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Giovanni

05/05/20 12:29 AM

#39539 RE: silver_bars #39537

Ot Virus


Coronavirus Causes Blood Clots Harming Organs From Brain to Toes

Jason GaleMay 5, 2020, 1:00 AM GMT+2



Doctors treat Covid-19 patients in an intensive care unit at a Hospital in Rome, Italy on March 26. Photographer: Antonio Masiello/Getty Images
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Another threat from the lung virus that causes Covid-19 has emerged that may cause swift, sometimes fatal damage: blood clots.

Doctors around the world are noting a raft of clotting-related disorders -- from benign skin lesions on the feet sometimes called “ Covid toe” to life-threatening strokes and blood-vessel blockages. Ominously, if dangerous clots go untreated, they may manifest days to months after respiratory symptoms have resolved.

The clotting phenomenon is “probably the most important thing that’s emerged over the last perhaps month or two,” said Mitchell Levy, chief of pulmonary critical care and sleep medicine at the Warren Albert School of Medicine at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island.

It’s not unusual for infections to raise the risk of clotting. The 1918 Spanish flu pandemic, caused by a novel strain of influenza that killed some 50 million people worldwide, was also linked to downstream damage from clots that could end lives dramatically.

Viruses including HIV, dengue and Ebola are all known to make blood cells prone to clumping. The pro-clotting effect may be even more pronounced in patients with the coronavirus.

“There’s something about this virus that’s exaggerated that to the nth degree,” said Levy, who is also medical director of the medical intensive care unit at Rhode Island Hospital. “We’re seeing clotting in a way in this illness that we have not seen in the past.”

The problem is visible in clots -- doctors call them thrombi -- that form in patients’ arterial catheters and filters used to support failing kidneys. More pernicious are the clots that impede blood flow in the lungs, causing difficulty breathing.

Rapid DeteriorationThese are probably what’s causing patients who otherwise appear well to suddenly “fall off the ledge” and develop severe blood-oxygen deficiency, said Margaret Pisani, an associate professor of medicine at the Yale University School of Medicine in New Haven, Connecticut.

Clotting disorders in Covid-19 patients were noted by researchers in China in February, but their gravity has since become clearer. While doctors had thought the vast majority of lung damage was due to viral pneumonia, they’re now looking more closely at clotting.



Photographer: Kevin Dietsch/UPI/Bloomberg

“When you look at autopsies now, we are seeing things that we didn’t expect,” said Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institutes of Allergy and Infectious Diseases who’s at the forefront of the U.S. pandemic response. Clumps of platelets inside blood vessels, or microthrombi, are probably why Covid patients can “rapidly and dramatically deteriorate,” he said in an interview with CNN last week.

Separate studies from France and the Netherlands found that as many as 30% of severely ill Covid-19 patients suffered a so-called pulmonary embolism -- a potentially deadly blockage in one of the arteries of the lungs. These often occur when bits of blood clots from veins deep in the legs travel to the lungs. By comparison, the prevalence of pulmonary embolism was 1.3% in critically ill patients without Covid-19, one study found.

Cardiac ArrestIf untreated, large arterial lung clots can put overwhelming strain on the heart, causing cardiac arrest. Even tiny clots in the capillaries of lung tissue may interrupt blood flow, undermining attempts to help oxygenate patients with ventilators, said Edwin van Beek, chair of clinical radiology at the University of Edinburgh’s Queen’s Medical Research Institute.

In the early 1990s, Van Beek helped develop the D-dimer blood test that’s used around the world to monitor clot formation in patients, including those with Covid-19, and to dose them with heparin and other anticoagulant medications.

Untreated pulmonary embolism is lethal in one in three cases, and will recur in another third, he said. In 3% to 7% of patients, it will cause pulmonary hypertension, another dangerous complication that can cause fatigue and shortness of breath.

Scarred lungs and clotting-related problems may be a lingering legacy of the pandemic, Van Beek said. Covid-19 survivors who have subsequent difficulty breathing, especially on exertion, might mistakenly believe it’s a recurrence of coronavirus infection, when it may actually be a “reactivation of the whole clotting problem.”

‘False Dawn’ Recovery Haunts Virus Survivors Who Fall Sick Again

“I expect to see more of this as we come out of the pandemic,” he said. Patients and doctors alike may not be aware of the risks or the potential need for treatment.

Coagulation may occur because of damage to cells lining blood vessels that results from both the viral infection and the immune system’s inflammation-causing response, said Jean Connors, a Harvard Medical School hematologist.

