Category: Corona Virus

Page 120«..1020..119120121122..130140..»

New discovery concerning receptors used by coronaviruses to enter human cells – Medical Xpress

October 29, 2023

This article has been reviewed according to ScienceX's editorial process and policies. Editors have highlighted the following attributes while ensuring the content's credibility:

fact-checked

peer-reviewed publication

trusted source

proofread

close

The SARS-CoV-2 virus responsible for COVID-19 can cause severe acute respiratory syndrome, contrasting with other coronaviruses that were known to cause mild seasonal colds prior to its emergence in 2019. This raises the question of why one coronavirus affects humans more severely than another. Scientists at the Institut Pasteur, Universit Paris Cit and the VRI have now provided part of the answer by identifying a gateway used by the seasonal coronavirus HKU1 to enter human cells.

HKU1 binds to a different receptor than SARS-CoV-2, which may partly explain the difference in severity between these two coronaviruses. Receptors provide a useful means of elucidating coronavirus transmissibility and pathology as part of surveillance work on viral evolution. These results are published in Nature.

Seven coronaviruses are known for their ability to infect humans. Four of these are generally mild: HKU1, 229E, NL63 and OC43, while the other three are more pathogenic: SARS-CoV-1, Mers-CoV and SARS-CoV-2.

The HKU1 virus was first identified in an elderly patient with severe pneumonia in Hong Kong in 2005. Like SARS-CoV-2, HKU1 mainly infects upper respiratory tract cells. However, it rarely affects the bronchi and alveoli in the lungs. The HKU1 virus causes colds and other mild respiratory symptoms.

Complications may also occur, including severe respiratory tract infections, particularly in young children, the elderly and immunocompromised individuals. It is estimated that 70% of children are infected before the age of 6. In total, 75 to 95% of the global population has been exposed to HKU1, which is comparable to other seasonal human coronaviruses.

close

At the cellular level, coronavirus spike proteins are cleaved, or split in two, after binding to their receptors. This cleavage phenomenon is vital for viral fusion, entry and multiplication. Some coronaviruses (SARS-CoV-2 and NL63) use the ACE2 receptor as a gateway for entering cells. Until now, HKU1 and OC43 were the only coronaviruses with unknown receptors.

Through collaboration between scientists at eight Institut Pasteur units, it was possible to identify the TMPRSS2 enzyme as the receptor to which HKU1 binds to enter cells. Once binding has occurred, TMPRSS2 triggers fusion of HKU1 with the cell, leading to viral infection. Through a combination of techniques performed in vitro and in cell culture, the scientists demonstrated that the TMPRSS2 receptor has high affinity with the HKU1 spike, which is not the case for SARS-CoV-2.

"Once a receptor has been identified for a virus, it is possible to characterize target cells more accurately, while also gaining insights on viral entry and multiplication mechanisms and infection pathophysiology," says Olivier Schwartz, co-last author of the study and Head of the Institut Pasteur's Virus and Immunity unit.

"Our findings also shed light on the various evolution strategies employed by coronaviruses, which use TMPRSS2 either to bind to target cells or trigger fusion and viral entry," adds Julian Buchrieser, co-last author of the study and scientist in the Institut Pasteur's Virus and Immunity unit.

These human-pathogenic viruses' use of different receptors probably affects their degree of severity. Receptor levels vary among respiratory tract cells, thus influencing the sensitivity of cells to infection and viral spread. Once the route of viral entry into cells is known, it should also be possible to fight infection more effectively by developing targeted therapies and assess the risk of virulence posed by any future emerging coronaviruses.

In parallel with this work, Institut Pasteur teams led by Pierre Lafaye and Felix Rey have developed and characterized nano-antibodies that inhibit HKU1 infection by binding to the TMPRSS2 receptor. These reagents have been patented for potential therapeutic activities.

More information: Nell Saunders et al, TMPRSS2 is a functional receptor for human coronavirus HKU1, Nature (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-023-06761-7

Journal information: Nature

See the rest here:

New discovery concerning receptors used by coronaviruses to enter human cells - Medical Xpress

Borenstein: Can Bay Area leaders meet the moment before its too late? – The Mercury News

October 29, 2023

Weekday ridership on BART, which depends heavily on office workers, continues to hover at about 40% of pre-pandemic levels.

Population growth. Transit ridership. Office demand. Property tax revenues. The coronavirus pandemic upended the Bay Area economy and many of the changes are likely to be permanent.

The question now is whether our local elected leaders can meet the moment. Whether they can pivot to plan for a future that will be radically different than previously assumed.

I hope they can. Im fearful they wont.

Revised population forecasts and office work patterns drive this seismic shift. The region has planned based on expectations of a rapidly increasing number of residents. But suddenly those numbers have reversed course, and state forecasts show that the Bay Area wont even return to its pre-pandemic population until midway through the next decade.

Meanwhile, after getting a taste during the lockdown, white-collar workers have embraced working from home, either full-time or on a hybrid schedule. Many employers have also championed the idea, recognizing that they want to keep their treasured workers happy and grabbing the cost savings that come from unloading excess office leases. They understand that remote work is here to stay.

