecting the extracellular domain of human ACE2 to the Fc region of the human immunoglobulin IgG1.
Summary
We have previously provided the first genetic evidence that Angiotensin converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) is the critical receptor for SARS-CoV and that ACE2 protects the lung from injury, providing a molecular explanation for the severe lung failure and death due to SARS-CoV infections.
ACE2 has now also been identified as a key receptor for SARS-CoV-2 infections and it has been proposed that inhibiting this interaction might be used in treating patients with COVID-19.
However, it is not known whether human recombinant soluble ACE2 (hrsACE2) blocks growth of SARS-CoV-2.
Here we show that clinical grade hrsACE2 reduced SARS-CoV-2 recovery from Vero cells by a factor of 1,000-5 ,000.
An equivalent mouse rsACE2 had no effect.
We also show that SARS-CoV-2 can directly infect engineered human blood vessel organoids and human kidney organoids, which can be inhibited by hrsACE2.
These data demonstrate that hrsACE2 can significantly block early stages of SARS-CoV-2 infections.
United Kingdom: The UK introduced universal BCG immunization in 1953. From then until July 2005, UK policy was to immunize all school children aged between 10 and 14 years of age, and all neonates born into high-risk groups. ... BCG was also given to protect people who had been exposed to tuberculosis.
But tuberculosis is bacterial, or doesn't that make any difference?
@Jonathan Edwards
It would be relatively easy to check (providing peoples records are accurate) which frontline staff have had the BCG vaccination, they might have to double check with those who have come from other countries. But might the fact that someone was vaccinated sometime ago be sufficient or are they proposing to 're-vaccinate' as a treatment?
Maybe it sheds even some light on ME/CFS?Following the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS‐CoV) and Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS‐CoV), another highly pathogenic coronavirus named SARS‐CoV‐2 (previously known as 2019‐nCoV) emerged in December 2019 in Wuhan, China, and rapidly spreads around the world. This virus shares highly homological sequence with SARS‐CoV, and causes acute, highly lethal pneumonia coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID‐19) with clinical symptoms similar to those reported for SARS‐CoV and MERS‐CoV. The most characteristic symptom of patients with COVID‐19 is respiratory distress, and most of the patients admitted to the intensive care could not breathe spontaneously.
Additionally, some patients with COVID‐19 also showed neurologic signs, such as headache, nausea, and vomiting. Increasing evidence shows that coronaviruses are not always confined to the respiratory tract and that they may also invade the central nervous system inducing neurological diseases. The infection of SARS‐CoV has been reported in the brains from both patients and experimental animals, where the brainstem was heavily infected.
Furthermore, some coronaviruses have been demonstrated able to spread via a synapse‐connected route to the medullary cardiorespiratory center from the mechanoreceptors and chemoreceptors in the lung and lower respiratory airways. Considering the high similarity between SARS‐CoV and SARS‐CoV2, it remains to make clear whether the potential invasion of SARS‐CoV2 is partially responsible for the acute respiratory failure of patients with COVID‐19. Awareness of this may have a guiding significance for the prevention and treatment of the SARS‐CoV‐2‐induced respiratory failure.
Interesting article - linking BCG vaccination to reduced prevalence of COVID19
https://www.irishtimes.com/news/hea...-changer-in-covid-19-fight-1.4220383?mode=amp
Long motorcades of volunteers converged at three Stanford University research sites this week, donating blood for a new test that identifies the prevalence of coronavirus in our community – and could help reveal the full scope of Santa Clara County’s epidemic.
The 2,500 test slots on Friday and Saturday filled up within hours, as news of the project — the first large scale study of its type in the U.S. — spread quickly through the county.
The test detects protective antibodies to the virus rather than the virus itself.
This gives scientists a snapshot of how many people in the county have already been infected, but weren’t seriously sick and didn’t realize it. And it tells residents whether they carry potentially protective antibodies – so may be immune to future infection.
“This is critical information,” said principal investigator Dr. Eran Bendavid, an infectious disease specialist and professor of medicine with Stanford Health Policy.
“We will show the country what to do and how to do it,” he said.
It is not yet proven that these antibodies actually provide protection. Related coronaviruses offer a spotty record. Some, which cause the common cold, return again and again. The antibodies to Middle East respiratory syndrome lasted merely a year.