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Showing posts with label Graphic News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Graphic News. Show all posts

Friday, 15 May 2020

Convalescent plasma therapy for severe SARS-CoV-2 - Graphic News

May 15, 2020 - A treatment which involves antibodies donated by people who have recovered from a coronavirus infection is helping thousands of patients worldwide who are severely ill with Covid-19.

Graphic shows the stages of convalescent plasma therapy.
Worldwide there are over 60 clinical trials actively recruiting Covid-19 patients to study the effect of so-called “convalescent plasma.” Plasma is the cell-free liquid part of blood after the removal of all red and white blood cells and platelets.

Mount Sinai Hospital in the U.S. has used the therapy on more than 20 critically ill coronavirus patients. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland, is also conducting convalescent plasma trials, as is Britain’s Guy’s and St Thomas’ hospital in London. Greece recently started trials at the Attiko and Evangelismos hospital in Athens.

India’s three states with the highest number of Covid-19 cases -- Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu and Delhi -- have also sought permission from the Council of Medical Research to conduct convalescent plasma therapy tests.

The plasma from the blood of a recovered Covid-19 patient is rich in antibodies -- proteins secreted by immune cells called B lymphocytes, or B cells, to target a pathogen such as SARS-Cov-2 for destruction.

One cured person’s plasma can produce two doses of the transfusion material. Critically ill patients receive 200-400ml of plasma intravenously, and their progress is then carefully monitored.

While vaccination provides life-long immunity, in the case of passive antibody therapy, the effect lasts only so long as the injected antibodies remain in the blood.

The therapy was first used over a century ago in 1918 during the Spanish flu pandemic. The most recent instance of the use is the 2018 Ebola outbreak. It was used in the H1N1 epidemic of 2008-2009, on SARS which broke out in 2003 and MERS in 2012.
PUBLISHED: 15/05/2020; STORY: Graphic News
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https://www.graphicnews.com/en/pages/40204/health-convalescent-plasma




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Treatment drugs recommended so far:



Monday, 27 April 2020

Stages of Vaccine Development









How ventilators work

How ventilators work

BY JORDI BOU
March 31, 2020 - Inventors, academics, carmakers and aerospace firms are rushing to build hundreds of thousands of ventilators to help save the lives of people with Coronavirus-related breathing difficulties.
For patients with the worst effects of the infection, a ventilator offers the best chance of survival.

A mechanical ventilator unit pushes air into a patient’s lungs, replicating the normal breathing when disease causes the lungs to fail.

Big names of industry such as General Motors, Airbus, McLaren and Dyson have offered their engineering expertise or factory lines, which in many cases have slowed or halted because of the pandemic.

University College London engineers have worked with clinicians at UCLH and Mercedes Formula One to build what is known as the Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP) device. Mercedes F1 is offering to build up to 1,000 CPAP machines per day.

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), some 80% of people with Covid-19 recover without needing hospital treatment.

But one person in six becomes seriously ill and can develop breathing difficulties. In these severe cases, the virus causes damage to the lungs.
PUBLISHED: 31/03/2020; STORY: Graphic News; PICTURES: UCL
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See Graphics picture on:

https://www.graphicnews.com/en/pages/40110/health-global-race-to-make-ventilators


Health authorities bid to install more ventilators


Saturday, 10 September 2016

GRAPHIC NEWS: Zika link to brain disease

Graphic shows links between Zika virus and autoimmune disorders.

April 15, 2016 -- The U.S. Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said there was an established link between pregnant women catching Zika and their babies developing microcephaly -- unusually small heads and brain damage -- as well as other neurological abnormalities.
A study at the Restoration Hospital in Recife, Brazil, followed patients with symptoms of arboviruses, the family of infectious agents that includes Zika and dengue, between December 2014 and June 2015.

Six people who tested positive for the Zika virus also developed neurological symptoms, two suffered attacks that swelled the brain and damaged its myelin, the fatty material that protects nerves there and at the spinal cord.

The research will be presented at the American Academy of Neurology's 68th Annual Meeting in Vancouver, Canada, April 15 to 21, 2016.
http://www.graphicnews.com/en/go/pages/34163/HEALTH-Zika-link-to-brain-disease