Honestly my Hexbear people won't learn much from this, but this is a good resource to beat libs over the head with.
-
Long COVID is an often debilitating illness that occurs in at least 10% of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infections.
-
At least 65 million individuals worldwide are estimated to have long COVID,
-
...[occurs in] 10–12% of vaccinated cases
Yes that's right, 10% of vaccinated cases
-
With significant proportions of individuals with long COVID unable to return to work, the scale of newly disabled individuals is contributing to labour shortages.
-
Six months after breakthrough infection, increased risks were observed for cardiovascular conditions, coagulation and haematological conditions, death, fatigue, neurological conditions and pulmonary conditions
-
A higher prevalence of long Covid has been reported in certain ethnicities, including people with Hispanic or Latino heritage. Socio-economic risk factors include lower income and an inability to adequately rest in the early weeks after developing COVID-19
Rich people don't have to give a fuck about COVID
-
Long COVID impacts children of all ages [with symptoms] 2 to 36 times more likely [with children who had COVID]
-
Studies looking at immune dysregulation in individuals with long COVID who had mild acute COVID-19 have found T cell alterations, including exhausted T cells [and other immune reductions]
-
A long-lasting reduction in vascular density, specifically affecting small capillaries, was found in patients with long COVID compared with controls, 18 months after infection.
-
Cardiac MRI studies revealed cardiac impairment in 78% of 100 individuals who had a prior COVID-19 episode
-
70% of [long COVID] patients had damage to at least one organ and 29% had multi-organ damage... The organ damage experienced by patients with long COVID appears durable
-
... fatigue was found in 32% and cognitive impairment was found in 22% of patients with COVID-19 at 12 weeks after infection. Cognitive impairments in long COVID are debilitating, at the same magnitude as intoxication at the :ukkk: drink driving limit or 10 years of cognitive ageing
-
Viral persistence in the penile tissue has been documented, as has an increased risk of erectile dysfunction, likely resulting from endothelial dysfunction. In one study, impairments to sperm count, semen volume, motility, sperm morphology and sperm concentration were reported in individuals
:alex-aware:
-
Several imaging studies that included non-hospitalized individuals with long COVID demonstrated pulmonary abnormalities including in air trapping and lung perfusion
-
Few people with long COVID demonstrate full recovery, with one study finding that 85% of patients who had symptoms 2 months after the initial infection reported symptoms 1 year after symptom onset
There's lots of good links to studies if you need to debate libs
All these medical sources are 🤮. Maybe fasting works, but I'm not loving this data.
"I'm going to put an enormous amount of stress on my body by starving it for a week. This will definitely help me with a syndrome typified by multiple organ system damage, vascular damage, brain damage, and other severe symptoms".
Doesn't pass the smell test.
Gosh it could be true. I've just learned to be careful of blogs and WebMD. Keeping to high quality medical research keeps us sane and gives us a one up over the libs.
I edited in a source from Nature investigating the mechanism of action a little more closely, give it a peep
Comrade, I apologise in advance for being super pedantic. I appreciate you taking the time to find research on this.
The BMJ article only compared long COVID with people who did IS vs those who didn't. There was no control group and no random experiment group. Therefore, potentially other variables followed those who did IS. Maybe they exercised more or had better health. Who knows.
The Nature article just seemed to discuss a possible mechanism for resolving COVID, for which Is could play a role.
These studies on their own lead to the need to study further the role of IS and long COVID, ideally with a random control trial. Potentially IS helpful. I'm not a medical professional, but I wouldn't advice this DIY treatment personally. But I'm not privy to enough info to specifically advise against it.
I wholeheartedly agree, it's fringe at best, but a minor fast executed safely is not likely to cause harm and the potential upshot is large, plus I've heard of it anecdotally several times. I don't want to promise anyone a cure but the cost/benefit pans out to me sharing the concept
Hey just as a heads up I added two more sources that are of significantly higher quality
Sorry, I replied to your other comment.