Hide Ya Wives, Hide Ya Kids: Worldwide Coronavirus Pandemic!

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Developed a cough on the 8th and didn’t think anything of it. Seemed like a normal seasonal cold.

This past Friday the cough got worse as well as a runny nose. Fast forward to today with cough, runny nose, tired, and had a fever earlier today. I’ve been in bed all day. I had a COVID test this morning. Have to wait a couple days for results.

Get better my man, Stay positive.
 
Developed a cough on the 8th and didn’t think anything of it. Seemed like a normal seasonal cold.

This past Friday the cough got worse as well as a runny nose. Fast forward to today with cough, runny nose, tired, and had a fever earlier today. I’ve been in bed all day. I had a COVID test this morning. Have to wait a couple days for results.
Don’t worry. Trump and nick saban are super humans capable of defeating all cdc guidelines. You can do it too
 
https://www.reuters.com/article/reutersComService_2_MOLT/idUSKBN2741ET

Doctors probe whether COVID-19 is causing diabetes

(Reuters) - Mario Buelna, a healthy 28-year-old father, caught a fever and started having trouble breathing in June. He soon tested positive for COVID-19.


Weeks later, after what had seemed like a recovery, he felt weak and started vomiting. At 3 a.m. on Aug. 1, he passed out on the floor of his home in Mesa, Arizona.

Paramedics rushed him to a nearby hospital, where doctors put him in intensive care after saving him from a coma. They told him he could have died. Their diagnosis – type 1 diabetes – stunned and frightened him. He had no history of the disease.

“COVID triggered it,” Buelna said the doctors told him.

Buelna’s ordeal and similar cases reflect a new worry about the dangerous relationship between diabetes and COVID-19 that’s being urgently studied by doctors and scientists around the world. Many experts are convinced that COVID-19 can trigger the onset of diabetes - even in some adults and children who do not have the traditional risk factors.

It’s already been well-documented that people with diabetes face much higher risks of severe illness or death if they contract COVID-19. In July, U.S. health officials found that nearly 40% of people who have died with COVID-19 had diabetes. Now, cases like Buelna’s suggest the connection between the diseases runs both ways.

“COVID could be causing diabetes from scratch,” said Dr. Francesco Rubino, a diabetes researcher and chair of metabolic and bariatric surgery at King’s College London.

Rubino is leading an international team that is collecting patient cases globally to unravel one of the biggest mysteries of the pandemic. Initially, he said, more than 300 doctors have applied to share cases for review, a number he expects to grow as infections flare up again.

“These cases are coming from every corner of the world and every continent,” Rubino told Reuters.

In addition to the global registry, the U.S. National Institutes of Health is financing research into how the coronavirus may cause high blood sugars and diabetes.

In these situations, symptoms can escalate quickly and become life threatening. These cases may take months to surface after exposure to COVID-19, so the full extent of the problem and the long-term ramifications may not be known until well into next year. More intensive research is needed to definitively prove, beyond the mounting anecdotal evidence, that COVID-19 is triggering diabetes on a wide scale.

“We have more questions than answers right now,” said Dr. Robert Eckel, president of medicine and science at the American Diabetes Association. “We could be dealing with an entirely new form of diabetes.”


Type 1 diabetes occurs when the body’s immune system mistakenly destroys insulin-producing cells in the pancreas, preventing the regulation of blood sugar levels. About 1.6 million Americans have the disease.

Type 2 diabetes is more prevalent, afflicting about 30 million Americans. Those patients still produce insulin, but over time their cells become insulin-resistant, allowing blood sugar to rise.

Type 1 diabetes cases have previously been associated with other viral infections, including influenza and previous coronaviruses. It is known that infections can stress the body and increase blood sugar levels. But this tends to happen in people predisposed to the disease. Only some of them eventually develop diabetes, and scientists still don’t fully understand why.

This year, doctors also are seeing some people without the risk factors for type 2 diabetes - such as being older or overweight - experience a diabetic emergency after exposure to COVID-19.

