Cheap antidepressant shows promise against COVID-19
Fluvoxamine, an inexpensive antidepressant, might help keep patients
with COVID-19 from developing severe disease, according to a new
study published in The Lancet Global Health
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science
/article/pii/S2214109X21004484 on Wednesday. Researchers
in Brazil recruited nearly 1,500 COVID-19 patients at high risk for
complications and randomly assigned half of them to receive
fluvoxamine by mouth for 10 days. Everyone received standard
COVID-19 treatments. Over the next month, 11% of the fluvoxamine
group needed at least six hours of emergency care or were
hospitalized, compared to 16% of patients who did not get
fluvoxamine, and fewer fluvoxamine patients died, the researchers.
The researchers suspect the drug is helping by limiting the ability
of the virus to cause inflammation. However, more research is needed
to determine the impact of fluvoxamine because "composite outcomes"
- where a variety of results are lumped together for analysis - are
unreliable, according to an editorial
https://www.sciencedirect.com/
science/article/pii/S2214109X21005015 by Otavio Berwanger
of Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein in Sao Paulo.
Reinfection odds higher for unvaccinated COVID-19 survivors
While SARS-CoV-2 infection induces antibodies that protect against
reinfection, those antibodies may not protect as well as
vaccine-induced antibodies, according to a study of hospitalized
adults who displayed COVID-like symptoms. Of 6,328 patients who were
vaccinated in the previous three to six months, 5.1% were confirmed
to have COVID-19. That compared to 8.7% of 1,020 patients who had
contracted the virus in the last three to six months but who had not
opted to get vaccinated. After accounting for risk factors, the odds
of a COVID-19 diagnosis were more than five-fold higher for the
unvaccinated survivors, researchers reported on Friday in the CDC's
Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report
https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr
/volumes/70/wr/mm7044e1.htm. "All eligible persons should
be vaccinated against COVID-19 as soon as possible, including
unvaccinated persons previously infected with SARS-CoV-2," they
said.
Ear infection by virus may explain hearing, balance problems
The coronavirus can infect cells of the inner ear, researchers found
in a study that may help explain the balance problems, hearing loss
and tinnitus, or ringing in the ears experienced by some COVID-19
patients. Using cellular models of the human ear, plus samples of
inner ear tissues from mice and humans, researchers found that inner
ear cells "have the molecular machinery to allow SARS-CoV-2 entry"
and that the virus can indeed infect those cells, according to a
report published on
[to top of second column] |
Friday in Communications
Medicine
https://go.nature.com/3k99DMX by the
team from MIT and Massachusetts Eye and Ear
Hospital in Boston. The virus might enter the
ears via the eustachian tube, which connects the
nose to the ear, or it might travel via nerves
that carry smells from the nose to brain and
from there via nerves that connect to the inner
ear, the authors speculate. They hope now to use
their human cellular models to test possible
treatments for inner ear infections caused by
SARS-CoV-2 and other viruses.
CDC, FDA tally side effects from 300 million
vaccines
Safety data from nearly 300 million doses of
COVID-19 mRNA vaccines administered in the first
six months of the U.S. vaccination program show
the majority of reported adverse events were
mild and brief, researchers from the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and
the U.S. Food and Drug Administration said this
week. Between mid-December 2020 and mid-June
this year, more than 298 million doses of the
vaccines from Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna were
administered, the researchers reported on
Thursday on medRxiv
https://www.medrxiv.org/
content/10.1101/2021.10.26.21265261v2
ahead of peer review. The Vaccine Adverse Event
Reporting System (VAERS) received more than
340,000 reports of side effects, of which 6.6%
were serious but not deadly and 1.3% were fatal.
Among roughly 8 million users of the CDC's
v-safe app, which surveys people about their
COVID-19 vaccination experiences, more than half
reported some kind of reaction, usually one day
after the injection, and more often after the
second dose, but fewer than 1% reported seeking
medical care. "Based on the most current
information," the report concludes, serious side
effects of the vaccines "are rare."
Click for a Reuters graphic
https://
tmsnrt.rs/3c7R3Bl
on vaccines in development.
(Reporting by Nancy Lapid; Editing by Tiffany
Wu)
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