The fallout is monumental. Transit ridership has plummeted. For example, weekday ridership on BART, which depends heavily on office workers, continues to hover at about 40% of pre-pandemic levels.

Bay Area office vacancy rates have hit record levels. The corollary to that is that office values are rapidly declining, and mortgage defaults are increasing. Similarly, the hotel industry is struggling.

In San Jose, weak demand for office and retail space, worsened by a troubled hotel sector, has building owners considering converting commercial properties to housing. In San Francisco, the revenue per hotel room is about 73% of what it was pre-pandemic. A major downtown San Jose hotel is looking to sell one of its two towers in a deal that would convert the space to student housing for nearby San Jose State University.

This should set off alarm bells for local government officials. The rapidly increasing property tax revenues they forecasted before the pandemic will not materialize.

The pain will start to come in about a year, warns Santa Clara County Assessor Larry Stone. He just issued his countys 2023 property assessment, which showed a surprisingly healthy 6.7% increase. But thats because its based on property values in calendar year 2022, which started very strong, but around the middle, Stone says, things started to come unglued.

The big driver of the downturn, which is continuing in 2023, is, not surprisingly, office buildings. The office market is now at the bottom of desired real estate property in Santa Clara County, Stone says. Thats the Silicon Valley, a key driver of the Bay Area economy.

Compounding the problem, but perhaps not as permanent as the office-market realignment, are the huge drop-offs in home sales and new construction, cramped by rapidly rising mortgage rates.

All of this means less property tax revenue to fund schools, counties, cities and special districts. And it couldnt come at a worse time. Local governments were propped up during the pandemic by bailouts, especially from the federal government. Thats ending.

Meanwhile, polling data suggests reluctance by Bay Area residents to venture into the regions three major downtowns each for a different reason: Crime in Oakland, homeless on San Francisco streets and lack of attractions in San Jose.

Failing downtowns, which are key economic drivers, will make it even harder for cities to recover.

Elected officials should be seeing these warning signs as prompts to rethink their financial and project planning. Their resources are limited and will likely become more constrained in the future.

This is the time when they should be reevaluating how they allocate their precious revenues. How they respond will tell us whether they will meet this moment.

Sadly, what were seeing right now is not encouraging.

BART officials, for example, should be rethinking rail service, scaling back because of reduced demand. Instead, they are increasing service, suicidally accelerating the race toward the fiscal cliff thats right in front of them.

Oaklands mayor and City Council members are witnessing the exiting of downtown businesses and visitors because of the justified fear of soaring crime. But the elected officials, while giving lip service to law enforcement, remain unwilling to realign municipal spending to meaningfully increase the number of cops solving crimes and patrolling the streets.

Good governing requires making tough decisions about financial tradeoffs, evaluating the costs and benefits of spending, and considering alternatives to ensure maximum efficiency. It requires acknowledgement that past decisions might not be the best ones today. It requires the courage to change course when justified.

The region is entering the post-pandemic economy. The assumptions of the past must be altered to meet the future. Thats the challenge we face.

Daniel Borenstein is editorial page editor for The Mercury News and East Bay Times.

Continued here:

Borenstein: Can Bay Area leaders meet the moment before its too late? - The Mercury News

Why is COVID-19 more severe in some people? Researchers use genetics, data science to find out – Medical Xpress

October 27, 2023

This article has been reviewed according to ScienceX's editorial process and policies. Editors have highlighted the following attributes while ensuring the content's credibility:

fact-checked

peer-reviewed publication

trusted source

proofread

close

Why do some people have a more severe course of COVID-19 disease than others? A genome sequence database created by an international collaboration of researchers, including many from the University of Toronto and partner hospitals, may hold the answers to this questionand many more.

The origins of the Canadian COVID-19 Human Host Genome Sequencing Databank, known as CGEn HostSeq, can be traced to the earliest days of the pandemic.

Lisa Strug, senior scientist at The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids) and academic director of U of T's Data Sciences Institute, one of several U of T institutional strategic initiatives, says genetic data was top of mind for her and other researchers in late 2019 and early 2020 as reports of a novel form of coronavirus emerged from China and then other locations across the globe.

"In my research, I use data science techniques to map the genes responsible for complex traits," says Strug, who is a professor in U of T's departments of statistical sciences and computer science in the Faculty of Arts & Science and in the biostatistics division of the Dalla Lana School of Public Health.

"We knew that genes were a factor in the severity of previous SARS infections, so it made sense that COVID-19, which is caused by a closely related virus, would have a genetic component, too.

"Very early on, I started getting messages from several scientists who wanted to set up different studies that would help us find those genes."

Over the next few months, Strugwho is also the associate director of SickKids' Centre for Applied Genomics, one of three sites across Canada that form CGEn, Canada's national platform for genome sequencing infrastructure for researchcollaborated with nearly 100 researchers from across U of T and partner hospitals and institutions, as well as other researchers from across Canada to enroll individuals with COVID-19 and sequence their genomes.

