Category: Corona Virus

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Coronavirus vs. seasonal flu: Symptoms that can differentiate between the two infections – Times of India

August 4, 2022

Both SARs-CoV-2 and influenza are respiratory viruses that are contagious and can affect your lungs and breathing. Patients infected with COVID or the flu can experience similar symptoms ranging from fever, cough, body aches, sore throat, runny/stuffy nose, muscle pain, headache and gastrointestinal issues.

However, COVID-19 can cause different complications from the flu, such as blood clots and multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children, according to the Mayo Clinic.

Furthermore, experts believe symptoms like loss of sense of smell and taste are specific to COVID-19, which was prevalent during the Delta wave.

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Coronavirus vs. seasonal flu: Symptoms that can differentiate between the two infections - Times of India

This DIY box helps clear indoor air of the coronavirus. Why aren’t more people using them? – UCI News

August 2, 2022

This DIY box helps clear indoor air of the coronavirus. Why arent more people using them?

When cholera ravaged Europe and North America in the 19th century, people revolutionized sewage by creating the modern sewage system, said AndrewNoymer, an associate professor of population health and disease prevention at UC Irvine. They could have just said, Boil your water. But they didnt do that. They gave people clean drinking water.Ensuring clean air indoors is the 21st century equivalent,Noymersaid. But its a long-term solution, and people are still hoping that COVID is just going to go away.

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This DIY box helps clear indoor air of the coronavirus. Why aren't more people using them? - UCI News

Montgomery County reported 957 additional COVID-19 cases this week – Montgomery Advertiser

August 2, 2022

Mike Stucka USA TODAY NETWORK| Montgomery Advertiser

Alabama reported 16,712 new cases of coronavirus in the week ending Sunday, down 3.8% from the previous week. The previous week had 17,366 new cases of the virus that causes COVID-19.

Alabama ranked sixth among the states where coronavirus was spreading the fastest on a per-person basis, a USA TODAY Network analysis of Johns Hopkins University data shows. In the latest week coronavirus cases in the United States increased 7.4% from the week before, with 906,593 cases reported. With 1.47% of the country's population, Alabama had 1.84% of the country's cases in the last week. Across the country, 28 states had more cases in the latest week than they did in the week before.

Montgomery County reported 957 cases and one death in the latest week. A week earlier, it had reported 989 cases and five deaths. Throughout the pandemic it has reported 62,703 cases and 965 deaths.

Elmore County reported 372 cases and zero deaths in the latest week. A week earlier, it had reported 431 cases and zero deaths. Throughout the pandemic it has reported 25,963 cases and 352 deaths.

Autauga County reported 200 cases and zero deaths in the latest week. A week earlier, it had reported 231 cases and three deaths. Throughout the pandemic it has reported 17,468 cases and 220 deaths.

More: I got COVID (again). I'm staying home (again). Why are so few following the rules?

Dallas County reported 180 cases and zero deaths in the latest week. A week earlier, it had reported 203 cases and two deaths. Throughout the pandemic it has reported 9,511 cases and 247 deaths.

Lowndes County reported 26 cases and zero deaths in the latest week. A week earlier, it had reported 35 cases and two deaths. Throughout the pandemic it has reported 2,890 cases and 79 deaths.

Across Alabama, cases fell in 41 counties, with the best declines in Mobile County, with 1,261 cases from 1,393 a week earlier; in Escambia County, with 84 cases from 185; and in Baldwin County, with 699 cases from 790.

>> See how your community has fared with recent coronavirus cases

Within Alabama, the worst weekly outbreaks on a per-person basis were in Monroe County with 550 cases per 100,000 per week; Dallas County with 484; and Morgan County with 474. The Centers for Disease Control says high levels of community transmission begin at 100 cases per 100,000 per week.

Adding the most new cases overall were Jefferson County, with 2,531 cases; Madison County, with 1,278 cases; and Mobile County, with 1,261. Weekly case counts rose in 26 counties from the previous week. The worst increases from the prior week's pace were in Tuscaloosa, Madison and Marshall counties.

In Alabama, 19 people were reported dead of COVID-19 in the week ending Sunday. In the week before that, 50 people were reported dead.

