06-21-2024, 02:30 AM
Imagine that! We find, after some study, that human beings are not all going to be wiped out by COVID after all...
Current research has documented a hitherto unreported fact of life, that despite being actually 'injected' with active COVID 19... some people just don't acquire the devastating respiratory syndrome... (Of course these would likely be vilified as anti-vaxxers and ignorant kooks in the responses crafted by media moguls and government agencies...)
Sources:
LabManager.com: New Study Explains Why Some People Don't Catch COVID-19
Sanger Institute: Immune response study explains why some people don't get COVID-19
Nature: Human SARS-CoV-2 challenge uncovers local and systemic response dynamics
... Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) has infected millions across the globe with Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). While it is potentially fatal, many will have come into contact with someone who has tested positive for COVID-19, but have managed to avoid getting ill themselves, whether remaining negative on PCR testing or having an asymptomatic case of the disease.
While previous studies have examined COVID-19 patients after symptom onset, in this new study researchers set out to capture immune responses right from exposure, in an immunologically naïve cohort for the first time....
[Bold letting mine]
Now this this assertion, of course, would have been anathema to the siren song of "get the Big Pharma experimental treatment, or you'll kill my grandma," and certainly would have been met with eye-rolls from those who wanted any unvaccinated people to be punished and shamed... while many in the internet social media world would have been lambasted by those "assigned" to hammer down any comments like that... (I'm looking at you, former Twitter employees.)
As it turns out there is a "novel" immune response in some people who
Across all participants, the team discovered previously unreported responses involved in immediate virus detection. This included activation of specialised mucosal immune cells in the blood and a reduction in inflammatory white blood cells that normally engulf and destroy pathogens.
Individuals who immediately cleared the virus did not show a typical widespread immune response but instead mounted subtle, never-seen-before innate immune responses. Researchers suggest high levels of activity of a gene called HLA-DQA2 before exposure also helped people prevent a sustained infection from taking hold. In contrast, the six individuals who developed a sustained SARS-CoV-2 infection exhibited a rapid immune response in the blood but a slower immune response in the nose, allowing the virus to establish itself there.
The researchers further identified common patterns among activated T cell receptors, which recognise and bind to virus-infected cells. This offers insights into immune cell communication and potential for developing targeted T cell therapies against not just COVID-19, but other diseases.
I am a little cynical about statements in research like, "the team discovered previously unreported responses involved in immediate virus detection" and "never-seen-before innate immune responses." Only because I understand rhetoric, and I can see that they left out the noun indicated that "they" never saw that before. I'd bet a dollar that someone had seen it before.
As time passes, more "science" will present itself, effectively grinding the 'Big Pharma COVID' narrative into dust.
Current research has documented a hitherto unreported fact of life, that despite being actually 'injected' with active COVID 19... some people just don't acquire the devastating respiratory syndrome... (Of course these would likely be vilified as anti-vaxxers and ignorant kooks in the responses crafted by media moguls and government agencies...)
Sources:
LabManager.com: New Study Explains Why Some People Don't Catch COVID-19
Sanger Institute: Immune response study explains why some people don't get COVID-19
Nature: Human SARS-CoV-2 challenge uncovers local and systemic response dynamics
... Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) has infected millions across the globe with Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). While it is potentially fatal, many will have come into contact with someone who has tested positive for COVID-19, but have managed to avoid getting ill themselves, whether remaining negative on PCR testing or having an asymptomatic case of the disease.
While previous studies have examined COVID-19 patients after symptom onset, in this new study researchers set out to capture immune responses right from exposure, in an immunologically naïve cohort for the first time....
[Bold letting mine]
Now this this assertion, of course, would have been anathema to the siren song of "get the Big Pharma experimental treatment, or you'll kill my grandma," and certainly would have been met with eye-rolls from those who wanted any unvaccinated people to be punished and shamed... while many in the internet social media world would have been lambasted by those "assigned" to hammer down any comments like that... (I'm looking at you, former Twitter employees.)
As it turns out there is a "novel" immune response in some people who
Across all participants, the team discovered previously unreported responses involved in immediate virus detection. This included activation of specialised mucosal immune cells in the blood and a reduction in inflammatory white blood cells that normally engulf and destroy pathogens.
Individuals who immediately cleared the virus did not show a typical widespread immune response but instead mounted subtle, never-seen-before innate immune responses. Researchers suggest high levels of activity of a gene called HLA-DQA2 before exposure also helped people prevent a sustained infection from taking hold. In contrast, the six individuals who developed a sustained SARS-CoV-2 infection exhibited a rapid immune response in the blood but a slower immune response in the nose, allowing the virus to establish itself there.
The researchers further identified common patterns among activated T cell receptors, which recognise and bind to virus-infected cells. This offers insights into immune cell communication and potential for developing targeted T cell therapies against not just COVID-19, but other diseases.
I am a little cynical about statements in research like, "the team discovered previously unreported responses involved in immediate virus detection" and "never-seen-before innate immune responses." Only because I understand rhetoric, and I can see that they left out the noun indicated that "they" never saw that before. I'd bet a dollar that someone had seen it before.
As time passes, more "science" will present itself, effectively grinding the 'Big Pharma COVID' narrative into dust.