Some of the key team members from the Toronto community included: Stephen Scherer, chief of research at SickKids Research Institute and a University Professor in U of T's Temerty Faculty of Medicine, as well as director of the U of T McLaughlin Centre; Rayjean Hung, associate director of population health at the Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute, Sinai Health, and a professor in U of T's Dalla Lana School of Public Health; Angela Cheung, clinician-scientist at University Health Network, senior scientist at Toronto General Hospital Research Institute and a professor in U of T's Temerty Faculty of Medicine; and Upton Allen, head of the division of infectious diseases at SickKids and a professor in U of T's Temerty Faculty of Medicine.

Identifying associations between individual genes and complex traits typically requires thousands of genomesboth from those with the trait and those without. Though there was no shortage of cases to choose from, it was critical to gather and sequence DNAand then organize the data in a way that would be ethical, efficient and useful to researchers now and in the future.

"One of our key mandates at the Data Sciences Institute is developing techniques and programs that ensure that data remains as open, accessible and as re-producible as it can be," Strug says.

"That vision was brought to bear as we assembled the data infrastructure for this projectfor example, ensuring that consent forms were as broad as possible so that this data could be linked with other sources, from electronic medical records to other health databases.

"We wanted to be sure that even after the COVID-19 pandemic was over this could be a national whole genome sequencing resource to ask all kinds of questions about health and our genes. The development of the database and its open nature also enabled Canada to collaborate effectively with similar projects in other countries."

In the end, the project gathered more than 11,000 full genome sequences from across Canada, representing patients with a wide range of health outcomes. Results are published in BMC Genomic Data. Those data were then combined with even more sequences from patients in other countries under what came to be called the COVID-19 Host Genetics Initiative.

It didn't take long for patterns to start to emerge. A paper published in Nature in 2021 identified 13 genome-wide significant loci that are associated with SARS-CoV-2 infection or severe manifestations of COVID-19.

Since then, even more data have been added, and subsequent analysis has confirmed the significance of existing loci while also identifying new ones. The most recent update to the project, published in Nature earlier this year, brings the total number of distinct, genome-wide significant loci to 51.

"Identification of these loci can help one predict who might be more prone to a severe course of COVID-19 disease," says Strug.

"When you identify a trait-associated locus, you can also unravel the mechanism by which this genetic region contributes to COVID-19 disease. This potentially identifies therapeutic targets and approaches that a future drug could be designed around."

While it will take many more years to fully untangle the effects of the different loci that have been identified, Strug says that the database is already showing its worth in other ways.

"It can be difficult to find datasets with whole genome sequence and approved for linkage with other health information that are this large, and we want people to know that it is open and available for all kinds of research well beyond COVID through a completely independent data access committee," she says.

"For example, several investigators from across Canada have been approved to use these data and we've even provided funding to trainees to encourage them to develop new data science methodologies or ask novel health questions using the CGen HostSeq data.

"This was a humongous effort, where researchers from across Canada came together during the COVID-19 pandemic to recruit, obtain and sequence DNA from more than 11,000 Canadians in a systematic, co-operative, aligned way to create a made-in-Canada data resource that will hopefully be useful for years to come. I think that was really miraculous."

More information: S Yoo et al, HostSeq: a Canadian whole genome sequencing and clinical data resource, BMC Genomic Data (2023). DOI: 10.1186/s12863-023-01128-3

Journal information: Nature

See the original post here:

Why is COVID-19 more severe in some people? Researchers use genetics, data science to find out - Medical Xpress

Time running out to apply for COVID-19 relief funds; ‘People need … – Chicago Tribune

October 27, 2023

A significant number of Lake County residents continue to feel the economic impact of the coronavirus pandemic, leaving them behind with mortgage payments or even facing foreclosure.

Help continues to be available through the Illinois Housing Development Authoritys federally funded Illinois Homeowners Assistance Fund, but there are only days left to apply.

People must apply online to the housing authority for help from the Homeowners Assistance Fund by 11:59 p.m. Tuesday to receive up to $60,000 in assistance with a delinquent mortgage, property taxes or homeowners organization payments.

Andrew Field, the housing authoritys deputy director of communications, said the program started over three years ago with approximately $270 million in federal funds when lots of people were dealing with economic hardships because of COVID-19.

Though the incidences of the disease have eased, Field said people did not have to make payments when there was a moratorium, but that is over. Others had forbearance agreements with lenders. They are now short of funds to bring their loans current.

Those forbearance agreements are coming due, and they still cant pay them, Field said, For them, foreclosure is a real possibility.

Ofelia Navarro, the deputy director of the Lake County Housing Authority, said she knows of close to 30 people with applications pending that were filed through her organization. For them, the impact of the pandemic is still very real.

People continue to get COVID-19 and expenses can mount because of it. Navarro said there are people who are going through foreclosure because they fell behind on payments since their income never returned to pre-pandemic levels.

