Category Archives: Health

Experts insist Covid infected people without symptoms were TWO-THIRDS less likely to pass virus on

Fears about silent spreaders of Covid — who suffer no symptoms but can pass the virus to others — may have been overblown. 

A study of nearly 30,000 people has found asymptomatic carriers are about 68 per cent less likely to pass the virus on than those who get sick.  

No10 used concerns about asymptomatic spread to justify forcing Britons to obey lockdowns and wear masks.  

They were thought to account for up to a third of all infections and many scientists claimed asymptomatic patients were just as infectious as the sick.

But a new global study spanning 42 countries, including the UK and US, found they were only responsible for as little as 14 per cent of cases. 

They also estimate that their overall risk of passing the virus to someone else ‘about two-thirds lower’. 

Scientists claimed Covid’s ability to spread asymptomatically was one of the reasons for harsh social curbs.

During one of the national lockdowns in January 2021, the Government said about a third of people with Covid had no symptoms and urged people to ‘act like you’ve got it’.

Researchers have found people with asymptomatic infections are two thirds less likely to pass the virus on to others compares to those with symptoms. The idea that someone could carry the virus without knowing it was part of the reason Britons were asked to wear masks at various stages of the pandemic 

The risk of asymptomatic people spreading Covid was part of Government messaging urging people to obey a lockdown in January 2021

WHAT IS THE FULL LIST OF COVID SYMPTOMS? 

According to the NHS, symptoms of Covid in adults can include: 

  • a high temperature or shivering (chills) – a high temperature means you feel hot to touch on your chest or back (you do not need to measure your temperature) 
  • a new, continuous cough – this means coughing a lot for more than an hour, or 3 or more coughing episodes in 24 hours 
  • a loss or change to your sense of smell or taste 
  • shortness of breath 
  • feeling tired or exhausted
  • an aching body 
  • a headache 
  • a sore throat 
  • a blocked or runny nose 
  • loss of appetite 
  • diarrhoea 
  • feeling sick or being sick

Experts analysed data from 130 studies from 42 countries.

They involved 28,426 people who caught Covid between April 2020 and July 2021. 

Of these patients, nearly 12,000 had an asymptomatic infection, having tested positive on a PCR but having suffered no symptoms. 

All of the studies included the results of community screening programmes, contact tracing, and investigations into specific outbreaks like on cruise ships. 

They found the ‘secondary attack rate’, how likely people infected with Covid are to pass the virus to others, was 68 per cent lower for asymptomatic cases, compared to those with symptoms. 

Scientists also estimated between 14-to-50 per cent of the Covid infections were asymptomatic. 

They said the range was so high due to the differences in the methodologies of the studies they drew the data from. 

But lead author, Diana Buitrago-Garcia, from the University of Bern in Switzerland, suggested their role in overall Covid transmission was minor.  

‘If both the proportion and transmissibility of asymptomatic infection are relatively low, people with asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infection should account for a smaller proportion of overall transmission than presymptomatic individuals,’ she said. 

Co-author, Professor Nicola Low, an expert in social and preventative medicine at Bern, said while it was clear asymptomatic cases were less infectious, the true scale of these cases in the pandemic was difficult to calculate. 

‘The true proportion of SARS-CoV-2 infection is still not known, and it would be misleading to rely on a single number because the 130 studies that we reviewed were so different,’ she said. 

‘People with truly asymptomatic infection are, however, less infectious than those with symptomatic infection.’ 

At the start of the pandemic, the NHS has only listed three Covid symptoms: a high temperature, a cough and a loss or change to taste or smell. But it quietly expanded its list of all the tell-tale signs of the virus to also include a loss of appetite, feeling or being sick, a headache, shortness of breath, feeling tired, an aching body, a sore throat, a blocked or runny nose and diarrhoea were added to the list in April

What’s the latest statistics on Covid in the UK? 

The latest data for the UK shows Covid cases are still collapsing.

Office for National Statistics (ONS) analysts estimate just over one million, or one in 55 people, in England had the virus on any day in the week to May 13. 

This is down 14 per cent on the previous week.

Similar falls were recorded in the other UK nations, with just one in 45 people in Scotland, one in 40 in Wales and one in 60 in Northern Ireland thought to be infected. 

It marks the sixth consecutive week that the ONS’s huge testing survey — now the best barometre of the outbreak — has reported a week-on-week fall in cases, despite no Covid restrictions being in place.