In type 1 diabetes, initial symptoms can include extreme thirst, fatigue, frequent urination and weight loss. Arthur Simis had no idea those were signs for the disease.

This summer, he and his wife, Sarah, noticed their 12-year-old son, Atticus, appeared thin and slept a lot. They figured he was stressed out from being trapped at home in the pandemic, or going through a growth spurt.

On July 9, as his symptoms persisted, Arthur Simis took his son to an urgent care center near their home in Gardnerville, Nevada. The medical staff detected dangerously high blood sugar levels and ketones in his urine, both indicators that Atticus was in diabetic ketoacidosis, or DKA.

The doctor told Simis that his son needed hospital care immediately to avoid slipping into a coma from his newly diagnosed type 1. An ambulance took them 50 miles to the nearest hospital in Reno.

His father spent three nights sleeping at his side in the pediatric ICU. He sobbed on the phone to his wife, because only one parent was allowed inside, a measure to control coronavirus infections.

“How could he have diabetes?” Simis recalls asking the doctors. “It was absolutely terrifying.”

Simis believes his son had been infected by the coronavirus because the father and his wife experienced symptoms in the spring. The couple went to urgent care but never got tested for the coronavirus because of stricter testing criteria at the time. Atticus tested negative for an active coronavirus infection in the ICU, medical records show. But he was never tested for antibodies that could show whether he was exposed weeks earlier.

Doctors say that’s not unusual in a fast-moving pandemic, as they focus on individual emergencies rather than big-picture research questions. But the lack of testing in many of these cases, they say, may complicate efforts to detect whether and how the coronavirus might be causing diabetes.


CHILDREN IN INTENSIVE CARE
The initial reports of COVID-related diabetes include more children with cases like that of Atticus.

In a study published in August, researchers at Imperial College in London and several hospitals there found that cases of type 1 diabetes among children nearly doubled to 30 during late March to early June - as the pandemic raged - compared to the same period in previous years. Five of the children tested positive for a prior coronavirus infection, but the study’s authors said many of the children were not tested.

In the United States, Children’s Hospital Los Angeles said the percentage of newly diagnosed type 2 patients who arrived in diabetic ketoacidosis, a potentially fatal buildup of acid in the blood, has nearly doubled for March through August compared to the same period in 2018 and 2019.

Dr. Lily Chao, director of the type 2 diabetes clinic there, said the hospital is still investigating whether this increase is driven by exposure to COVID-19.

Brandi Edwards, a registered nurse and diabetes educator at Alabama’s Huntsville Hospital, said calls about pediatric cases began to surge in May. Doctors summon her when a child arrives in the emergency room or ICU so she can counsel the family on insulin injections, glucose readings and how daily life will change going forward.
“We’ve seen more type 1 cases this year than I ever remember,” Edwards said. “There were three kids in the pediatric ICU at the same time. That is so rare.”

EVICTION NOTICE
After surviving a diabetic emergency, life for a newly diagnosed patient can be overwhelming. Medication and other supplies to manage diabetes can cost hundreds of dollars every month, and long waits to see an endocrinologist are common in many areas.

Buelna, the patient in Arizona, is still waiting for his Medicaid plan to approve a continuous glucose monitor more than two months after his diagnosis. The disease knocked him out of work for weeks and wrecked his family’s finances. His wife, Erika, is eight months pregnant and they have a 3-year-old daughter, Katalina. The family got an eviction notice on Aug. 2, while Mario was in the ICU, and they rely on a food bank for some meals.

Buelna said he fell into a depression in the hospital, cut off from family visits, and credits his sister with lifting his spirits in phone calls.

“I want to get better so I can see my kids grow up,” he said. “I’m not ready to go yet.”
 
https://www.reuters.com/article/reutersComService_2_MOLT/idUSKBN2741ET

Doctors probe whether COVID-19 is causing diabetes

(Reuters) - Mario Buelna, a healthy 28-year-old father, caught a fever and started having trouble breathing in June. He soon tested positive for COVID-19.