A total of 1,424,411 people in Alabama have tested positive for the coronavirus since the pandemic began, and 19,891 people have died from the disease, Johns Hopkins University data shows. In the United States 91,316,648 people have tested positive and 1,029,926 people have died.

>> Track coronavirus cases across the United States

USA TODAY analyzed federal hospital data as of Sunday, July 31. Likely COVID patients admitted in the state:

Likely COVID patients admitted in the nation:

Hospitals in 24 states reported more COVID-19 patients than a week earlier, while hospitals in 21 states had more COVID-19 patients in intensive-care beds. Hospitals in 30 states admitted more COVID-19 patients in the latest week than a week prior, the USA TODAY analysis of U.S. Health and Human Services data shows.

The USA TODAY Network is publishing localized versions of this story on its news sites across the country, generated with data from Johns Hopkins University and the Centers for Disease Control. If you have questions about the data or the story, contact Mike Stucka at mstucka@gannett.com.

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Montgomery County reported 957 additional COVID-19 cases this week - Montgomery Advertiser

Covid is still causing havoc around the world – CNN

August 2, 2022

This is the weekly edition of CNNs coronavirus newsletter. Look out for your roundup every Wednesday. If you havent subscribed yet, sign up here.

CNN

The number of new Covid-19 cases is rising once again and while the virus isnt killing nearly as many people as it used to thanks to vaccinations it is still causing havoc around the world.

With labor shortages already paralyzing airports and wrecking the hospitality sector, a wave of worker absences due to sickness is the last thing the economy needs.

The latest wave of infections is driven by the most infectious and transmissible variant identified so far BA.5.

Based on the sequencing data reported to the World Health Organization (WHO), about half of all coronavirus cases globally are now caused by this variant. In the US, BA.5 accounts for about 80% of new cases, according to the latest data from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

The variant is keeping experts on their toes because of its ability to evade immunity and cause reinfection.

It is important that we continue to talk about Covid, WHOs technical lead on Covid-19 Maria Van Kerkhove said in a briefing on Tuesday, stressing the need to keep up the efforts to vaccinate the most vulnerable.

People who are more likely to die, and this is consistent across all countries, are people who have not been vaccinated.

According to WHO, about a third of the new cases reported last week were in Europe, a third in the Western Pacific region and 25% in the Americas.

The latest surge is having a huge impact on the economy.

The International Monetary Fund slashed its world economic forecast on Tuesday, as it predicted major slowdowns in the three biggest economies: The United States, China and Europe.

It said that Covid-19 lockdowns in China have continued to hamper the economy, triggering a slowdown that has been worse than anticipated.

A recent example of the crushing effect of Covid on the economy is the gaming hub of Macao.

Governed by China, Macao is subject to its zero Covid policy, which means that the region has been under stay-at-home restrictions since last week. Gaming accounts for more than 80% of government revenue and is Macaos most important industry. Because casinos are also part of the shutdown, the government revenue is plummeting.

Then theres the impact of long Covid. A study published Wednesday by the Institute for Fiscal Studies, a London-based economic think tank, said one in 10 UK workers with long Covid have stopped working while sick, which means an estimated 110,000 workers are currently missing from the countrys labor market.

Q: What are the Covid-19 vaccine side effects in young kids?

A: Yes now more than ever. The Omicron BA.5 subvariant, which is dominant in the US, is causing more reinfections than earlier strains, a new analysis has found.

Gene sequencing company Helix looked at how many times the same individuals were testing positive with Covid-19 and found that, of around 300,000 US infections since March 2021, the number of reinfections had nearly doubled from 3.6% during the BA.2 wave in May to 6.4% during the BA.5 wave in July.

Shishi Luo, associate director of bioinformatics and infectious disease at Helix, called it a jump, saying that their latest data showed that the fraction of all infections that are reinfections have increased quite a bit.

Luo thinks this could be happening for a range of reasons, such as mutations to BA.5 and waning immunity, adding that statistically speaking, youre more likely to get reinfected the longer it has been since your last infection, just based on the data weve generated.

Send your questions here. Are you a health care worker fighting Covid-19? Message us on WhatsApp about the challenges youre facing: +1 347-322-0415.