There are a lot of seniors applying, Navarro said. Theyre not retired, but theyre not making as much money as they did. Some are retired, but the cost of living is high and going up more than their pension or Social Security.

Self-employed people also incurred financial setbacks during the pandemic. Navarro said they, too, have not been able to retire the debts they incurred at the time. Now their mortgage is becoming a challenge.

People need help in Lake County like Ive never seen before, Navarro said. Its huge, and impacting their mortgage payments. They can call us, or come to our office, and well help them.

Field said people behind on a mortgage, property taxes or condominium homeowner association fees because of a COVID-19 related situation are eligible for up to $60,000 in relief. They must earn less than 150% of the areas median income.

For a family of four, Field said the annual income must be less than $165,450, $132,400 for a couple and $115,850 for an individual.

Navarro urges those with an issue on their mortgage, real estate taxes or homeowner association assessments not to delay. As long as the application is filed before the deadline, the applicants request will be evaluated.

Get in there and apply, Navarro said. Do it before the application deadline. You know what can happen at the last minute with a lot of people trying to get online at the same time.

Most of the $270 million has been disbursed, but just under $20 million remains in the fund to help homeowners. While an individual can receive up to $60,000, Field said the average disbursement is around $18,000. Payments go directly to the lender, the tax collector or homeowners association.

Original post:

Time running out to apply for COVID-19 relief funds; 'People need ... - Chicago Tribune

FAU medical experts back CDC’s latest COVID-19 vaccine recommendations in new study – WEAR

October 27, 2023

FAU medical experts back CDC's latest COVID-19 vaccine recommendations in new study

Researchers from FAU published their recommendations in the American Journal of Medicine. (Credit: WTGS).{ }

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (CBS12)

Medical experts at Florida Atlantic University (FAU) published new guidance to health care providers following recommendations from the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) regarding the latest COVID-19 vaccines.

The CDC is recommending the public get the latest COVID-19 vaccines that were recently granted Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The EUA's were issued for the latest mRNA COVID-19 vaccines by Moderna and Pfizer back on Sept. 11, 2023.

Researchers from FAU published their recommendations in the American Journal of Medicine.

The war on COVID-19 continues to be fought valiantly and selflessly by health care professionals in communities and hospitals across the nation., said Allison H. Ferris, M.D., senior author, chair of the Department of Medicine, and program director of the internal medicine residency program for the FAU Schmidt College of Medicine. As competent and compassionate physicians, we must redouble our efforts to promote evidence-based clinical and public health practices, including vaccination of all eligible U.S. adults and children with the new vaccine."

FAU experts said reliable evidence shows the benefits of the COVID-19 vaccines outweigh the potential risks, noting that vaccine eligible children will also benefit from receiving the vaccine, leading to a reduction of death and hospitalizations of their parents, grandparents, childcare providers and schoolteachers.

In the face of continuing opposition to masking, social distancing and crowd avoidance in the U.S., vaccination is the best defense against a new emerging strain, said Dr. Charles H. Hennekens, M.D., P.H., co-author, and the first Richard Doll Professor and senior academic advisor to the dean in the Charles E. Schmidt College of Medicine at FAU. This approach coupled with a prescription of Paxlovid as needed during the first five days following infection will also further reduce hospitalizations and deaths.

The study was co-authored by Sarah K. Wood, MD, FAAP, M.D., senior author, director of the Harvard Macy Institute at Harvard Medical School and former professor of pediatrics and vice dean for medical education at FAU Schmidt College of Medicine and Dennis G. Maki, M.D., Ovid O. Meyer professor of medicine, director of the COVID-19 Intensive Care Unit and an infectious disease clinician and epidemiologist from the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, and Mia Glickman, a second-year medical student at the FAU Schmidt College of Medicine.

Load more...

The rest is here:

FAU medical experts back CDC's latest COVID-19 vaccine recommendations in new study - WEAR

Beshear and Cameron clash on abortion, education and … – Hoptown Chronicle

October 27, 2023

Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear and his Republican challenger, Attorney General Daniel Cameron, clashed on abortion, education and the coronavirus in their third debate, continuing themes from their previous meetings.

In his opening statement, Cameron again said that the governors race is about crazy versus normal and tied Beshear to national Democratic figures like President Joe Biden. Camerons criticisms of Beshear included closing schools and churches during the coronavirus pandemic.

Ladies and gentlemen, we do not have to accept this crazy agenda any longer, Cameron said. We can have leadership that makes sure that we have good quality schools, that we keep our streets safe from crime and drugs, that we support our public school teachers, and yes, we eliminate Kentuckys income tax.

Beshear criticized Cameron for nationalizing the race and being overly partisan while reminding Kentuckians who led the state through hard times like the pandemic and natural disasters.

This race is about us. It is about Kentucky, Beshear said in his opening statement. And to truly lead this state forward, you cant be on team red or team blue. You have to lead team Kentucky.