Weeks later, after what had seemed like a recovery, he felt weak and started vomiting. At 3 a.m. on Aug. 1, he passed out on the floor of his home in Mesa, Arizona.

Paramedics rushed him to a nearby hospital, where doctors put him in intensive care after saving him from a coma. They told him he could have died. Their diagnosis – type 1 diabetes – stunned and frightened him. He had no history of the disease.

“COVID triggered it,” Buelna said the doctors told him.

Buelna’s ordeal and similar cases reflect a new worry about the dangerous relationship between diabetes and COVID-19 that’s being urgently studied by doctors and scientists around the world. Many experts are convinced that COVID-19 can trigger the onset of diabetes - even in some adults and children who do not have the traditional risk factors.

It’s already been well-documented that people with diabetes face much higher risks of severe illness or death if they contract COVID-19. In July, U.S. health officials found that nearly 40% of people who have died with COVID-19 had diabetes. Now, cases like Buelna’s suggest the connection between the diseases runs both ways.

“COVID could be causing diabetes from scratch,” said Dr. Francesco Rubino, a diabetes researcher and chair of metabolic and bariatric surgery at King’s College London.

Rubino is leading an international team that is collecting patient cases globally to unravel one of the biggest mysteries of the pandemic. Initially, he said, more than 300 doctors have applied to share cases for review, a number he expects to grow as infections flare up again.

“These cases are coming from every corner of the world and every continent,” Rubino told Reuters.

In addition to the global registry, the U.S. National Institutes of Health is financing research into how the coronavirus may cause high blood sugars and diabetes.

In these situations, symptoms can escalate quickly and become life threatening. These cases may take months to surface after exposure to COVID-19, so the full extent of the problem and the long-term ramifications may not be known until well into next year. More intensive research is needed to definitively prove, beyond the mounting anecdotal evidence, that COVID-19 is triggering diabetes on a wide scale.

“We have more questions than answers right now,” said Dr. Robert Eckel, president of medicine and science at the American Diabetes Association. “We could be dealing with an entirely new form of diabetes.”


Type 1 diabetes occurs when the body’s immune system mistakenly destroys insulin-producing cells in the pancreas, preventing the regulation of blood sugar levels. About 1.6 million Americans have the disease.

Type 2 diabetes is more prevalent, afflicting about 30 million Americans. Those patients still produce insulin, but over time their cells become insulin-resistant, allowing blood sugar to rise.

Type 1 diabetes cases have previously been associated with other viral infections, including influenza and previous coronaviruses. It is known that infections can stress the body and increase blood sugar levels. But this tends to happen in people predisposed to the disease. Only some of them eventually develop diabetes, and scientists still don’t fully understand why.

This year, doctors also are seeing some people without the risk factors for type 2 diabetes - such as being older or overweight - experience a diabetic emergency after exposure to COVID-19.

In type 1 diabetes, initial symptoms can include extreme thirst, fatigue, frequent urination and weight loss. Arthur Simis had no idea those were signs for the disease.

This summer, he and his wife, Sarah, noticed their 12-year-old son, Atticus, appeared thin and slept a lot. They figured he was stressed out from being trapped at home in the pandemic, or going through a growth spurt.

On July 9, as his symptoms persisted, Arthur Simis took his son to an urgent care center near their home in Gardnerville, Nevada. The medical staff detected dangerously high blood sugar levels and ketones in his urine, both indicators that Atticus was in diabetic ketoacidosis, or DKA.

The doctor told Simis that his son needed hospital care immediately to avoid slipping into a coma from his newly diagnosed type 1. An ambulance took them 50 miles to the nearest hospital in Reno.

His father spent three nights sleeping at his side in the pediatric ICU. He sobbed on the phone to his wife, because only one parent was allowed inside, a measure to control coronavirus infections.

“How could he have diabetes?” Simis recalls asking the doctors. “It was absolutely terrifying.”