The hope is to shore up the defenses right there in the nose so that the virus cant even replicate in the nose, said Dr. Ellen Foxman, an immunobiologist at the Yale School of Medicine. And then someone who has a really effective mucosal vaccination cant even really support viral replication or make viruses that can infect other people.

Animals sold at Wuhan market most likely started Covid-19 pandemic, studies find

Two studies looking into the origins of the Covid-19 pandemic were published on Tuesday in the journal Science. Both arrived at the same conclusion: The Hunan Seafood Market in Wuhan, China, was likely the epicenter for the virus that rippled across the world.

One study did a spatial and environmental analysis, finding that, while the exact circumstances remain obscure, the coronavirus was most likely present in live animals sold at the market in 2019. The other study looked at when the virus was first transmitted from animals to humans, suggesting it was around November 18, 2019 that infections first appeared in people who had a direct connection to the market.

Kristian Andersen, the co-author of the first study and professor in the Department of Immunology and Microbiology at Scripps Research, said while the studies do not disprove the lab leak theory, they were persuasive enough to change his mind. I was quite convinced of the lab leak myself (but) based on data and analysis Ive done over the last decade on many other viruses, Ive convinced myself that actually the data points to this particular market, he said.

On Wednesday, Wuhan shut down a district of nearly a million people in the latest action of Chinas zero-Covid policy after four asymptomatic Covid cases were detected. Authorities in the Jiangxia district said it would enforce three days of temporary control measures.

Over 40% of parents to young kids will not get them vaccinated

According to a survey by the Kaiser Family Foundation, 43% of parents to under-5s in the US say they will not get them vaccinated against Covid-19 the highest figure since the KFFs Vaccine Monitor survey began asking the question, Virginia Langmaid reports.

Only 17% of parents of children between 6 months and 5 years old say their child has been vaccinated or will be as soon as possible, the study found. Another 27% say they will wait to see how effective they are in other children, and 13% said they will only vaccinate if required to do so for school or childcare.

Concerns over side effects are a major reason for the hesitancy. More than 8 in 10 parents of unvaccinated young children said they were concerned over side effects, a concern shared by many parents of vaccinated children too.

The US Food and Drug Administration authorized Covid-19 vaccinations in children as young as 6 months in mid-June.

Top Chinese officials including President receive domestic vaccine amid public concern over safety

Chinese President Xi Jinping and other top state officials have been given domestic Covid-19 vaccines, the ruling Communist Party said in a rare public statement aimed at encouraging booster uptake in the nation.

Deputy head of the National Health Commission (NHC) Zeng Yixin said on Saturday that all Chinas incumbent state and party leaders have been vaccinated against Covid-19 with domestically made shots, referring to top officials at the national and deputy national level a category that includes Xi, Premier Li Keqiang and other senior leaders.

Information regarding the health of Chinese leaders is seldom disclosed to the public; Xis vaccination status had previously not been revealed.

Nearly 90% of Chinas eligible population has been fully vaccinated. But among over 80-year-olds, only 61% have been fully vaccinated and 38.4% have received boosters, the NHC added.

While it seems like summer romances and frolicking in the sea and sun may once again be drowned out by the latest Covid-19 variant, we can still make it a season to remember.

CNNs Scottie Andrew suggests some ways to fill the long, hot days, from heading to the beach to catching the first rays during the sunrise when it will be cooler and less crowded, to ice cream dates complete with cones in places with ample outdoor seating.

But wherever you are, remember to protect yourself from the scorching heat weve been seeing in the US and around the world. Take an umbrella or a makeshift parasol if you will and live your best life in a Bridgerton-esque world.

Read more here.

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Covid is still causing havoc around the world - CNN

Bristol County reported 844 additional COVID cases this week – Taunton Daily Gazette

August 2, 2022

Mike Stucka USA TODAY NETWORK| The Taunton Daily Gazette

Massachusetts reported 11,075 new cases of coronavirus in the week ending Sunday, down 3.9% from the previous week. The previous week had 11,525 new cases of the virus that causes COVID-19.

