What is Covid: Definition and 87 Discussions

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is a contagious disease caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). The first known case was identified in Wuhan, China in December 2019. The disease has since spread worldwide, leading to an ongoing pandemic.Symptoms of COVID-19 are variable, but often include fever, cough, headache, fatigue, breathing difficulties, and loss of smell and taste. Symptoms may begin one to fourteen days after exposure to the virus. At least a third of people who are infected do not develop noticeable symptoms. Of those people who develop noticeable symptoms enough to be classed as patients, most (81%) develop mild to moderate symptoms (up to mild pneumonia), while 14% develop severe symptoms (dyspnea, hypoxia, or more than 50% lung involvement on imaging), and 5% suffer critical symptoms (respiratory failure, shock, or multiorgan dysfunction). Older people are at a higher risk of developing severe symptoms. Some people continue to experience a range of effects (long COVID) for months after recovery, and damage to organs has been observed. Multi-year studies are underway to further investigate the long-term effects of the disease.Transmission of COVID-19 occurs when people are exposed to virus-containing respiratory droplets and airborne particles exhaled by an infected person. Those particles may be inhaled or may reach the mouth, nose, or eyes of a person through touching or direct deposition (i.e. being coughed on). The risk of infection is highest when people are in close proximity for a long time, but particles can be inhaled over longer distances, particularly indoors in poorly ventilated and crowded spaces. In those conditions small particles can remain suspended in the air for minutes to hours. Touching a contaminated surface or object may lead to infection although this does not contribute substantially to transmission. People who are infected can transmit the virus to another person up to two days before they themselves show symptoms, as can people who do not experience symptoms. People remain infectious for up to ten days after the onset of symptoms in moderate cases and up to twenty days in severe cases.Several testing methods have been developed to diagnose the disease. The standard diagnostic method is by detection of the virus' nucleic acid by real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (rRT-PCR), transcription-mediated amplification (TMA), or by reverse transcription loop-mediated isothermal amplification (RT-LAMP) from a nasopharyngeal swab.
Preventive measures include physical or social distancing, quarantining, ventilation of indoor spaces, covering coughs and sneezes, hand washing, and keeping unwashed hands away from the face. The use of face masks or coverings has been recommended in public settings to minimize the risk of transmissions.
While work is underway to develop drugs that inhibit the virus (and several vaccines for it have been approved and distributed in various countries, which have since initiated mass vaccination campaigns), the primary treatment is symptomatic. Management involves the treatment of symptoms, supportive care, isolation, and experimental measures.

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  1. mktsgm

    D-dimer and COVID-19: A Prognostic Indicator or Pitfall?

    D-dimer is a fibrin degradation product, a small protein fragment present in the blood after a blood clot is degraded by fibrinolysis. So, the presence of D-dimer indicates that fibrinolysis is active in the body. Fibrinolysis should be considered beneficial against the backdrop of the danger...
  2. bhobba

    COVID Possible Breakthrough With Covid

    From our local paper, unfortunately behind a paywall. However, a precis follows: Just up the road from where I live, Griffith University has developed a treatment to reduce the viral load by up to 99.99%. It uses a “gene-silencing” antiviral treatment that kills COVID-19 in what would be an...
  3. mktsgm

    COVID Covid Vaccines: Is the 2nd Dose Different?

    Many of the Covid vaccines at present need two doses. Is the second dose, the same as the first dose, in terms of its contents and dosage? I specifically want to know if there is any variation in the contents of the second dose. Thanks.
  4. P

    Getting a Vaccination vs Having Recovered from Covid -- Are they equivalent?

    There is a bias in the medical community toward getting vaccinated even if you have had Covid with symptoms. Example - https://health.clevelandclinic.org/when-should-you-get-vaccinated-if-youve-had-covid-19/ I am unaware of any hard science - incremental analysis - that would conclude that...
  5. Wrichik Basu

    COVID Can MRI detect COVID infection in lungs?

    During this second wave of pandemic in our country, there have been several cases where the RT-PCR test is yielding false negatives. Many patients are being advised CT scans by doctors if the RT-PCR is negative, but the patient still shows symptoms of COVID. In many cases, this has given good...
  6. jedishrfu

    The Dangers of COVID Misdiagnosis

    Summary:: Article on doctors trying to diagnose patients who don’t have COVID but does have COVID indications. https://www.wired.co.uk/article/covid-19-misdiagnosis
  7. A

    COVID Possible to have severe 2021 flu season because of Covid?

