Monolecte 😷🤬

Fauteuse de merde 🐘 @Monolecte@framapiaf.org

  • Thread by DataDrivenMD sur les progrès de la lutte contre le #covid19  : l’aération (pas chez nous) et les vaccins nasaux (abandonné précocement par Pasteur il y a un an).
    https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1528825593009041408.html

    It’s been a while since I’ve read a COVID19 preprint worth highlighting. I found one today that is fascinating

    The study compares Delta vs. Omicron in terms of symptoms + rapid test results. Data was collected at a walk-up community testing site in San Francisco

    Strap in. 1/n
    They collected data from a HUGE study population— 63,277 persons over the course of 1 year (Jan 2021 to Jan 2022)

    The other neat thing is that the testing site used the same eligibility criteria throughout and the same rapid test the entire time. 2/n Image
    Another neat thing: the community testing site was located in a part of San Francisco that is predominantly Hispanic.

    Yet another neat thing: they collected vaccination status.

    Here’s a link to the study for anyone who wants to follow along. 3/n
    COVID-19 symptoms and duration of direct antigen test positivity at a community testing and surveillance site, January 2021-2022
    Importance: Characterizing clinical symptoms and evolution of community- based SARS Co-V-2 infections can inform health practitioners and public health officials in a rapidly changing landscape of pop…
    https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2022.05.19.22274968v1.full.pdf+html
    They found that symptomatic COVID-19 cases due to Omicron tended to experience cough (67%) and/or a sore throat (43%) and/or congestion (39%).

    They also found that fewer persons reported fever and/or loss of smell/taste as compared to the Delta wave.
    Another fascinating finding: fevers and body aches were less common among persons that had received boosters compared to those who received 0, 1, or 2 doses. 5/n Image
    OK, here’s one of the most interesting findings, that I haven’t seen reported anywhere else: the rate of “congestion” was highest among boosted persons. Yes, higher

    Now, that may seem bad and counter-intuitive but it’s great and makes perfect sense. Allow me to explain...
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    2 years in, we now know that SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19 invades our body by latching onto proteins on the surface of the cells that line our respiratory tract— these are known as ACE2 receptors and they’re found in our nose, all they way down into our lungs Image
    The key piece to note is that ACE2 receptors are not present in equal amounts throughout our respiratory tract— there are more of these proteins in our nose than our lungs

    There’s another thing to consider to understand how boosted persons might end up w/ more congestion

    8/n Image
    The other piece of the puzzle is Omicron’s much, much higher transmissibility. That’s due, in part, to Omicron’s ability to partially evade immunity from vaccination and/or prior infection. 9/n

    source: assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/upl… Image
    So, what seems to be going on, is that the immune system of persons who were boosted were able to respond more quickly to the first sign of an Omicron infection— in the nose. The congestion is the body’s way of slowing down the infection— it’s flooding the virus in sludge 10/n
    If that fails, the virus migrates down to your throat where it causes a sore throat, a cough, or croup in the case of young children.

    If that fails, then it makes it further, into the lungs, where it triggers a different kind of “congestion” that causes collateral damage 11/n
    Somewhere between a sore throat and a pneumonia, the body responds by raising your body temperature— a fever. And by mobilizing other parts of your immune system, a process that causes lymph nodes to swell...the swelling stretches surrounding tissue— those are body aches. 12/n Image
    So, putting it all together: although Omicron is able to partially evade our vaccines, the immune system of persons who were boosted responded earlier and more robustly. Sparing millions of persons from developing worse symptoms.
    13/n
    Another way to say it: many people had at least a little immunity after Delta. This explains, in part, why many (not all!) Omicron cases have been “mild” thus far. And, why boosted persons experienced even milder symptoms, like congestion. 14/n

    covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tra… Image
    COVID Data Tracker
    CDC’s home for COVID-19 data. Visualizations, graphs, and data in one easy-to-use website.
    https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/#covidnet-hospitalizations-vaccination
    👀 Here’s the data that, IMO, really drives home the point that our vaccines helped to make Omicron “mild”— check out that massive jump in the % of persons that were boosted between the Delta vs. Omicron surges

    3% boosted during Delta ➡️ 25% boosted during Omicron 🔥🔥🔥

    15/n Image
    Here’s why I’m really excited by this study: it makes perfect sense in the context of the next big breakthrough. @VirusesImmunity is working on a nasal vaccine that could actually end this pandemic— by stopping the virus as soon as it enters the nose

    16/n
    Opinion | The Answer to Stopping the Coronavirus May Be Up Your Nose
    Why nasal vaccines for Covid could be so effective.
    https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/16/opinion/covid-nasal-vaccine.html
    Another reason why I’m really excited: it underscores the fact that we have very powerful tools to bring the pandemic to a crawl right now— high-quality masks, ventilation, and air filtration.

    These, in combination with our vaccines, can extend the time between surges. 17/n
    This study also underscores why it is necessary to keep boosting using our current vaccines + masking up, while simultaneously developing the next generation of vaccines. These charts show that it takes up to 2 weeks to fully clear an Omicron infection

    18/n ImageImage
    And it doesn’t matter how you define it. It can take up to 2 weeks for a rapid test to go back to negative (-) and/or symptoms to resolve.

    The kicker: while boosters keep symptoms mild (great), they neither shorten the duration of symptoms nor test positivity (not great)

    19/n Image
    Anywho, there’s a lot more in this study that I’d like to discuss but this thread is long enough and I’ve other work to do right now. The upshot is: get boosted + mask up and there’s a glimmer of light at the end of the tunnel— nasal vaccines.

    20/20