The Government is relying on the study, based on swabs of thousands of random people, to track the coronavirus now that free testing has been axed for the vast majority of Britons.

Another limitation of the study, which is ongoing as more data becomes available, is that it only includes studies up to July 2021.

This, as the authors highlight, means it will not include any data on more recent Covid variants like Omicron, which only emerged in November last year and is milder than earlier versions of the virus. 

It also means the sample size includes data from both before and when vaccines were starting to be rolled out in various countries, which could influence the results. 

Most of the studies included in the research, which has been published in the journal PLOS Medicine, were from Europe and the Americas, with 45 from each.  

The authors also highlighted reduced routine testing as countries, like the UK, wind down their routine pandemic testing will also impact future research into asymptomatic cases.

Fears about asymptomatic Covid cases unwittingly spreading the virus were part of a Government rationale for urging people at the start of 2021 to take a test twice a week.

At the time then-Health Secretary Matt Hancock said regular testing was one the best ways to catch asymptomatic cases and keep people safe. 

‘Around 1 in 3 people have coronavirus without any symptoms, so getting tested regularly is one of the simplest and easiest ways we can keep ourselves and our loved ones safe,’ he said. 

‘I’d encourage everyone to take up the offer and test twice a week.’ 

Covid symptoms themselves have undergone several changes over the course of the pandemic.

In the beginning UK health officials only accepted three symptoms: a high temperature, a cough and a loss or change to taste or smell as signs someone had the virus, despite other countries including up to 14.

But in April this year the NHS quietly expanded the list to 12, including a loss of appetite, feeling or being sick and a headache, shortness of breath, feeling tired, an aching body, a sore throat, a blocked or runny nose and diarrhoea. 

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Monkeypox case reported in Virginia, CDC says

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Virginia public health officials on Thursday reported the state’s first presumed positive case of monkeypox in a Northern Virginia woman who recently traveled to an African country.

The Virginia case is among nine identified in seven states, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention officials told reporters Thursday morning. The state lab identified the case, and as of Thursday afternoon the Virginia Department of Health was awaiting CDC confirmation.

The patient was not infectious during travel, did not require hospitalization and is isolating at home, state officials said. The health department identified her close contacts and is monitoring them.

State Health Commissioner Colin M. Greene stressed that, despite the recent national uptick, monkeypox is a very rare disease in the United States and the Virginia resident who tested positive does not pose a public health risk.

“Transmission requires close contact with someone with symptomatic monkeypox, and this virus has not shown the ability to spread rapidly in the general population,” he said.

What is monkeypox, the rare virus now confirmed in the U.S. and Europe?

The health department last week advised medical providers in Virginia to watch for cases of monkeypox and report them to local health authorities right away.

Monkeypox is a rare but potentially serious viral illness that typically begins with flu-like symptoms and swelling of the lymph nodes and progresses to a rash on the face and body, the state message said. Symptoms generally appear seven to 14 days after exposure and usually clear up within two to four weeks.

The recent cases represent the first identified in the United States this year. Last year, Maryland and Texas each reported a case in people who had recently visited Nigeria, Virginia officials said.

This year, cases have also been identified in Massachusetts, Florida, Utah, New York, Washington state and California.

“We need to presume that there is some community spread, but there is active contact tracing that is happening right now to understand whether and how these cases might have been in contact with each other or with others in other countries,” CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said Thursday.

CDC monkeypox warning urges ‘enhanced precautions’ for travel

The first monkeypox case in the United States this year was identified last week in Massachusetts, in a resident who had recently traveled to Canada. The unusual uptick globally has been clustered in Europe, as well as in the United States and Canada, the World Health Organization says.

Fenit Nirappil contributed to this report.

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CDC identifies 9 monkeypox cases in 7 states

Cases have been identified in Massachusetts, Florida, Utah, Washington, California, Virginia and New York.

All of the cases “are within gay, bisexual men and other men who have sex with men,” she said.

Walensky called for an approach “guided by science, not by stigma.”

“This is a community that has the strength and has demonstrated the ability to address challenges to their health by focusing on compassion and science,” she said in an apparent reference to the AIDS epidemic.

“While some groups may have a greater chance of exposure right now, infectious diseases do not care about state or international borders. They’re not contained within social networks and the risk of exposure is not limited to any one particular group,” she warned.

