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Related: About this forumCoronavirus survivors may carry 'superhero' antibodies and hope they can help others
Susan Ormiston · CBC News · Posted: Apr 13, 2020 4:00 AM ET | Last Updated: 44 minutes ago
Trials are under way to harness protective powers of antibodies that might benefit patients with COVID-19
...
"I feel like we're in a science fiction movie," she said last Friday. "I am one of the ones walking around with immunity, like a hazmat suit Inside my body, protecting me."
Thaler's symptoms began raging the first week of March, three days after her school shut down. She suffered "horrific chills like pins and needles," headaches and a "terrible backache." When her fever spiked above 102 degrees, (38.9 C), the virus triggered her asthma, which landed her in the emergency department twice.
She was fortunate. A month later, she is virus free and donating blood as scientists race to mine the protective powers of antibodies to help fight the global pandemic. Researchers in multiple countries are rushing trials to find out how survivors who've built up those hard-won antibodies can help both those currently ill with COVID-19 and those on the front lines treating the disease.
"It makes me feel like I can do something positive to help in this incredibly difficult time," she told CBC News outside the blood clinic.
...
"I feel like we're in a science fiction movie," she said last Friday. "I am one of the ones walking around with immunity, like a hazmat suit Inside my body, protecting me."
Thaler's symptoms began raging the first week of March, three days after her school shut down. She suffered "horrific chills like pins and needles," headaches and a "terrible backache." When her fever spiked above 102 degrees, (38.9 C), the virus triggered her asthma, which landed her in the emergency department twice.
She was fortunate. A month later, she is virus free and donating blood as scientists race to mine the protective powers of antibodies to help fight the global pandemic. Researchers in multiple countries are rushing trials to find out how survivors who've built up those hard-won antibodies can help both those currently ill with COVID-19 and those on the front lines treating the disease.
"It makes me feel like I can do something positive to help in this incredibly difficult time," she told CBC News outside the blood clinic.
...
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/coronavirus-survivors-may-carry-superhero-antibodies-and-hope-they-can-help-others-1.5530491
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Coronavirus survivors may carry 'superhero' antibodies and hope they can help others (Original Post)
inanna
Apr 2020
OP
And there's another subset of CV survivors who are susceptible to catching the Virus again.
no_hypocrisy
Apr 2020
#1
no_hypocrisy
(48,791 posts)1. And there's another subset of CV survivors who are susceptible to catching the Virus again.
safeinOhio
(34,075 posts)2. Why we need to test 10% of
the random population to find those that don't get symptoms or don't show any. Then we would have the data that could be used to save 100% of us.
Too expensive? I don't think so.
saidsimplesimon
(7,888 posts)3. Every state must increase testing instead
of "hoping" this will go away or that it can be hidden under a wall of false narratives.
defacto7
(13,610 posts)4. Maybe... Or not...