Massachusetts ranked 45th among the states where coronavirus was spreading the fastest on a per-person basis, a USA TODAY Network analysis of Johns Hopkins University data shows. In the latest week coronavirus cases in the United States increased 7.4% from the week before, with 906,593 cases reported. With 2.07% of the country's population, Massachusetts had 1.22% of the country's cases in the last week. Across the country, 28 states had more cases in the latest week than they did in the week before.

Bristol County reported 844 cases and five deaths in the latest week. A week earlier, it had reported 702 cases and five deaths. Throughout the pandemic it has reported 164,400 cases and 2,224 deaths.

Across Massachusetts, cases fell in eight counties, with the best declines in Middlesex County, with 2,325 cases from 2,505 a week earlier; in Suffolk County, with 1,219 cases from 1,322; and in Hampshire County, with 223 cases from 265.

>> See how your community has fared with recent coronavirus cases

Within Massachusetts, the worst weekly outbreaks on a per-person basis were in Hampden County with 193 cases per 100,000 per week; Berkshire County with 187; and Barnstable County with 165. The Centers for Disease Control says high levels of community transmission begin at 100 cases per 100,000 per week.

Adding the most new cases overall were Middlesex County, with 2,325 cases; Essex County, with 1,251 cases; and Suffolk County, with 1,219. Weekly case counts rose in four counties from the previous week. The worst increases from the prior week's pace were in Bristol, Essex and Berkshire counties.

In Massachusetts, 49 people were reported dead of COVID-19 in the week ending Sunday. In the week before that, 59 people were reported dead.

A total of 1,966,919 people in Massachusetts have tested positive for the coronavirus since the pandemic began, and 21,176 people have died from the disease, Johns Hopkins University data shows. In the United States 91,316,648 people have tested positive and 1,029,926 people have died.

Note: For Massachusetts, Johns Hopkins University reports data in a combined health department for Dukes and Nantucket counties. Those two counties may appear without any cases, and this will skew rankings of counties.

>> Track coronavirus cases across the United States

USA TODAY analyzed federal hospital data as of Sunday, July 31. Likely COVID patients admitted in the state:

Likely COVID patients admitted in the nation:

Hospitals in 24 states reported more COVID-19 patients than a week earlier, while hospitals in 21 states had more COVID-19 patients in intensive-care beds. Hospitals in 30 states admitted more COVID-19 patients in the latest week than a week prior, the USA TODAY analysis of U.S. Health and Human Services data shows.

The USA TODAY Network is publishing localized versions of this story on its news sites across the country, generated with data from Johns Hopkins University and the Centers for Disease Control. If you have questions about the data or the story, contact Mike Stucka at mstucka@gannett.com.

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Bristol County reported 844 additional COVID cases this week - Taunton Daily Gazette

How many New Yorkers tested for COVID in other states? What we know – The Journal News

August 2, 2022

Florida and New York COVID cultures are worlds apart

USA TODAY Network journalists compare the differences in COVID culture between New York and Florida.

Rob Landers, Florida Today

About 2,000 New Yorkers got tested for COVID-19 while traveling in Florida during the initial omicron variant wave this winter, state data show.

The newly reported test numbers offered the first glimpse of omicrons impact on New Yorkers visiting Florida, as debates raged over the two states drastically different pandemic responses.

But the full scope of interstate coronavirus infections remains unclear because few states share test data, according to a USA TODAY Network analysis of state records obtained via public records request.

Among the findings of COVID-19 test data spanning from Nov. 1, 2021 through Feb. 3, 2022:

DATA: New York and Florida approached COVID-19 differently. What does the data say?

COVID: NY COVID-19 cases stay flat as nation continues to fight BA.5 subvariant

As authorities brace for a COVID-19 surge this fall, interstate testing gaps joined a growing list of potential blind spots for catching and containing outbreaks early. Others include limited at-home test result reporting, as well as the end of most contact tracing efforts.

Meanwhile, New Yorks plan for combating COVID-19 allows for ramping up a range of shelved infectious-disease control tools used earlier in the pandemic, such as mass testing and vaccination sites, which closed during lulls in cases.

Heading into the school year, state officials further aim to limit threats by urging students and educators to use at-home tests before returning to classrooms. The state plans to distribute nearly 20 million test kits in the coming weeks.