Walensky implored Americans “to approach this outbreak without stigma and without discrimination.”

The CDC is working to learn more about the outbreak: Samples from the nine identified cases were sent to the CDC for additional confirmatory testing and genomic investigation, Walensky noted, and there are efforts to learn how each individual contracted the virus.

Some of the nine cases have a recent history of international travel to areas with active monkeypox outbreaks, she said, but “others do not.”

The US expects more cases to be diagnosed as the CDC has urged doctors and Americans to be on the lookout for symptoms.

“We shouldn’t be surprised to see more cases reported in the US in the upcoming days. It’s actually a sign that Americans are remaining vigilant, and healthcare providers and public health workers are doing their job,” said Dr. Raj Panjabi, White House senior director for health security and biodefense.

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Who Is Protected Against Monkeypox?

For a world weary of fighting the coronavirus, the monkeypox outbreak poses a key question: Am I at risk?

The answer is reassuring. Most children and adults with healthy immune systems are likely to dodge severe illness, experts said in interviews. But there are two high-risk groups.

One comprises infants younger than six months. But they are not yet affected by the current outbreak. And many older adults, the group most likely to succumb to the monkeypox virus, are at least somewhat protected by decades-old smallpox vaccinations, studies suggest.

Vaccinated older adults may become infected but are likely to escape with only mild symptoms.

“The bottom line is that even those that were vaccinated many decades before maintain a very, very high level of antibodies and the ability to neutralize the virus,” said Dr. Luigi Ferrucci, scientific director of the National Institute on Aging.

“Even if they were vaccinated 50 years ago, that protection should still be there,” he said.

In the United States, routine immunization for smallpox ceased in 1972. The military continued its vaccination program until 1991 as a precaution against a bioterrorism attack.

Questions about the smallpox vaccine’s durability rose after an anthrax attack in 2001, said Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, the Biden administration’s top adviser on infectious diseases. It was reasonable to assume that most vaccinated people were still protected, he said, “but durability of protection varies from person to person.”

“We can’t guarantee that a person who was vaccinated against smallpox is still going to be protected against monkeypox,” Dr. Fauci said.

The monkeypox outbreak has grown to include about 260 confirmed cases and scores more under investigation in 21 countries.

In the United States, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is tracking nine cases in seven states, not all of which have a history of travel to countries where monkeypox is endemic. That suggests that there may already be some level of community transmission, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, the agency’s director, told reporters on Thursday.

Dr. Walensky said that 74 laboratories in 46 states have access to a test that can detect monkeypox, and together they can screen up to 7,000 samples a week. The agency is working to expand that capacity, she said, adding: “We’ve been preparing for this type of outbreak for decades.”

Monkeypox infection begins with respiratory symptoms but blooms into a distinct rash, first in the mouth, then the palms of the hand and soles of the feet, and gradually the rest of the body. The rash eventually becomes raised, growing into pus-filled blisters.

Each pustule contains live virus, and a ruptured blister can contaminate bed linens and other items, putting close contacts at risk. Infected people should also be very careful about rubbing their eyes because the virus can destroy sight.

“Before Jenner had developed the smallpox vaccine, the number one cause of blindness in the world was smallpox,” said Mark Slifka, an immunologist at Oregon Health and Science University. Infected people are contagious until the pustules scab over and slough off, he said.

Dr. Slifka and other experts emphasized that while monkeypox can be severe and even fatal, the current outbreak is unlikely to swell into a large epidemic.

“We’re lucky to have vaccines and therapeutics — things that can mitigate all that,” said Anne Rimoin, an epidemiologist at the University of California, Los Angeles, who has studied monkeypox in Africa. “We do have the ability to stop this virus.”

Monkeypox takes up to 12 days to cause symptoms, giving doctors a window of at least five days after exposure to vaccinate and forestall disease. (The approach, called post-exposure prophylaxis, is not an option for Covid patients because the coronavirus can start to ravage the body just a couple days after exposure.)

The monkeypox virus does not spread in the absence of symptoms. Careful surveillance, isolation of infected people, contact tracing and quarantine of contacts should contain the outbreak, Dr. Rimoin said.

A majority of those infected currently are men under 50, and many identify as gay or bisexual, which may reflect the outbreak’s possible origins at a Gay Pride event in the Canary Islands. (The outbreak could just as easily have started among heterosexual people at a large event, experts said.)

