yo!.. more on clots... innit!
palookaville today..
we thought you might find this of interest..
I know I did..
njbr
CV is the "reverse ebola"
There
is a lot of emerging evidence that..
THE serious effect of CV is increased blood-clotting..
THE serious effect of CV is increased blood-clotting..
This is the reverse of ebola, which was
decreased blood-clotting..
(with blood leaking from blood vessels and
through body membranes).
In CV, blood clots
form in the lungs at the site where blood oxygenation occurs.
As more
and more are blocked off by clots,
the result is the dry cough and
pneumonia symptoms that follow..
Blood oxygenation levels fall to
unprecedented levels--unlike standard pneumonia..
you can wander around
for quite a while. .
And it also explains the examples of people falling
over in the streets..
Blood clots damage kidneys..
Blood clots cause
strokes..
Blood clots cause loss of blood flow to appendages and require
amputation..
Mild forms cause skin rashes..
ECMO becomes the only
effective way of getting oxygen into the blood until the lungs clear
(deaths on ventilators are extremely high)
comments from mish site
Blood clots, in which the red liquid turns gel-like, appear to be the opposite of what occurs in Ebola, Dengue, Lassa and other hemorrhagic fevers that lead to uncontrolled bleeding. But they actually are part of the same phenomenon — and can have similarly devastating consequences.
njbr
Blood clots, in which the red liquid turns gel-like, appear to be the opposite of what occurs in Ebola, Dengue, Lassa and other hemorrhagic fevers that lead to uncontrolled bleeding. But they actually are part of the same phenomenon — and can have similarly devastating consequences.
Autopsies have shown some people’s lungs fill with hundreds of microclots. Errant blood clots of a larger size can break off and travel to the brain or heart, causing a stroke or heart attack. On Saturday, Broadway actor Nick Cordero, 41, had his right leg amputated after being infected with the novel coronavirus and suffering from clots that blocked blood from getting to his toes....
....One doctor replied that one of his patients had a strange blood problem. Despite being put on anticoagulants, the patient was still developing clots. A second said she’d seen something similar. And a third. Soon, every person on the text chat had reported the same thing.
“That’s when we knew we had a huge problem,” said Coopersmith, a critical-care surgeon. As he checked with his counterparts at other medical centers, he became increasingly alarmed: “It was in as many as 20, 30 or 40 percent of their patients.”
these comments are cribbed from
mish's site
they are here because they are interesting and compelling..
no point is being made..
and we are not medic boffins..
here in palookaville..
we just think this will develop..
into a thread..
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