Saturdays debate was hosted by the League of Women Voters of Louisville and TV station WLKY. Questions included a range of topics, such as the coronavirus pandemic, the economy and crime.

During a couple tense moments, Beshear directly asked Cameron to answer questions about abortion and school voucher programs. Cameron said last month that he would sign legislation adding exceptions in cases of rape and incest to Kentuckys near-total abortion ban if the General Assembly passed it. However, he has not directly said if he personally supports those exceptions and continues to call himself the pro-life candidate.

Ill tell you what, I got a few seconds left. So, General Cameron, will you look at the camera and say, I support exceptions for rape and incest? Beshear said Saturday as part of a rebuttal to Cameron.

Ive already said that I will sign the exceptions if they are brought to my desk, Cameron responded. At the end of the day, this governor wants more abortions. There is no difference between him and Joe Biden on this issue.

Beshear also claimed during the debate that Camerons education plan which he calls a Catch-Up Plan, includes support for school vouchers to allow public school funds to follow students who attend private schools, but it does not. Cameron, however, has gained support from school choice groups.

Both candidates were asked about their position on school vouchers Saturday.

Beshear, who had the first opportunity to answer, said he opposes them and believes they would defund our public education system in devastating ways.

In his answer, Cameron brought up his family ties to educators and promised to support public education in his first budget, but did not answer whether he would support school vouchers if he becomes governor.

In his rebuttal, Beshear asked Cameron directly: Do you support vouchers that take money from public education and send them to private schools?

Both candidates were cut off by a moderator before going to the next question, but Cameron pushed back at Beshearon his support for public schools, saying he shut our schools down for nearly two years.

During Saturdays debate, both candidates were asked if the state should have an ongoing plan for a future pandemic, like the COVID-19 pandemic that began in 2020, as well as what they thought were successes and failures in the response to the coronavirus.

Cameron, who answered the question first, criticized Beshear for closing schools, businesses and churches during the pandemic. He has made similar comments on the campaign trail and in press conferences.

What Andy Beshear did was wrong. I will respect your constitutional rights. I will look out for our most vulnerable populations, Cameron said. But at the end of the day, I will make sure that we respect you as a citizen and your constitutional rights.

Beshear called the pandemic the challenge of our lifetime and said it killed 18,000 Kentuckians. He also praised health care workers who worked during the pandemic and added that it was a slap in the face of the heroism that they showed for Cameron to refuse to act like this pandemic was as deadly as it was.

I made decisions to save lives, Beshear said. Its clear this attorney general would have played politics. That would have caused more death, more destruction. Id rather save lives than win reelection.

Both candidates also discussed eliminating Kentuckys income tax.Cameron has often voiced support for completely doing away with the state income tax and vowed again Saturday to be the governor who eliminates Kentuckys income tax.

The attorney general criticized Beshear for vetoing legislation in 2022 that would have lowered Kentuckys income tax.

In response, Beshear said the General Assembly created guardrails to gradually lower the income tax based on indicators of the states fiscal health, but Daniel Cameron wants to take the train off the track. The governor said a similar plan in Kansas, which he referenced in his 2022 veto, was later reversed because of strains on that states economy.

Beshear and Cameron addressed crime Saturday and were asked about how they would particularly make Louisville, Kentuckys largest city, safer.

Cameron referred to his previously released public safety plan, and emphasized his support for adding a Kentucky State Police post in Louisville. He also criticized Beshear for commuting the sentences of nearly 2,000 inmates during the coronavirus pandemic. The criteria for the people who were released included being medically vulnerable, near the end of the sentences and not having been convicted of violent or sexual offenses.

Beshear said he was surprised Cameron just criticized me for following Donald Trump the former Republican president who endorsed Cameron before highlighting pay raises for state troopers during his administration, as well as a lower recidivism rate.

The next gubernatorial debate is Monday, hosted by KET, followed by the last debate on Tuesday, hosted by WKYT.

Beshears running mate, Lt. Gov. Jacqueline Coleman, and Camerons running mate, state Sen. Robby Mills, will face each other in a KET debate on Oct. 30.

This article is republished under a Creative Commons license from Kentucky Lantern, which is part of States Newsroom, a network of news bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Kentucky Lantern maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Jamie Lucke for questions: info@kentuckylantern.com. Follow Kentucky Lantern on Facebook and Twitter.

McKenna Horsley covers state politics for the Kentucky Lantern. She previously worked for newspapers in Huntington, West Virginia, and Frankfort, Kentucky. She is from northeastern Kentucky.

Read the rest here:

Beshear and Cameron clash on abortion, education and ... - Hoptown Chronicle

Study: Kids with COVID shed virus for median of 3 days, supporting school-isolation policies – University of Minnesota Twin Cities

October 25, 2023

Children who tested positive for COVID-19 in 2022 were contagious for a median of 3 days, regardless of vaccination status, suggesting that 5-day school isolation policies are sufficient amid Omicron variant predominance, University of Southern California (USC) and Stanford University researchers report today in JAMA Pediatrics.