New Yorkers seeking prescription COVID-19 antiviral pills also have access to 44 test-to-treat sites statewide, as well as a recently launched state hotline 888-873-2869 offering telehealth consults to access the pills.

If anything, this pandemic and COVID has taught us, preparations are the key to literally survival, Gov. Kathy Hocul said recently, detailing the fall strategy.

While schools are currently poised to open without mask mandates, Hochul said she would consider requiring masks in classrooms again, if pandemic conditions warranted, such as hospitalizations skyrocketing or a variant emerging that caused more severe illness in children.

State agencies and health providers are also once again stockpiling masks, gowns, and other personal protective equipment, under measures intended to prevent the dire shortages that cost countless lives in early 2020.

Despite recent moves to relax many COVID-19 restrictions, New York fueled politically charged debates over outbreaks spreading between states earlier in the pandemic.

Many of the policy clashes focused on New Yorks various attempts at imposing domestic travel restrictions aimed at curbing coronavirus outbreaks. Many health experts, however, asserted the policies had limited impact due to the contagiousness of COVID-19 and enforcement hurdles.

In 2020, New York imposed a 14-day quarantine requirement for out-of-state travelers visiting the state.

The complex web of rules applied to those spending more than 24 hours outside New York, and eventually included a test-out option to shorten the quarantine period based on a negative result.

Enforcement of the travel restrictions relied mostly on the honor system, although COVID-19 contact tracers for months asked domestic air and rail travelers arriving in New York to fill out questionnaires related to the effort.

In August 2020, about 67,000 out-of-state students also arrived in New York to hunker down in dorms, apartments and hotel rooms for mandatory 14-day quarantine periods.

Despite the travel restrictions, COVID-19 cases eventually spiked in New York in the late fall of 2020, as holiday gatherings proved the most effective means of spreading the virus.

In April 2021, New York ended the domestic travel restrictions as COVID-19 vaccines became more widely available.

Now, widespread access to COVID-19 vaccines and antiviral pills makes the prospect of a return of domestic travel bans unlikely, as many people are protected against severe illness and death, said Dr. Aaron Glatt, an Infectious Diseases Society of America expert.

But people should still weigh risk factors, such as higher infection rates and hospitalizations, when considering traveling, said Glatt, who oversees infectious diseases at Mount Sinai South Nassau Hospital.

Intensive care unit usage and death rates, he added, have recently become the most accurate gauge of COVID-19 risk levels for a specific community due to gaps in case tracking and incidental COVID-19 positives involving hospital patients with unrelated illness.

People need to make individual decisions, taking into account the data as best as they possibly can, he said, adding: Its a far more nuanced approach than it was previously.

COVID policy: Florida and New York share an interstate, but their COVID cultures are worldsapart

Polio in NY: Polio in Rockland wastewater as early as June, samples show

Many of the out-of-state COVID-19 test results involved New Yorkers getting tested in New Jersey, or New York specimens outsourced to New Jersey labs.

A total of about 66,000 of the tests fell into the New Jersey category, while Florida accounted for most of the remaining tests. The five other states reported a total of just 13 test results to New York.

Health care: NY health insurers propose nearly 19% rate hike, say COVID-19 costs, inflation are to blame

Of the 68,100 tests, about 6,000 were deemed positive. Another roughly 1,200 test reports either lacked result details or were deemed invalid.

About 270 of the 2,000 tests in Florida were positive, with another 205 lacking result details.

While New York received test data from ordering facilities in just seven states, some of the cases involved providers from a handful of other states, suggesting links to additional travel-related testing where specimen processing was outsourced.

Yet the lack of detailed testing information from 43 states and massive scope of the initial omicron wave suggested thousands of additional New Yorkers contracted COVID-19 while traveling in other states.

For example, New York reported a total of about 6.8 million new COVID-19 cases during the wave, which excluded countless additional at-home test results.

Still, Glatt described ever-evolving efforts to keep tracking the virus spread as key to reducing preventable suffering if a resurgence unfolds in coming months.

All of the data that we have has to be understood as being one part of many important factors, he said.

