with all of this evidence of vascular damage in the cadavers of those who died of covid19, it seems a good bet this is bloodborne. we are already facing a blood shortage, is the blood being tested? mosquitoes are probable vector.
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Replying to @DanielleFong
Danielle, the blood issues and the over-reactive immune response may very well be a result of a secondary anaerobic bacterial infection taking advantage ... Please see
@sanchak74 links in his bio to his hypothesis. We are not testing for presence of these bacteria in most places.1 reply 0 retweets 1 like -
Replying to @JodiKoberinski @DanielleFong
sandeep chakraborty Retweeted sandeep chakraborty
There is no virus in the blood in the early stages. If the virus was blood borne, the fatalities would be much higher.https://twitter.com/sanchak74/status/1253722700994002944 …
sandeep chakraborty added,
sandeep chakraborty @sanchak741/ Not a single viral read found in blood (and they have sequenced deep) in 3 samples `we failed to detect viral RNAs as well as ACE2 expression' in blood And did 2 BALF samples. And compared human protein response. So this refutes the hypothesis... https://tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/22221751.2020.1747363 …Show this thread1 reply 3 retweets 5 likes -
Replying to @sanchak74 @JodiKoberinski
thank you sanchak. this is mysterious to me still though — how does the virus get around?
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We push them around.
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I would guess, from our mouth/nose to our lungs(stomach also) - where the whole interplay with bacteria happens, and abscesses form. But it only spreads to other organs with the bacteria through blood, in the later stages. For eg, its is also rarely found in urine.
1 reply 0 retweets 3 likes
I still think the bacteria is a good hypothesis
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