“The risk of exposure is not limited to any one particular group,” Dr. Walensky said on Thursday. “Our priority is to help everyone make informed decisions to protect their health and the health of their community, and that starts with building awareness guided by science, not by stigma.”

No deaths have been reported. But experts are particularly concerned about close contacts who are children, older adults or who have weak immune systems for other reasons.

There are conflicting opinions on how long immunity from a smallpox vaccination lasts.

The C.D.C. recommends boosters of smallpox vaccines every three years but only “for persons at risk of occupation exposure,” David Daigle, a spokesman for the agency, said in a statement.

“Until we know more, we will be using available vaccine stocks for people who’ve had close contact with known cases, and people at highest risk for exposure through their jobs, like health care workers treating monkeypox patients,” he said.

The United States and several European countries have begun immunizing close contacts of infected patients, an approach called ring vaccination.

Many of the most vulnerable groups may already be protected. In one study, Dr. Slifka and his colleagues drew blood from 306 vaccinated volunteers, some of whom had been immunized decades earlier, including one who had been immunized 75 years before. Most of them maintained high levels of antibodies to smallpox.

In another study, Dr. Slifka and his colleagues showed that antibodies produced by even a single dose of the smallpox vaccine decline very slowly in the body, dropping to half after about 92 years.

Dr. Ferrucci and his colleagues at the N.I.H., as well as other teams, have also found that antibody levels persist for decades after vaccination. Some studies have found that other branches of the immune system also wane slowly, but antibodies produced from smallpox vaccination may be enough on their own to protect against monkeypox.

If smallpox were to start spreading, it would make sense to immunize anyone who is exposed because of its high mortality rate, regardless of a previous vaccination, said Gigi Gronvall, a biosecurity expert at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security.

“We wouldn’t want to take the chance that somebody was left unprotected,” she said.

But that is not necessary now, she added: “This is monkeypox.”

Laboratory evidence of antibodies does not prove that smallpox vaccination can protect against monkeypox. But answering that question would require that study participants be deliberately infected with smallpox or a related virus, an obviously unethical experiment.

For the same reason, newer smallpox vaccines and drugs have been tested only in animals.

Still, one way to study the vaccine’s effectiveness in people is to gather evidence during an outbreak. Dr. Slifka’s team did just that in 2003, when dozens of Americans became infected with monkeypox after being exposed to infected prairie dogs.

The researchers flew into Milwaukee and drew blood from 28 people who had been exposed to the infected prairie dogs. Of the eight people who had previously been vaccinated, five developed an average of three pus-filled blisters, compared with an average of 33 in those who were unvaccinated.

The other three vaccinated individuals had no symptoms at all. “They didn’t even know they had been infected,” Dr. Slifka said.

Another study of that outbreak found that in a family of three, the previously vaccinated father developed just two monkeypox lesions compared with 200 in the unvaccinated mother. Their unvaccinated 6-year-old daughter had about 90 lesions and was in a coma for 12 days.

Questions about the durability of vaccine protection against monkeypox have taken on particular significance as the number of cases worldwide has risen. Monkeypox re-emerged among people in Nigeria in 2017, and there have since been about 200 confirmed cases and 500 suspected cases.

The Democratic Republic of Congo has recorded 58 deaths and nearly 1,300 suspected cases since the beginning of this year.

People in African villages used to contract monkeypox from animals while hunting but rarely infected others. “It’s only very recently, like, just the last few years, when we started to see this,” Dr. Rimoin said of bigger outbreaks.

The eradication of smallpox, while one of the greatest achievements in public health, has left populations vulnerable to the virus and to its cousins.

Diminishing immunity, coupled with a rise in population and increased proximity to wild animals, may result in more frequent monkeypox outbreaks, Dr. Rimoin and her colleagues warned in 2010.

Unrestrained outbreaks, particularly among immunocompromised people, would give the virus more opportunity to acquire mutations that make it more resilient — in people and in animals.

“If monkeypox were to establish itself in a wildlife reservoir outside of Africa, the public health setback would be enormous,” Dr. Rimoin said. “That, I think, is a legitimate concern.”