The study included 76 children aged 7 to 18 years infected with SARS-CoV-2 in Los Angeles County from April to September 2022. The researchers obtained throat swabs for culture and recorded demographic information and COVID-19 vaccination status during five visits to the children's homes over 10 days. The samples were examined in a lab for evidence of cell death, a sign of viral infectivity.

The researchers noted that a previous study found that nose-throat swabs from children diagnosed as having COVID-19 were half as likely to contain culturable virus than those from adults but that none had assessed viral shedding of the Omicron variant among children over time.

"COVID-19 quarantine and self-isolation policies continue to interrupt education," the study authors wrote. "These policies, while typically more stringent than for routine viral illnesses, are guided by few data."

Of the 76 participants, 52 (68.4%) were vaccinated, 41 (55.4%) were aged 7 to 12 years, and 38 (50.0%) were boys. The median duration of infectivity was 3 days, regardless of COVID-19 primary or booster vaccination status. Fourteen children (18.4%) were still infectious on day 5 and 3 (3.9%) remained so on day 10. A sensitivity analysis that used the date of symptom onset as the origin of observation produced similar results.

The authors said that school policies requiring students with COVID-19 stay at home for 5 days are probably appropriate and that return-to-school policies may not need to consider vaccination or booster status.

We want to protect the other children in the school who could potentially get infected, but at the same time, we don't want to disrupt education for the child who is infected, given the amount of disruption that's already happened.

"We're basically saying five days is more than sufficient; public-health and education leaders may consider shorter durations," coauthor Neeraj Sood, PhD, director of the COVID-19 Initiative and a senior fellow at the USC Schaeffer Center, said in a USC news release.

"We want to protect the other children in the school who could potentially get infected, but at the same time, we don't want to disrupt education for the child who is infected, given the amount of disruption that's already happened," he added.

Sood said future research is needed to enable policymakers to adjust school COVID-19 isolation policies as needed. "The virus will keep mutating," he said. "We need to continue doing studies like this because the next variant may have a longer or shorter duration of infectivity."

Read the original:

Study: Kids with COVID shed virus for median of 3 days, supporting school-isolation policies - University of Minnesota Twin Cities

Why do ‘long COVID’ patients have brain fog? New research points to the gut. : Goats and Soda – NPR

October 25, 2023

Corona virus Radoslav Zilinsky/Getty Images hide caption

Corona virus

Scientists have uncovered a possible explanation for one of COVID-19's most vexing legacies: the stubborn neurological symptoms of long COVID, such as brain fog, memory loss and fatigue.

The first clue emerged when researchers scoured the blood of long COVID patients: It was serotonin specifically, a lack of the neurotransmitter circulating in the body that grabbed their attention.

Their analysis revealed that having low levels of that chemical predicted whether or not someone was suffering from persistent symptoms following an infection.

Next, the team of researchers at the University of Pennsylvania carefully recreated the chain of events that might be depleting serotonin and causing downstream consequences that could line up with some of the symptoms characteristic of long COVID.

Their findings, published in the journal Cell, point to an intriguing hypothesis that winds its way from the gut up through the vagus nerve and ultimately into the brain.

"Basically, we can explain some of the neurocognitive manifestations of long COVID through this pathway that leads to serotonin reduction," says Christoph Thaiss, a senior author on the study and an assistant professor of microbiology at the University of Pennsylvania.

The work has made an impression on those studying long COVID, a condition that still has no validated treatment or widely accepted biomarker that doctors can use to diagnose the condition.

The study weaves together several prominent lines of evidence on the potential drivers of the condition the ongoing presence of viral material, blood clotting and chronic inflammation and offers up possible targets for clinical trials that can test treatments in humans.

"I'm impressed by the study," says Dr. Michelle Monje, a professor of neurology at Stanford University. "I think they did a beautiful job showing the causality of these changes."

Given that much of the work was done on mice, the implications for long COVID patients still need to be fully explored in future studies, but the results tell a "very nice linear story," says Akiko Iwasaki, an immunologist at Yale University.

"Everyone who's engaged in this research should now be thinking about this serotonin pathway," says Iwasaki.

So what exactly did they find?

With serotonin on their minds, the researchers tried to start from the very beginning of the disease process, primarily using experiments on mice to trace its course.

Their hunch was that "viral persistence" a major suspect in long COVID could underlie the depletion of serotonin. Multiple studies show that well after the initial illness passes, some long COVID patients may have a lingering infection in certain parts of the body, sometimes called a "viral reservoir," which could be driving some of their symptoms.

Maayan Levy, a senior author, says they looked for evidence of viral persistence by checking the stool of their long COVID subjects for genetic material from the virus.

"In about 30% of patients, we could find viral RNA in their gastrointestinal tract, so we took this and tried to model it in mice," says Levy, an assistant professor of microbiology at the University of Pennsylvania.

Those experiments revealed that a chronic viral infection (they used lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus as a stand-in for SARS-CoV-2) also led to reductions in serotonin and that the body's own immune response seemed to be the culprit.