Simis believes his son had been infected by the coronavirus because the father and his wife experienced symptoms in the spring. The couple went to urgent care but never got tested for the coronavirus because of stricter testing criteria at the time. Atticus tested negative for an active coronavirus infection in the ICU, medical records show. But he was never tested for antibodies that could show whether he was exposed weeks earlier.

Doctors say that’s not unusual in a fast-moving pandemic, as they focus on individual emergencies rather than big-picture research questions. But the lack of testing in many of these cases, they say, may complicate efforts to detect whether and how the coronavirus might be causing diabetes.


CHILDREN IN INTENSIVE CARE
The initial reports of COVID-related diabetes include more children with cases like that of Atticus.

In a study published in August, researchers at Imperial College in London and several hospitals there found that cases of type 1 diabetes among children nearly doubled to 30 during late March to early June - as the pandemic raged - compared to the same period in previous years. Five of the children tested positive for a prior coronavirus infection, but the study’s authors said many of the children were not tested.

In the United States, Children’s Hospital Los Angeles said the percentage of newly diagnosed type 2 patients who arrived in diabetic ketoacidosis, a potentially fatal buildup of acid in the blood, has nearly doubled for March through August compared to the same period in 2018 and 2019.

Dr. Lily Chao, director of the type 2 diabetes clinic there, said the hospital is still investigating whether this increase is driven by exposure to COVID-19.

Brandi Edwards, a registered nurse and diabetes educator at Alabama’s Huntsville Hospital, said calls about pediatric cases began to surge in May. Doctors summon her when a child arrives in the emergency room or ICU so she can counsel the family on insulin injections, glucose readings and how daily life will change going forward.
“We’ve seen more type 1 cases this year than I ever remember,” Edwards said. “There were three kids in the pediatric ICU at the same time. That is so rare.”

EVICTION NOTICE
After surviving a diabetic emergency, life for a newly diagnosed patient can be overwhelming. Medication and other supplies to manage diabetes can cost hundreds of dollars every month, and long waits to see an endocrinologist are common in many areas.

Buelna, the patient in Arizona, is still waiting for his Medicaid plan to approve a continuous glucose monitor more than two months after his diagnosis. The disease knocked him out of work for weeks and wrecked his family’s finances. His wife, Erika, is eight months pregnant and they have a 3-year-old daughter, Katalina. The family got an eviction notice on Aug. 2, while Mario was in the ICU, and they rely on a food bank for some meals.

Buelna said he fell into a depression in the hospital, cut off from family visits, and credits his sister with lifting his spirits in phone calls.

“I want to get better so I can see my kids grow up,” he said. “I’m not ready to go yet.”

Having extended Family member and knowing handful acquaintance families with Type 1, this news story hit too close for comfort. Type 1 Diabetes gets way overlooked by the general public compared to usual Type 2. And how FDA, Big Pharma compound this health problem is an effing disgrace. Slow step forward, couple steps back. Tragedy.

😡:emoji_angry:😡
 
It has one of the most
dame2.png
volleyball scenes you'll ever see

and a GOAT soundtrack song


Take my breath awaaaaaaayyyyaawayyyyy
noah.png

BERLIN!! 👍👍👍

Yeah, the soundtrack is quite possibly one of the best in movie history!! Kenny Loggins is a genius!!!
 
Developed a cough on the 8th and didn’t think anything of it. Seemed like a normal seasonal cold.

This past Friday the cough got worse as well as a runny nose. Fast forward to today with cough, runny nose, tired, and had a fever earlier today. I’ve been in bed all day. I had a COVID test this morning. Have to wait a couple days for results.

Hey buddy, I saw your IG story. 🙏🙏🙏🙏 for ya buddy. Do everything you can to feel better.
 

Supposedly the brightest and smartest scientists in the world and a damn 14 yr old girl might have found the cure. Hats off to this young lady!
She's come up with a theory, not the actual cure yet.