    Here's a CDC link summarizing how a influenza vaccine is developed: Selecting viruses for flu vaccine However, as you know, we've had a record mild flu season because of covid. I'm wondering if this will adversely affect our ability to create an effective vaccine for the 2021 flu season due...
  8. bhobba

    Oral Covid Vaccine May Be Game Changer

    Check out: https://www.pfizer.com/news/press-release/press-release-detail/pfizer-initiates-phase-1-study-novel-oral-antiviral If it works out may change the vaccine landscape entirely. Thanks Bill
  9. mktsgm

    Medical Determination of T-cell response in Covid vaccines

    Presently some 4-5 Covid vaccines are popular worldwide. pfizer, moderna, astrazeneca, sputnik to name a few. Some Chinese and Indian vaccines are also in the selected markets. It is said that all these vaccines elicit robust antibody responses against the SARS-cov2 virus. My question is if...
  10. V

    I Statistical analysis of COVID reinfection

    Hi, I'm a physicist so I have a basic knowledge of probability and hypothesis testing etc. I would like to more sophistically calculate from available data in my country whether ones Covid infected people have a statistically significant different probability of reinfection than people who are...
  11. bhobba

    COVID Covid Long Haulers: Statistics Show Potential for Serious Health Issue

    Hi All An interesting article on Covid long-haulers appeared in our local newspaper - the Courier Mail in Brisbane. Unfortunately it is behind a paywall - but a precis follows. Start of precis: Gary Macpherson could pull a golf cart around 18 holes without effort. He’d climb the six flights...
  12. jim mcnamara

    Oral molnupiravir phase II-a of Covid RCT by Merck

    News release https://www.thepharmaletter.com/article/preliminary-phase-iia-trial-results-of-molnupiravir-in-covid-19 Molnupiravir has passed part of a phase II-a study. Caveat: this is preliminary, not peer reviewed data. Study design Earlier paper Feb 24 2021...
  13. jim mcnamara

    Obesity (BMI>25) in 50%+ population == much higher Covid fatalities

    https://www.worldobesity.org/news/statement-coronavirus-covid-19-obesity This is more of a medical practitioner's site than a research facility. This shows far greater impact on medical facilities and fatalities, apparently 90% of fatalities occur in chubby countries. News version...
  14. Evo

    Is it Safe to Schedule a Mammogram After Receiving the COVID-19 Vaccine?

    I saw this today, and it's something for women to know. Mammograms Should Be Scheduled Before COVID-19 Vaccine or 4 to 6 Weeks After, Experts Say https://www.everydayhealth.com/cancer/breast-cancer/mammograms-should-be-scheduled-before-or-4-to-6-weeks-after-covid-19-vaccine-experts-say/
  15. jedishrfu

    COVID Resistance from Neanderthal DNA

    https://www.cnn.com/2021/02/16/health/neanderthal-gene-coronavirus-scn-wellness/
  16. cybernetichero

    COVID Will COVID vaccines become part of normal immunisation regimes?

    I can't post unless I put a message here but my question is pretty clear and there's nothing to add.
  17. pinball1970

    COVID 19 mutations and implications for the vaccines

    SARS-CoV-2 501Y.V2 escapes neutralization by south African Donar plasma from the abstract SARS-CoV-2 501Y.V2, a novel lineage of the Coronavirus causing COVID-19, contains multiple mutations within two immunodominant domains of the spike protein. Here we show that this lineage exhibits...
  18. mktsgm

    Medical Which COVID vaccines have adjuvants?

    The Covid disease has caused the emergence of the many of types of vaccines like DNA, mRNA, whole-inactivated-virus etc. Also many companies have brought on similar vaccines (Pfizer and moderna's mRNA vaccine). I want to know if any of these vaccines have adjuvants present in them. Which of the...
  19. anorlunda

    How Can a Digital Photo Frame Revive Old Memories and Connections?

    I discovered something really fun, that I would like to share. I bought a cheap ($30) digital photo album. It is cheap because it has no memory, just a USB port for a thumb drive. I also have more than 29 thousand pictures in my folders, some on the hard disk, some in the cloud. I even...
  20. mktsgm

    COVID Those who had covid infection are also advised for vaccines. Why?

    Normally, when a person gets infected by a virus and subsequently recovers from it, it is understood that he had developed sufficient antibodies. One can surmise that his T-cell contribution also could be satisfactory in its fight against the infection. In my view, the vaccines are supposed to...
  21. Fervent Freyja

    COVID Common sense question about COVID and quarantining

    I received results this morning that I’m COVID-19 positive. On Friday, my mom sent me a message on my watch saying that her Dr tested her at her normal checkup, I was in the lab at the time and just finished up my duties at template stage for testing a few thousand specimens (mainly for COVID)...
  22. Dale

    COVID Pfizer/Moderna covid vaccine research papers

    Here is the official peer reviewed Pfizer vaccine study published in the New England Journal of Medicine: https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2034577 This is a follow-up piece that describes what an emergency use authorization means and gives a perspective about follow-up...
  23. jim mcnamara

    COVID Astra-Zeneca Covid vaccine trial explanation

    Links for some of the science are included - this presentation is based on press releases. The peer reviewed data will be available shortly. Some things to note - results show both 64% and 90% effective,the video explains this one The tests looked for positive Covid tests in volunteers...
  24. gleem

    COVID Lingering effects of a COVID infection: Post COVID Syndrome

    It is becoming apparent that the COVID pandemic may be casusing more harm than originally thought. Months after recovering from noncritical infections from COVID people are developing medical conditions that are greatly affecting their lives. Symptoms include tremors, vertigo, double vision...
  25. kyphysics

    COVID Could COVID Travel from Car Trunk into Main Car Area from Drive-Up?