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How many New Yorkers tested for COVID in other states? What we know - The Journal News

What is the immunopathogenesis of pediatric COVID-19? – News-Medical.Net

August 2, 2022

In a recent study published in the Clinical & Translational Immunology journal, researchers assessed the immunopathogenesis of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infection in children.

Symptoms and outcomes associated with pediatric severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infections differ significantly from those in adult patients, with lower mortality and morbidity rates. Understanding the factors responsible for the lesser number of adverse effects of COVID-19 on pediatric populations could play an important role in assessing COVID-19 disease severity in adults and developing novel therapies against SARS-CoV-2.

In the present study, researchers summarized reports that investigated cytokine profiles, pre-existing immunity, antibody, B-cell, and innate responses among children diagnosed with multisystem inflammation and acute COVID-19.

Studies have reported multiple phases of the human immune response against COVID-19 infection. Among adult patients, the first phase involves a protective immune response that aims to eliminate the virus. The second phase is characterized by a dysregulated or over-activated host response along with a more severe multi-system disorder. The third phase includes the post-acute COVID-19 sequelae and is called long-COVID. Most pediatric patients have been reported to display an effective first-phase response while a small proportion of patients develop a hyperinflammatory response leading tomultisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C).

Heterogeneous outcomes observed after SARS-CoV-2 infections are likely a result of pre-existing immunity derived from prior exposure to seasonal Coronaviruseslike HCoV-229E and HCoV-NL63. While most primary Coronavirusinfections are reported in childhood, high incidences of reinfection occur in adults. Moreover, adults residing with children in the same household have an increased risk of exposure to viruses and increased cross-reactive immunity, thus leading to a lower risk of COVID-19 infection proportional to the higher number of children sharing the household.

Furthermore, individuals with a history of previous seasonal Coronavirus infection had a lower chance of experiencing severe COVID-19 as well as better survival probability as opposed to those with no history. A study found that 62% of children and 5% of adults had cross-reactive antibodies, which displayed a neutralizing activity against SARS-CoV-2. In contrast, another study noted that the cross-reactive antibodies found were rarely neutralizing.

Similarities of MIS-C with other disorders such as toxic shock syndrome, macrophage activation syndrome, and sepsis have triggered further research to understand MIS-C pathogenesis and treatment. These include the measurement of cytokine and the determination of adaptive or innate immune responses in MIS-C.

Studies have demonstrated a remarkable inflammatory profile characterized by an anti-inflammatory response in all the patient groups with slight variations between COVID-19-pneumonia and MIS-C. Interferon-alpha (IFN) was at a comparable or higher proportion in MIS-C as compared to adult COVID-19 infections, while interleukin-10 (IL-10), IL-17, and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-) were at higher levels in MIS-C than in adults. Chemokines are involved in the activation and recruitment of several immune cells such as T cells, natural killer (NK) cells, monocytes, and neutrophils.

Various studies suggest that an early and significant innate response plays a key role in the determination of COVID-19 disease severity. This led to the possibility that an excessive innate response was important in the development of MIS-C. IFN release along with the induction of cytokines such as IL-1, IL-6, IL-18, and TNF- resulted in the suppression of viral load and the stimulation of the adaptive immune response. A study highlighted the importance of adequate IFN response by detecting inborn mutations in IFN signaling in 3.5% of lethal COVID-19 cases. In contrast, another study showed that 13% of the patients experiencing severe COVID-19 had autoantibodies against type 1 IFN.

A study showed comparable anti-SARS-CoV-2 spike protein responses among MIS-C and acute COVID-19 patients and adult donors of convalescent plasma. However, adults diagnosed with COVID-pneumonia displayed the highest concentrations of anti-spike protein responses. While neutralizing antibodies were noted in children after diagnosing varying severities of COVID-19, adults had higher concentrations of neutralizing antibodies than children. At the same time, no such difference was observed among children with acute COVID-19 and MIS-C.

Another study observed broadly normal frequencies of B-cells among MIS-C patients. Furthermore, increased immunoglobulin G1 (IgG1) and IgG3 plasmablasts were also detected among children with MIS-C and acute COVID-19.Moreover, MIS-C patients had lower levels of plasmablasts displaying somatic hypermutation. At the same time, the same levels were higher in severe MIS-C casesthan in non-severe MIS-C cases.

