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China today shared COVID Autopsy / Post-Mortem secrets: COVID-19 VIRUS EATS YOUR IMMUNE SYSTEM! Power?

COW flu

Alfrescian
Loyal
Live now still daily press conference on CCTV now.

Reported analysis from Autopsy / Post-Mortem of 29 corpses by Chinese pathological research experts found that human immune system is destroyed at some stage of COVID-19 infection. From then on, not only the original COVID-19 infection is out of control, other bacterial and fungus / yeast infections will also flare up alike a big birthday party. That was how many COVID-19 patients up lorries.

This is where COVID-19 is similar with HIV / AIDS, killing humans in similar ways.

Dua Kee??
 

COW flu

Alfrescian
Loyal
They found that human cells responsible for normal immunity are greatly reduced or totally lost in the corpses killed by COVID-19.
 

hofmann

Alfrescian
Loyal
Yes while at the same time, healthy individuals with normally functioning immune systems have been able to recover quite quickly.

https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/ar...virus-in-3-days#An-influx-of-key-immune-cells


SARS-CoV-2: How a person’s immune system defeated the virus
Written by Maria Cohut, Ph.D. on March 19, 2020 - Fact checked by Rita Ponce, Ph.D. New

Although some people who contract SARS-CoV-2 experience serious symptoms, others are able to recover after a fairly short period of time. A new study shows how the immune system of one otherwise healthy person was able to fight the virus within days.
doctor on hospital corridor
Share on PinterestA new case study explains how the immune system of an otherwise healthy adult was able to fight off SARS-CoV-2.
In a new study in the journal Nature Medicine, researchers from the University of Melbourne at the Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity in Australia have outlined how the human immune system mounts its response to the new coronavirus.
The scientists were able to conduct a case study using information about one of the first hospital patients with a SARS-CoV-2 infection in Australia. This was a 47-year-old female who had traveled to Melbourne from Wuhan, China.
The female was experiencing mild-to-moderate symptoms of the infection when they sought care, but they were healthy in all other respects.
Stay informed with live updates on the current COVID-19 outbreak and visit our coronavirus hub for more advice on prevention and treatment.
That is why scientists later became interested in finding out how an otherwise healthy adult’s immune system is able to react to an infection with the new virus.
“We showed that even though COVID-19 is caused by a new virus, in an otherwise healthy person, a robust immune response across different cell types was associated with clinical recovery, similar to what we see in influenza,” says study co-author Prof. Katherine Kedzierska.
“This is an incredible step forward in understanding what drives recovery of COVID-19. People can use our methods to understand the immune responses in larger COVID-19 cohorts, and also understand what’s lacking in those who have fatal outcomes,” she adds.




An influx of key immune cells

The female sought specialized care 4 days after the onset of viral infection symptoms. These symptoms included lethargy, a sore throat, a dry cough, pleuritic chest pain, some shortness of breath, and a fever.
They were able to leave the hospital and enter self-isolation 11 days after symptom onset, and they were symptom-free by day 13.
In their study, the researchers analyzed blood samples that healthcare professionals had collected from the patient on four different occasions: on days 7, 8, 9, and 20 following symptom onset.
“We looked at the whole breadth of the immune response in this patient using the knowledge we have built over many years of looking at immune responses in patients hospitalized with influenza,” explains study co-author Dr. Oanh Nguyen.
The researchers found that during days 7–9 following symptom onset, there was an increase in immunoglobulin G — which is the most common type of antibody — rushing to fight the virus. There was also an increase in immunoglobulin M.
This increase in immunoglobulins persisted up to day 20 after symptom onset, according to the analyses.
At days 7–9 following symptom onset, a large number of specialized helper T cells, killer T cells, and B cells — all of which are crucial immune cells — were also active in the patient’s blood samples.
This suggested that the patient’s body had been using many different “weapons” effectively against the new virus.
“Three days after the patient was admitted, we saw large populations of several immune cells, which are often a tell-tale sign of recovery during seasonal influenza infection, so we predicted that the patient would recover in 3 days, which is what happened,” notes Dr. Nguyen.
 
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