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Monkeypox virus outbreak news and updates live | Symptoms, transmission and new cases in the US

Monkeypox outbreak: headlines

More than 250 confirmed and suspected cases of monkeypox from 16 countries reports WHO

– WHO’s Maria van Kerkhove describes monkeypox outbreak as “containable situation”

– Monkeypox outbreak will not lead to lockdowns, says expert

– Roche develops three test kits able to detect monkeypox

– One confirmed case and four suspected cases in US: CDC

– California health officials announce suspected case in Sacramento County

– US government orders $119 million of smallpox vaccine Jynneos – does it protect against monkeypox?

Moderna starts clinical trials on monkeypox vaccine

– UK’s Health Security Agency confirms 14 more cases in England

– WHO doesn’t see need for mass vaccination, isolation and contact tracing should suffice

Denmark considering vaccinating monkeypox close contacts

Helpful information & links:

– Monkeypox symptoms: fever, malaise, headache, and sometimes sore throat and cough, and lymphadenopathy.

– Everything you need to know about Monkeypox.

– Mokeypox: How does it spread? Does it require sexual contact?

Related AS USA articles:

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How To Start A Mediterranean Diet: A Nutritionist-Backed Guide

A lot of diets out there get over-hyped, but that’s not the case with the Mediterranean diet. Yes, the word diet is in there, but one of the best parts about this approach to eating is that it’s more about making a conscious decision to eat more fruits, veggies, whole grains, seafood, and healthy fats than anything you might traditionally associate with a “diet.”

“The Mediterranean diet doesn’t involve counting calories, tracking macronutrients like carbohydrates, or any of the strict rules or restrictions of many of the fads marketed to us these days as health or weight-loss quick fixes,” explains dietitian Lauren Armstrong, RDN.

For many years, the U.S. News and World Report has named the Mediterranean diet as the #1 healthiest eating style because of its versatility and health benefits. That’s why we put together an exclusive Mediterranean diet PDF guidebook just for WH+ members.

While following this plan won’t magically transport you to a villa somewhere in Greece (wouldn’t that be nice), it can certainly put you in the right headspace. Research has shown that following a Mediterranean diet aligns with reduced rates of cancer, better heart health, and improved mental health.

If that all sounds good to you, keep reading for all the details on how to start the Mediterranean diet.

Try The Mediterranean Diet Now

What is the Mediterranean diet?

The Mediterranean diet refers to the eating habits of people who live in countries that border the Mediterranean Sea. This includes places such as France, Greece, Morocco, Turkey, Italy, and Spain. And while it has many benefits, including weight loss (per The American Journal of Medicine), there are few things you should know before you make the commitment.

If you’re someone that’s always on the go, consider making small lifestyle changes to ensure you’re sticking to the right foods and not grabbing the easiest thing in reach.

Learn More About The Mediterranean Diet

“The premise is avoiding over-processed, packaged foods and enjoying fresh, whole foods whenever possible,” explains Emily Kyle, RDN. That means you’ll want to leave out sodas, processed meats (like hot dogs), white bread, and candy.

How to get started on the Mediterranean diet

It might seem overwhelming to start a diet based on a culture that you might not be a part of or geographically near. Luckily, there are a few tips you can follow to ensure a smooth transition to a Mediterranean diet.

  • Try incorporating seafood into your meals once a week.
  • Keep healthy, fulfilling snacks on deck.
  • Start using olive oil to cook.
  • Don’t shy away from frozen foods.

    You’ll find even more tips in our Mediterranean diet guide, exclusive to WH+ members.

    What foods are considered a part of a Mediterranean diet?

    Many different foods fit into a Mediterranean diet. And as you stock your fridge with these items more frequently, it will start to become second nature. Here’s a general idea of what you’ll be adding to your shopping cart.

    • spinach
    • potatoes
    • beans
    • salmon
    • milk
    • oats
    • olives
    • peaches
    • hummus
    • dark chocolate

      For a full shopping list, access our Mediterranean diet guidebook now.

      You won’t get bored with your meals.

      Many assume that the Mediterranean diet means a restrictive or all seafood diet with a lack of variety. In reality, there are plenty of delicious meals you can add to your routine. Here are three simple ideas that taste amazing and are packed with nutrients.

      • Breakfast: scrambled eggs with spinach, mushrooms, and tomatoes.
      • Lunch: grilled fish with brown rice, grilled zucchini, bell pepper, and red onion.
      • Dinner: lentil soup with celery, carrots, onion, tomatoes, and mushrooms.