The international Best Available Treatment Study (BATS) has provided sufficient evidence to conclude that the commonly used immunomodulatory treatments such as corticosteroids, intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG), or a combination of corticosteroids and IVIG are related to a faster resolution of inflammation as compared no immunomodulatory therapy. Some studies have displayed rapid resolution of cardiac dysfunction among patients who initially received IVIG and corticosteroid treatment as opposed to those treated with IVIG alone.

Overall, the study summarized the various immunopathogenic aspects of MISC-C and pediatric COVID-19.

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What is the immunopathogenesis of pediatric COVID-19? - News-Medical.Net

More people are getting reinfected with COVID-19 – theday.com

August 2, 2022

Rob Richter had a dry cough and some congestion, and he was a little tired, but mostly he was annoyed. It was the morning of July 12, and a rapid test he took at home showed he was positive for COVID-19.

It was less than two days after the Mystic resident had returned from a conference in Boston, where he believes he was exposed and a little under nine months since he contracted COVID-19 the first time.

It was late October when Richter, 62, first got COVID-19, he believes from a friend with whom he drove to a yoga class. He works as director of arts programming at Connecticut College and had the ability to get frequent PCR tests on campus, so he took multiple tests.

This infection meant he had to cancel travel to a Peace Corps reunion, where he was supposed to represent his late father, who served as deputy director of the Peace Corps in Kenya in the 1960s. Richter, who got his first booster shot shortly before his first case and his second booster in April, said both cases were mild.

Reinfections were relatively rare last year, but that changed when the omicron variant surged in the U.S. in winter. The novel coronavirus continues to evolve, and the subvariant dubbed BA.5 accounted for 81.9% of new cases for the week ending July 23, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

One study followed more than 250,000 people in Serbia who had laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 between March 2020 and October 2021, following them until Jan. 31, and recorded nearly 87% of the reinfections in January. The reinfection risk was higher among women, health care workers and people with fewer vaccine doses.

According to data from the United Kingdom, the rate of reinfections was fairly steady from May to December of last year before rising dramatically, peaking in April and then dropping slightly. People were more likely to be reinfected if they were asymptomatic in their first infection and are younger.

The U.S. doesnt track reinfections, but some states do. New York, for example, reported the most reinfections for the week beginning Dec. 27.

Dr. Prakash Kandel, an inpatient doctor who treats COVID-19 patients at Lawrence + Memorial Hospital in New London, said he saw a few reinfections during the delta variant wave last year but its more common now. He said while vaccinated people can get reinfected, the vaccine still provides protection against severe infection.

Most of the people he sees are not in the hospital specifically for COVID-19. Elderly people may come to the hospital for nonspecific symptoms and then test positive, he said, and its hard to tell the symptoms whether its purely from COVID or its something else, because its multiple things going on at the same time.

If it seems like more people are getting reinfected now, its partially due to timing: A lot of people in the U.S. contracted COVID-19 in January and February, and the immunity built up from those infections has waned. The CDC estimated that the percentage of people in the U.S. with at least one infection increased from 33.5% at the end of December to 57.7% at the end of February.

I think theres two things going on, said Dr. Ted Cohen, an infectious disease epidemiologist at the Yale School of Public Health. The first is that we have a lot of people who have been infected at this point, and thats necessary to be reinfected, obviously, and secondly, some of these new variants that are circulating, especially BA.5, seems to have an important capacity to evade previous immune responses.

It's difficult to estimate how many people have gotten COVID-19 at least once because so many people test positive on at-home rapid tests, which arent reported.

But Cohen is a contributor to Covidestim, covidestim.org, a collaboration between departments at the Yale School of Public Health and Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health that uses a statistical model to try to paint a complete, current, and granular picture of the U.S. COVID-19 epidemic.

The model estimates that Connecticut has seen 131,000 infections per 100,000 people to date meaning that on average, people have been infected more than once, even though some people have yet to be infected at all. But this is their best guess, and Cohen said theres wide uncertainty around the number of infections in the state.

How do symptoms compare?