This led to further experiments focused on a cytokine, called type 1 interferon, revealing that this signaling protein was driving inflammation and interfering with serotonin levels in the bloodstream in several ways.

The gut produces 90% of serotonin in the body. The amino acid tryptophan is critical to this task it's a precursor to serotonin and gets absorbed in the gastrointestinal tract from the food we eat. Except, this inflammatory response in the gut actually impaired the absorption of tryptophan.

"If there's less tryptophan, there's less serotonin production," says Thaiss. On top of that, these cytokines also lead to clotting of blood platelets which store serotonin further reducing the amount of serotonin in circulation.

Here, the detective work moved away from the gut to the vagus nerve, which essentially acts like the brain's monitoring system of the body and connects to the gastrointestinal tract and many other organs.

Levy says they found this reduction in serotonin impairs communication between the vagus nerve and the brain, which then reduces some activity in a region of the brain known as the hippocampus.

What's promising, though, is that the cognitive symptoms the Penn researchers documented in mice could be reversed.

"We can make the animals remember perfectly again by just reactivating their vagus nerve or by restoring their serotonin signaling," says Thaiss, referring to a cognitive behavioral test they performed on their mouse models of long COVID.

"Whether the exact same thing is true in individuals with long COVID is something we don't know."

Because much of this work was done on mice, there are limitations to what conclusions can be drawn about humans. Levy points out that their data can't prove a viral reservoir is causing these events in humans and that a lack of good mouse models of long COVID still hampers research.

"To make any recommendations for patients, we need to perform a large clinical trial that is well-controlled," she says, "The obvious next step would be for us to to try an intervention that will increase serotonin levels or stimulate the vagus nerve in other ways or [to] supplement tryptophan."

In their experiment, they gave the mice a generic form of Prozac a class of medication known as an SSRI that's typically prescribed for depression and increases circulating serotonin in the brain.

The research offers new insights into how immune problems outside of the nervous system can have far-reaching consequences on the brain and other functions in the aftermath of COVID-19, says Stanford's Monje.

"It's not the whole puzzle and it's not meant to be the whole puzzle but it's a really important aspect of it," she says.

Indeed, scientists don't expect to find a single mechanism that, once unearthed, will resolve all these problems.

"There are many ways that COVID can influence the nervous system that are not mutually exclusive," says Monje. "Any individual might be suffering from some combination of those."

For example, her lab has found that, in mice, a mild COVID-19 infection in the lungs sets off an inflammatory cascade that impairs neuron production in the hippocampus.

The long COVID "brain fog" syndrome encompasses a constellation of symptoms, everything from problems with memory and attention to speed of information processing to executive function and fatigue.

Monje says research on the effects of COVID-19 have revealed neurobiological changes elsewhere in the brain, too. "It's broader than just the hippocampus, but certainly the hippocampus has been implicated."

As with all long COVID research, the challenge is figuring out how these findings fit into our ever-changing understanding of the disease.

"Long COVID is a heterogeneous disorder. There are many different manifestations," says Dr. Saurabh Mehandru, a professor of medicine at Mount Sinai in New York. "It's novel, exciting data. I would consider this as important but initial findings which have to be further studied."

Mehandru says "it makes sense the tryptophan-serotonin pathway is being affected" given that SARS-CoV-2 utilizes the ACE-2 receptor, which is widely expressed on the surface of the small intestines.

"It's expressed there because it plays a role in absorption of amino acids" like tryptophan, he says.

But he says there are still many open questions about this business of viral persistence in the gut of long COVID patients.

Because these cells renew every three to five days, "for anything to be persistently active in this layer, it would by definition imply there's some level of replication," he says. It's not clear, however, exactly what's replicating.

Multiple studies have found evidence of genetic material and viral proteins in different tissues. Yet, no one has actually cultured the virus from intestinal tissue, which is admittedly difficult to do, he says. "These are active and important scientific areas of interest."

While it's possible a chronic viral infection in the gut could be driving these symptoms in some patients, as the Penn study suggests, Yale's Iwasaki says the neurocognitive dysfunction in long COVID can be "downstream of many different things, including circulating inflammatory factors and autoantibodies."

"Even though the dots are very well connected with animal models and patient samples, whether this is happening in patients and what proportion might be suffering from this particular pathology, that still requires future studies," says Iwasaki, whose research has found that low levels of the stress hormone cortisol are also associated with long COVID symptoms.

Ultimately, this research may not explain all the neurological symptoms that surround long COVID and that's okay, says Monje.

"It's not that we have to put all the pieces of the puzzle together to begin to make meaningful therapeutic changes," she says. "I think it's worth further pursuing."

See the original post here:

Why do 'long COVID' patients have brain fog? New research points to the gut. : Goats and Soda - NPR

Children infected with Omicron COVID variant remain infectious for three days: Study – The Hindu

October 25, 2023

Children infected with the Omicron variant remain infectious for three days on average after testing positive for the SARS-CoV-2 virus, according to a study.