“The outcome isn’t affected if you’re treated appropriately,” she said. But “it’s possible that people are dying from undiagnosed pulmonary emboli.”



Hospital workers moves a Covid-19 patient outside the Montefiore Medical Center Moses Campus in New York City on April 7.

Photographer: John Moore/Getty Images

Organ DamageClots may form in other parts of the body, potentially damaging vital organs including the heart, kidneys, liver, bowel, and other tissues.

Five cases of stroke were treated in Manhattan’s Mount Sinai Health System over a two-week period through early April, doctors reported in the New England Journal of Medicine last week. The patients, who all had the coronavirus and were younger than 50, were treated for large-vessel blockages.

It’s a rare complication amplified by the “sheer numbers of infected patients,” Connors said. New York City has reported about 170,000 Covid-19 cases, including roughly 43,000 hospitalizations.

Puzzling, EnlighteningSuch findings are “puzzling” on one hand, “but on the other hand are enlightening” because they can inform better ways to treat patients, said Fauci, the NIAID leader.

In Italy, the first European country gripped by the pandemic, it was after Covid-19 patients died from acute pulmonary emboli and other clotting-related events that doctors moved to inflammation-blocking treatments, such as tocilizumab, sold by Roche Holding AG as Actemra, said Frank Rasulo, a head of neuro critical care at Spedali Civili University Hospital in Brescia.

Some doctors are starting to see Covid as less of a typical respiratory disease, and more of one that involves dangerous clotting, said Rasulo, who is also an associate professor of anesthesia and intensive care. “That’s quite frightening when you think of it, because we didn’t know what we’re up against until we were in a later stage.”

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Giovanni

05/09/20 9:28 PM

#39590 RE: silver_bars #39537

White House On 'High Alert' As 11 Secret Service Agents Currently Positive For COVID-19

In the most alarming revelation yet that coronavirus is getting ever closer to severely impacting the White House, Yahoo News has unveiled documents showing that nearly a dozen US Secret Service members have tested positive for COVID-19.

A Department of Homeland Security (DHS) internal memo or 'daily report' showed the Secret Service currently has eleven active cases of the virus (as of this past Thursday night) — this after it was learned Friday that Katie Miller, a spokesperson for Vice President Mike Pence, tested positive for coronavirus. And the day before, Trump's personal military valet was confirmed positive, prompting the president to indicate he would be receiving daily tests as opposed to weekly, according to The Hill.

"According to the DHS document, along with the 11 active cases there are 23 members of the Secret Service who have recovered from COVID-19 and an additional 60 employees who are self-quarantining," Yahoo News reports. "No details have been provided about which members of the Secret Service are infected or if any have recently been on detail with the president or vice president."

File image via ReutersAll of this has reportedly put the White House on "high alert" over possible further spread of the virus. While the Secret Service is a relatively small agency compared to all other major protective law enforcement and intelligence gathering agencies (chiefly monitoring threats against the president and US leaders, as well as investigating and preventing counterfeiting), it also maintains field offices and personnel across the country and even in foreign countries.

Only a single COVID-19 case among Secret Service personnel had been officially reported by the agency earlier in March, however, the new revelation of both active infections and 23 total recoveries suggests the spread was much more pervasive than previously acknowledged.

A Secret Service spokeswoman issued the following statement:

“To protect the privacy of our employees' health information and for operational security, the Secret Service is not releasing how many of its employees have tested positive for COVID-19, Nor how many of its employees were, or currently are, quarantined.”

The statement further emphasized the Secret Service will continue to strictly adhere to CDC protocol. Last week the administration said that new precautions include that anyone coming near the president is tested.

Vice President Mike Pence on a Rochester, Minn. hospital tour on h April 28, where he came under fire for not wearing a mask in accord with hospital policy, via CNN.

However, there's been growing criticism and controversy over Secret Service agents being seen working at the White House without masks, along with neither Trump nor Pence opting to wear masks.

Further precautions the White House has identified includes frequent temperature checks of personnel in and around the complex, regular reviews of symptom histories, widespread hand sanitizer usage and availability, as well as social distancing.

Meanwhile, the new report of the outbreak among Secret Service, considered the closest line of security defense immediately surrounding the president and top admin officials at all times is sure to unleash a new storm of controversy.

As separate reports from the start of this week underscored: "there are regularly held large events with unmasked attendees in close quarters at the White House — including inside the Oval Office, which is the president’s inner sanctum. Many Secret Service employees on the White House grounds are among those who are not wearing masks."