    I do curbside/drive-up pick-up service from various businesses. I order on their app. They pack it and when I arrive to the store, they put it in my trunk. No contact. I never have to roll down my window even. I let the groceries (non-refrigerated) or retail goods sit in the trunk for a...
  26. russ_watters

    Lab Ventilation Energy Use and COVID

    Welcome to PF! I'm an HVAC engineer and I actually gave a talk/round-table with the founder of your organization a few years ago: https://www.westchesterbiotechproject.org/innovation-in-research-2017 One factoid I give on labs that speaks to what people know is that a single 8' constant volume...
  27. .Scott

    COVID A Health check App sensitive to asymptomatic COVID may be in the works

    https://www.embs.org/ojemb/articles/covid-19-artificial-intelligence-diagnosis-using-only-cough-recordings/ A study has been posted in Engineering in Medicine and Biology (article) that describes the methods and results from an MIT algorithm as applied to asymptomatic COVID-19. Per the...
  28. jim mcnamara

    COVID US Covid fatality rates highest among top 18 developed countries

    US Covid-19 fatality rates are the highest among top 18 developed countries -primary claim The US medical system and Covid-19 therapy are both as good as it gets, therefore other factors intervene <- is what the letter says. https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/2771841 I need...
  29. bhobba

    COVID Supercomputer Analysis Of Covid Virus

    Hi All Someone passed onto me the following supercomputer analysis of the Covid virus: https://elemental.medium.com/a-supercomputer-analyzed-covid-19-and-an-interesting-new-theory-has-emerged-31cb8eba9d63 Very interesting. Thanks Bill
  30. jim mcnamara

    COVID What are the challenges in accurately reporting and interpreting COVID-19 data?

    � Source Deaths Data timestamp https://www]cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/cases-updates/cases-in-us.html 175,651 Aug 23 2020 12:15PM EDT https://www]worldometers.info/coronavirus/#countries 180,724 August 24, 2020, 16:47 GMT Johns Hopkins U ARCGIS* 176,901 8/24/2020, 10:27:56 AM...
  31. jeffinbath

    COVID Surely a truly “symptomless superspreader “ of Covid 19 is impossible

    When cells get "Hi-jacked" to make new virus particles it usually has a considerable effect on us, and we feel tired and unwell. The so-called "superspreaders " are presumably able to ignore these effects , but they must have them to a lesser degree than usual.
  32. C

    Imaging Emitted Covid 19 Samples with an Electron Microscope

    After many months what comes out of the mouth and nose of someone infected with Covid 19 has not been directly observed. A single virus particle of Covid 19 is about 120 nanometers in diameter. This means that to see the virus, visible light wavelengths of 400 nm to 700 nm are too long to...
  33. Grinkle

    COVID Covid Vaccine Phase 3 significance

    Russia's vaccine news has me pondering. How often after a successful phase 2 study do phase 3 studies show that the vaccine causes harm? If I were offered a COVID-19 vaccine that had passed phase 2 trials, I'd accept it. Is that foolhardy of me? Is it possible to use existing data to model...
  34. R

    Google covid search results....

    If you type in google.com any 2 or 3 digit numbers combinations before "new cases" for example "312 new cases" into google there will always be a result with a covid19 article correlating with the number... why is that?
  35. jim mcnamara

    COVID Covid 19 population study, Vitamin D, and controversy

    My main reason for posting this is to prevent overreaction to the research, especially from the "pill press" internet people and the impact that has on non-science people. Yes, it is interesting. No, it is not definitive. Worried about it? Take a short 10 minute walk, 5 or 6 days a week, in...
  36. C

    COVID Are these respirators spewing covid viruses?

    This is an ER doctor in New York with a respirator with cartridges. Due to shortages of the N95. There are hundreds of doctors in my country using them too. I even bought one. But I noticed something dangerous. The exhalation valve has only a thin rubber flap that moves when you talk or exhale...
  37. .Scott

    COVID COVID ARDS Diagnostic Tool - Age is not best indicator. N=53

    An article published Monday in "Computers, Materials, & Continua" identifies leading indicators of which patients will go on to develop ARDS (acute respiratory distress syndrome). From the abstract: Among the features identified as possible indicators: A pdf of the full article can be...
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