        Need more inspo? We asked a nutritionist to map out even more ideas in our Mediterranean diet guidebook.

        Try The Mediterranean Diet ASAP


        Now that you’ve gotten a sneak peek of how to start a Mediterranean diet, it’s time for you to dive into the real thing with this PDF guidebook that’s an exclusive perk for our Women’s Health+ members.

        And BTW, signing up for a Women’s Health+ membership also gives you access to our newsletter, *unlimited site content*, a one-year print magazine subscription, and our full library of healthy living PDFs and guidebooks.

        Join Women’s Health+ today for exclusive access to your Mediterranean diet PDF guide and tons more perks.

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        Illinois COVID Update Today: IL reports 6,406 new coronavirus cases, 8 deaths

        CHICAGO (WLS) — Illinois reported 6,406 new COVID cases and 8 deaths Wednesday.

        There have been at least 3,274,360 total COVID cases as of Wednesday, including at least 33,796 related deaths in the state since the pandemic began.

        As of Monday night, 1,138 patients in Illinois were reported to be in the hospital with COVID-19. Of those, 120 patients were in the ICU, and 35 patients with COVID-19 were on ventilators.

        RELATED | Pfizer says its 3-shot COVID vaccine for kids 6 months to 5 years old 80% effective against omicron

        IDPH officials reported a seven-day case average of 41.6 per 100,000 people.

        A total of 22,270,391 vaccine doses have been administered in Illinois as of Tuesday, and 64.76% of the state’s population is fully vaccinated. The seven-day rolling average of vaccines administered daily is 13,957.

        RELATED | COVID reinfection likely to become more common without variant-specific vaccines, experts say

        Chicago’s top doctor expects the city will move from the “medium” risk level of community transmission to “high” by Friday.

        Dr. Allison Arwady is urging people who are unvaccinated or with underlying conditions to avoid indoor gatherings.

        She does not anticipate the return of mask mandates unless more people are hospitalized.

        Copyright © 2022 WLS-TV. All Rights Reserved.



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        Months After a Stroke, the Man Was Wasting Away. What Was Wrong?

        Finally, he agreed to see Dr. Richard Kaufman, their primary-care doctor. Kaufman was shocked by the man’s appearance, how the skin on his face hung in folds as if air had been let out of his cheeks. He’d lost nearly 40 pounds. He struggled to walk the few steps to the exam table. His right side, which was weakened by his stroke, was now matched by weakness on his left side. His stroke hadn’t done this. There was something else going on. Kaufman ordered some preliminary blood tests to try to see where the problem might lie. Those were the results that sent the couple to the emergency room.

        It was early afternoon when Dr. Osama Kandalaft, the hospitalist on duty, found the couple. This was December 2021, and the E.R. was bursting with a new surge of Covid cases. The patient was on a stretcher in the hallway. His wife sat on a stool next to him. Before meeting the man, Kandalaft reviewed the results of the tests done in the E.R. His kidneys were in bad shape.

        Kandalaft saw a pattern in the other labs that he recognized. One test showed the presence of a lot of blood in the man’s urine. And yet when the urine was examined under a microscope, no blood was seen. That’s because this wasn’t blood; it was a hemoglobin cousin, myoglobin, the oxygen-​carrying component of muscle, which is released into the bloodstream after an injury. Widespread muscle damage could certainly explain the man’s weakness. Moreover, he was taking a cholesterol-​lowering medication, a statin called rosuvastatin, which is known to cause muscle injury in some who take it. Kandalaft wasn’t sure if the statin could cause the patient’s trouble swallowing. Still, he would put a hold on the medication and order a test to look for creatine kinase, another protein released by injured muscles.

        Doctors often invoke the principle of Occam’s razor, articulated by the 14th-​century philosopher William of Occam, who posited that the simplest interpretation of any phenomenon is most likely the right one. A single, elegant explanation of suffering is often more welcome by both doctors and patients than the more contemporary principle, attributed to the 20th-century physician John Hickam, that “patients can have as many diseases as they damn well please.” But in Kandalaft’s experience, Hickam’s complexity often fit better. Especially with a patient who was 82 and had diabetes and heart disease and had suffered a recent stroke.