Kandel hasnt seen anyone who was hospitalized for COVID-19 during a reinfection but not during the first infection, and both he and Cohen said reinfections on average are likely to be less severe than initial infections.

The Serbian study, which ran through January, found that the hospitalization rate for a reinfection was 1.08%, compared to 3.66% for a first infection.

But theres still risk.

A preprint posted in June, which hasnt yet been peer-reviewed and is under review at the journal publisher Nature Portfolio, found that compared to people with one infection, reinfection contributes additional risks of hospitalization, other adverse health outcomes and even death from any cause.

Researchers at the Washington University School of Medicine and VA Saint Louis Health Care System found that reinfected people exhibited increased risk of cardiovascular disorders, diabetes, fatigue, gastrointestinal disorders and more.

The authors said the risks were evident regardless of vaccination status.

The study used U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs databases to look at health outcomes of 38,926 people with two or more COVID-19 infections, which included 246 people with four or more infections. It also included 257,427 people with one infection and a control group of 5.4 million people who had never been infected, but across the groups, only 10% of the participants are women, reflecting the VA population.

The data also showed increased risk of mental health and neurologic disorders from reinfection.

COVID saps your oomph

Mystic resident Maria Saganis, 57, thinks the mental health symptoms of COVID-19 arent discussed enough. She said she contracted the coronavirus last September and in early July, respectively, while traveling to Missouri and Los Angeles.

I was annoyed when I got it, because Id gone through the vaccines, and then I got hit with it, and when I got hit with it, I couldnt breathe, she said of the first infection. The fatigue alone was debilitating; I didnt eat for six days. I slept for six days, and honestly, in the middle of it, I was hoping I would just cross over.

She just felt extremely dead inside, something that was particularly rough for someone who works as an intuitive healer.

While she didnt have a fever or flu-like symptoms the second time, she was fatigued and still is and went through that same depression. She described it as being in a funk and not feeling like herself, not feeling like she has her usual oomph.

Saganis said she had breast cancer in the 90s but has been free and clear since, and shes not someone who ever gets colds or the flu.

It pisses me off. I dont like being down. I dont like being in isolation. I dont like having to quarantine for seven days. It just sucks, Saganis said. She said shes heard from clients that theyre also weepy and depressed, that its almost like PMS on steroids.

How often can someone get reinfected?

Reinfection has been defined as an infection more than 90 days after a previous one. But as new omicron subvariants have emerged and skirted immune protections, University of California San Francisco infectious disease specialist Peter Chin-Hong told The Wall Street Journal that rule of thumb is now completely out the window.

An Australian governmental health committee earlier this month advised that the reinfection period be reduced from 12 weeks to 28 days. But its still unlikely someone would get reinfected with the same subvariant within a few months.

Chris Kennedy a Groton native splitting his time between here and Arizona, working as fundraising director for the Vatican Observatory contracted COVID-19 in January and mid-June.

The first time was just two weeks after receiving the Moderna booster, which followed his unusual vaccine history of being in the AstraZeneca trial and then getting the Johnson & Johnson shot.

Kennedy, 32, thinks he got the coronavirus the first time from traveling to England, though no members of the family with whom he stayed tested positive, and the second time from a wedding.

He described his symptoms the first time as mild, with a sore throat, headache and a little bit of congestion. He said the symptoms the second time were also all above the neck, but the sore throat lasted longer and he had more nasal congestion.

But he said after the first bout, he would wake up after eight hours of sleep feeling like he only got four, and the fatigue lasted for about three months.

e.moser@theday.com

See the article here:

More people are getting reinfected with COVID-19 - theday.com

Coronavirus Omicron variant, vaccine, and case numbers in the United States: Aug. 1, 2022 – Medical Economics

August 2, 2022

Patient deaths: 1,029,926

Total vaccine doses distributed: 789,714,195

Patients whove received the first dose: 261,654,261

Patients whove received the second dose: 223,245,563

% of population fully vaccinated (both doses, not including boosters): 67.2%

% tied to Omicron variant: 100%

% tied to Other: 0%

Read more here:

Coronavirus Omicron variant, vaccine, and case numbers in the United States: Aug. 1, 2022 - Medical Economics

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