(For top health news of the day,subscribeto our newsletter Health Matters)

Researchers at the University of Southern California (USC) and Stanford University in the U.S. noted that school policies that require students with COVID-19 to stay out of the classroom for five days are more than sufficient.

"We are basically saying five days is more than sufficient; public health and education leaders may consider shorter durations, said study co-author Neeraj Sood, Director of the COVID-19 Initiative and a senior fellow at the USC Schaeffer Center.

The study, published in the journal JAMA Pediatrics, found that the median time of infectivity was three days, with 18.4% and 3.9% of children still infectious on day five and day 10, respectively.

The researchers also found no association between how long children were infectious and whether they were vaccinated, suggesting return-to-school policies may not need discriminate by vaccine or booster status.

The study seeks to inform policymakers who grapple with how long children must isolate when they contract COVID-19. Such self-isolation policies, aimed at halting the spread of the virus, can negatively interrupt children's education.

"We want to protect other children in the school who could potentially get infected, but at the same time, we don't want to disrupt education for the child who is infected, given the amount of disruption that's already happened, said Mr. Sood.

Also Read | Why Im still masked up

"The duration of infectivity is an important parametre into figuring out what the optimal duration of self-isolation should be," he added.

The researchers partnered with a virus testing company and examined nasal swabs from 76 children in Los Angeles County who were between the ages of seven and 18 and tested positive for COVID-19.

Survey participants provided samples during five home visits over a 10-day period and samples were examined in a lab to find evidence of cell death, a sign of infectivity. All participants were infected with the Omicron variant of COVID-19.

"We wanted to capture how infectivity changed over the 10-day window," said study lead author Nikhilesh Kumar, a Doctor of Medicine student at the USC Keck School of Medicine.

The findings are consistent with previous research on adults who contracted the Omicron variant, which showed no association between vaccination status and time of infectivity.

That research, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, showed adults with Omicron were infected for a slightly longer duration, with a median time of five days, the authors noted.

The team called for further research so that policymakers can consider adjusting the time students must stay out of the classroom.

Visit link:

Children infected with Omicron COVID variant remain infectious for three days: Study - The Hindu

Gut-Dwelling Fungi Amplify Inflammation in Severe COVID-19: Study | Weather.com – The Weather Channel

October 25, 2023

Fungi

Certain gut-dwelling fungi flourish in severe cases of COVID-19, amplifying the excessive inflammation that drives this disease while also causing long-lasting changes in the immune system, according to a new study.

Utilising patient samples and preclinical models, researchers at Weill Cornell Medicine and NewYork-Presbyterian in the US determined that the growth of fungi in the intestinal tract, particularly strains of Candida albicans yeast, trigger an upsurge in immune cells whose actions can exacerbate lung damage.

Their findings, published in the journal Nature Immunology, also elucidate that patients retain a heightened immune response and immune memory against these fungi for up to a year after the resolution of SARS-CoV-2 infection.

The research reveals a new dimension of the complex pathology unleashed by severe COVID-19, said Dr Iliyan Iliev, immunologist and Associate Professor in the Department of Medicine at Weill.

"Severe and long COVID were not thought to involve fungal blooms in the intestines that, in addition to the virus, can impact a patient's immunity," he said.

The team first made the connection when analysis of blood samples from patients diagnosed with severe COVID-19 unveiled the presence of antibodies tuned to attack fungi common to the gut. The researchers then found that populations of yeast, and one species in particular, Candida albicans, increased in the intestines of the patients during the course of severe COVID-19.

When they looked at the patients' immune systems, the researchers found a parallel increase in immune cells called neutrophils. In severe COVID-19, excessive numbers of neutrophils appear in the lungs, where their activity worsens the inflammatory response already damaging these organs.

Turning to preclinical models, the investigators found that mice bearing fungi from patients with severe COVID-19 produced more neutrophils in their blood and lungs, and had signs of heightened inflammation when infected with SARS-CoV-2.

However, giving them an antifungal drug reduced these effects.

From within patients' blood samples, researchers also uncovered evidence of persistent changes to the immune system they believe are related to a condition known as long COVID, in which symptoms linger, or new ones develop after an infection has cleared.

When the team examined patients' blood up to a year afterwards, they found it still contained anti-fungal antibodies. In addition, when they looked at the stem cells that give rise to neutrophils, the researchers found that these progenitors are primed to respond to fungi.

They found that an immune protein called IL-6 that these fungi induce, appears to bolster both the neutrophils and the antibodies.

Further experiments showed that blocking IL-6 in the patients or in mice dampened this immunological memory, causing the presence of neutrophils and antibodies to wane.

While these results do not have immediate implications for treating severe or long COVID, they suggest new opportunities to tailor therapy, according to Dr. Iliev.

**

The above article has been published from a wire agency with minimal modifications to the headline and text.

Visit link:

Gut-Dwelling Fungi Amplify Inflammation in Severe COVID-19: Study | Weather.com - The Weather Channel

Page 120«..1020..119120121122..130140..»