        The patient and his wife spent most of the night in the emergency room, waiting for a bed to open for someone who didn’t have Covid-19. He was moved to one just before dawn. Dr. Andrew Sanchez, the intern assigned to care for the patient, woke him early the next morning to introduce himself and try to figure out how to proceed. The blood test sent by Kandalaft to look for muscle injury had been helpful. It was 40 times higher than it should have been, indicating severe damage.

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        Warning signs ahead of monkeypox outbreak went unheeded

        Monkeypox appears to have exploded out of nowhere in the past two weeks, spreading across Europe, the Americas, and other regions. But warning signs appear to have gone unheeded.

        An unusual and long-running outbreak in Nigeria should have served as notice that it was only a matter of time before this orthopoxvirus pushed its way to the center of the infectious diseases stage, experts say.

        After decades without cases, Nigeria experienced a large monkeypox outbreak starting in 2017 that continues to this day. Prior to this year, that outbreak spread beyond Nigeria’s borders eight times, with infected people traveling to the United States, the United Kingdom, Israel, and Singapore.

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        Chikwe Ihekweazu, the former director general of the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control, said his country sought help to try to decipher what was going on with monkeypox. But the requests didn’t get much traction.

        As such, some critical questions about monkeypox — including the true case fatality of the West African clade of the virus, the one circulating now, as well as how many people, on average, each infected person transmits to — remain unclear.

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        “There wasn’t a lot of interest to support that work until now — sadly,” said Ihekweazu, who was recently named to head the World Health Organization’s new Berlin-based hub for pandemic and epidemic intelligence. “It never really received the interest it needed to answer some of these questions.”

        Nigeria has detected 558 suspected cases — 241 of them confirmed — since the current outbreak began in 2017.

        Nigerian CDC

        “When we saw this emerge suddenly in Nigeria in 2017 out of the blue literally, we were all very surprised,” he told STAT. “In a way, it’s similar to the surprise around the world right now, because it’s a similar scenario. Suddenly from nowhere, we had a lot of cases in the Niger Delta part of Nigeria in the south.”

        Further investigation revealed cases around the country, Ihekweazu said. “So very interesting that a virus that we hadn’t seen for about 40 years at the time in Nigeria suddenly appears and appears in multiple places at the same time.”

        The Nigerian CDC tried — to date without success — to figure out how people were being infected with the virus. Some small mammals are believed to be the host species of the virus, but efforts to find the virus in the wild have so far failed.

        The rest of the world appears to be rapidly catching up with Nigeria. There have been over 300 suspected cases detected since the United Kingdom reported in mid-May that it has diagnosed cases of monkeypox in people who had not traveled to one of the countries in West or Central Africa where the virus is endemic. Of the cases outside of Africa, 219 have been confirmed, the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control said Wednesday.

        Ihekweazu said before the Covid-19 pandemic he tried to raise awareness of the problem monkeypox could pose. In 2019, the London-based think tank Chatham House convened a meeting to discuss the risks, said David Heymann, a professor of infectious diseases epidemiology at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, who chaired the meeting. Among them was the possibility of sexual transmission of monkeypox because some people who contracted the virus developed lesions on their genitals or in their genital region.

        The current outbreak appears to have taken off when the virus began to transmit among men who have sex with men.

        The virus is not transmitted through sex per se; there’s no evidence, for example, that it is passed through semen or vaginal fluids. But the skin-to-skin contact experienced during sex can lead to transmission, if one of the partners has monkeypox lesions.

        Anne Rimoin, an infectious diseases epidemiologist at the University of California, Los Angeles, who has studied monkeypox since 2002, agreed with Ihekweazu that people who study poxviruses knew spread of monkeypox was a possibility. The eradication of smallpox in 1980 and the cessation of use of smallpox vaccine — which offers some protection against monkeypox — created an ecological void experts feared another poxvirus might fill.

        “There have been a million tabletop exercises and other things, looking at the dissemination of monkeypox, of smallpox, of other poxviruses. This is not a completely unanticipated situation here,” Rimoin said. “We knew all along, as population immunity waned and potentially individual immunity waned for those who were vaccinated, we would potentially see cases of monkeypox or other poxviruses spreading.”

        From 2018 onward, there were sporadic instances where travelers infected in Nigeria brought the virus to countries where monkeypox is not found. Ihekweazu said each exportation put recipient countries on high alert to try to prevent domestic spread, with cases treated in high containment facilities while they were infectious. But help to stop the virus from spreading at its source didn’t follow.

