Moderator: Soñadora
Jamie wrote:Aren't you all lucky. I live here in freedumland Floriduh. Everything is open for business. Apps? So that the tech giant can trace my every move? Shirley you are joking.
TheOffice wrote:Jamie wrote:Aren't you all lucky. I live here in freedumland Floriduh. Everything is open for business. Apps? So that the tech giant can trace my every move? Shirley you are joking.
Jamie, we are supposed to go to Marathon Key next month. Would that be stupid?
LarryHoward wrote:Benno von Humpback wrote:kimbottles wrote:Benno von Humpback wrote:I loaded it. No alarms so far.
None here yet....
My risk is so low that I expect few pings. I go to work, where everyone is supposed to get tested once a week and there’s been virtually no transmission, to the commissary once a week, and on the occasional group ride (until last weekend when a guy tested +).
Well, I enabled it so we’ll see what happens.
Olaf Hart wrote:It’s not clear whether the effect, if it happened, was on the COVID or the sepsis, which presumably is secondary bacterial infection in the bloodstream.
Reassuring that they are following up with a double blind study, it’s being sorted out the right way.
I love this left field stuff, it’s surprising how many significant medical discoveries are the result of serendipity, not research programs.
"Unfortunately, sepsis isn't a "disease" as it is called in this article. It is a "syndrome" usually related to bacteria entering the bloodstream.
"Viremia" is a syndrome that we've all experienced at the onset of a galloping viral disease like influenza. COVID starts the same way with fever, aches, etc."
Benno von Humpback wrote:Yeah, but don't start taking vitamin C tablets on account of this. You need simply massive intravenous doses to get any of the interesting effects.
BeauV wrote:
OH,
This is quite interesting. Obviously, these doctors are radically changing the PH of the patient's blood. I wonder if the increased acidity is the agent that causes the improvement. Of course, I also wonder if there will ever be more than one or two folks who respond this way. I'm always leery of basing anything on a small number of samples. However, if it doesn't' damage the patient, there should be plenty of folks to try it out on this winter.
Benno von Humpback wrote:BeauV wrote:
OH,
This is quite interesting. Obviously, these doctors are radically changing the PH of the patient's blood. I wonder if the increased acidity is the agent that causes the improvement. Of course, I also wonder if there will ever be more than one or two folks who respond this way. I'm always leery of basing anything on a small number of samples. However, if it doesn't' damage the patient, there should be plenty of folks to try it out on this winter.
Respiratory failure causes CO2 retention and a drop in blood pH, so if that were the mechanism, pneumonia would cure itself. Acidosis is not a good thing.
TheOffice wrote:There is a 38% false negative rate.assume it’s wrong.
Olaf Hart wrote:TheOffice wrote:There is a 38% false negative rate.assume it’s wrong.
A rate that high suggests there is a problem with timing of the tests, perhaps too soon...
My impression is that clinicians are diagnosing this thing from the symptoms, and using the test as a backup.
Down here you have to quarantine till the result comes back, may not be long enough...
Anecdotally, a lot of USA folks seem to be managing this thing themselves without testing, so the incidence rates may be a lot lower than the actual number of cases.