But. If her theory leads to the cure then they got to throw her way more than 25k. Way way way way more
 
Developed a cough on the 8th and didn’t think anything of it. Seemed like a normal seasonal cold.

This past Friday the cough got worse as well as a runny nose. Fast forward to today with cough, runny nose, tired, and had a fever earlier today. I’ve been in bed all day. I had a COVID test this morning. Have to wait a couple days for results.
tale care of yourself and keep us posted if possible
what state are you in if you don’t mind me asking
 
Question about the Covid Antigen rapid tests, does the test only result in positive for those with existing symptoms? I've been doing some research and this appears to be the case but just asking here to see if someone has more information. As these tests become more readily available it seems people will get too comfortable taking these tests instead of the standard PCR and have a false sense of security if they are asymptomatic and test negative when they still could potentially have the virus. We all saw what happened with the white house event.
 
Question about the Covid Antigen rapid tests, does the test only result in positive for those with existing symptoms? I've been doing some research and this appears to be the case but just asking here to see if someone has more information. As these tests become more readily available it seems people will get too comfortable taking these tests instead of the standard PCR and have a false sense of security if they are asymptomatic and test negative when they still could potentially have the virus. We all saw what happened with the white house event.

They are certainly less sensitive and don't typically detect the virus as early or late as standard PCR tests. However, based on what I have seen from day 3 (after infection) to day 10 they are often very accurate. Most people don't find out they have been exposed until a few days after anyway, so based on exposure or symptoms I would personally opt for an antigen test that will give me results within 15 minutes rather than the anxiety of waiting 2+ days.
 
tale care of yourself and keep us posted if possible
what state are you in if you don’t mind me asking

Hey thanks. Well my fever went up to 100.7 and then back down over the course of the early evening. It went away completely at night and I slept well. No fever right now so working from home. Coughing up phlegm still. Nose stopped running. Waiting for test results which my wife suggested I get the test. She’s has been seeing potential COVID patients every week. She’s seen some people not have every symptom too.
 
Question about the Covid Antigen rapid tests, does the test only result in positive for those with existing symptoms? I've been doing some research and this appears to be the case but just asking here to see if someone has more information. As these tests become more readily available it seems people will get too comfortable taking these tests instead of the standard PCR and have a false sense of security if they are asymptomatic and test negative when they still could potentially have the virus. We all saw what happened with the white house event.
My understanding was that the rapid antigen test would catch if you're infectious, not necessarily whether you're symptomatic or not. But there may be new data that says otherwise (if you have any sources, please share).

No current test can tell you with 100% certainty that you're safe. For example, if it's day 1 of your infection, you may get a negative PCR test, but by the time you get the results (1-7 days later), you may not be infectious and/or symptomatic. I think the best strategy is a combination of time and testing -- if you've been isolated for a week or two AND get a negative test towards the end of your isolation, I'd be fairly confident you're not infectious.
 
Hey thanks. Well my fever went up to 100.7 and then back down over the course of the early evening. It went away completely at night and I slept well. No fever right now so working from home. Coughing up phlegm still. Nose stopped running. Waiting for test results which my wife suggested I get the test. She’s has been seeing potential COVID patients every week. She’s seen some people not have every symptom too.
Is she getting tested for covid regularly? Or at least this week?

Glad you're doing ok. Hang in there.
 
My understanding was that the rapid antigen test would catch if you're infectious, not necessarily whether you're symptomatic or not. But there may be new data that says otherwise (if you have any sources, please share).

No current test can tell you with 100% certainty that you're safe. For example, if it's day 1 of your infection, you may get a negative PCR test, but by the time you get the results (1-7 days later), you may not be infectious and/or symptomatic. I think the best strategy is a combination of time and testing -- if you've been isolated for a week or two AND get a negative test towards the end of your isolation, I'd be fairly confident you're not infectious.

To add, PCR tests WILL pick up dead/inactive viral particles, so a positive PCR test doesn't even necessarily mean you are still contagious.
 
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