        “So basically you pull out the army whenever there’s a single case exported. But there’s no interest in working together with the country from which the cases are coming to try and understand it a little bit more,” he said.

        He suggested in the aftermath of the Covid pandemic, the world may be more open to understanding the need to nip infectious disease in the bud. “This was all pre-Covid. So … hopefully people’s general sense of these things have changed a little bit that we do pay a little bit more attention.”

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        Seven healthy habits linked to lower risk of

        EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE UNTIL 4 P.M. ET, WEDNESDAY, MAY 25, 2022

         

        MINNEAPOLIS – Seven healthy habits and lifestyle factors may play a role in lowering the risk of dementia in people with the highest genetic risk, according to research published in the May 25, 2022, online issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.

        The seven cardiovascular and brain health factors, known as the American Heart Association’s Life’s Simple 7, are: being active, eating better, losing weight, not smoking, maintaining a healthy blood pressure, controlling cholesterol, and reducing blood sugar.

        “These healthy habits in the Life’s Simple 7 have been linked to a lower risk of dementia overall, but it is uncertain whether the same applies to people with a high genetic risk,” said study author Adrienne Tin, PhD, of the University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson. “The good news is that even for people who are at the highest genetic risk, living by this same healthier lifestyle are likely to have a lower risk of dementia.”

        The study looked at 8,823 people with European ancestry and 2,738 people with African ancestry who were followed for 30 years. People had an average age of 54 at the beginning of the study.

        Study participants reported their levels in all seven health factors. Total scores ranged from 0 to 14, with 0 representing the most unhealthy score and 14 representing the most healthy score. The average score among those with European ancestry was 8.3 and the average score amongst those with African ancestry was 6.6.

        Researchers calculated genetic risk scores at the start of the study using genome-wide statistics of Alzheimer’s disease, which have been used to study the genetic risk for dementia.

        Participants with European ancestry were divided into five groups and those with African ancestry were divided into three groups based on genetic risk scores. The group with the highest genetic risk included people who had at least one copy of the APOE gene variant associated with Alzheimer’s disease, APOE e4. Of those with European ancestry, 27.9% had the APOE e4 variant, while of those who had African ancestry, 40.4% had the APOE e4 variant. The group with the lowest risk had the APOE e2 variant, which has been associated with a decreased risk of dementia.

        By the end of the study, 1,603 people with European ancestry developed dementia and 631 people with African ancestry developed dementia.

        For people with European ancestry, researchers found that people with the highest scores in the lifestyle factors had a lower risk of dementia across all five genetic risk groups, including the group with the highest genetic risk of dementia. For each one-point increase in the lifestyle factor score, there was a 9% lower risk of developing dementia. Among those with European ancestry, compared with the low category of the lifestyle factor score, the intermediate and high categories were associated with 30% and 43% lower risk for dementia, respectively. Among those with African ancestry, the intermediate and high categories were associated with 6% and 17% lower risk for dementia, respectively.

        Among people with African ancestry, researchers found a similar pattern of declining dementia risk across all three groups among those with higher scores on the lifestyle factors. But researchers said the smaller number of participants in this group limited the findings, so more research is needed.

        “Larger sample sizes from diverse populations are needed to get more reliable estimates of the effects of these modifiable health factors on dementia risk within different genetic risk groups and ancestral backgrounds,” Tin said.

        A limitation of the study was the smaller sample size among people with African ancestry and that many African American participants were recruited from one location.

        The study was supported by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, the National Institutes of Health, the Department of Health and Human Services, and the National Human Genome Research Institute.

        Learn more about dementia at BrainandLife.org, home of the American Academy of Neurology’s free patient and caregiver magazine focused on the intersection of neurologic disease and brain health. Follow Brain & Life® on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

        When posting to social media channels about this research, we encourage you to use the hashtags #Neurology and #AANscience.

        The American Academy of Neurology is the world’s largest association of neurologists and neuroscience professionals, with over 38,000 members. The AAN is dedicated to promoting the highest quality patient-centered neurologic care. A neurologist is a doctor with specialized training in diagnosing, treating and managing disorders of the brain and nervous system such as Alzheimer’s disease, stroke, migraine, multiple sclerosis, concussion, Parkinson’s disease and epilepsy.

        For more information about the American Academy of Neurology, visit AAN.com or find us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn and YouTube.


        Disclaimer: AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert system.



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