5:33 PM 8/4/2020 - News Review: We thought it was just a respiratory virus. We were wrong.

UCSF body map illustration
Credit: Anna and Elena Balbusso

5:33 PM 8/4/2020

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Michael Novakhov - SharedNewsLinks 
We thought it was just a respiratory virus. We were wrong.

Michael_Novakhov shared this story .



In late January, when hospitals in the United States confirmed the presence of the novel coronavirus, health workers knew to watch for precisely three symptoms: fever, cough, and shortness of breath. But as the number of infections climbed, the symptom list began to grow.
Some patients lost their sense of smell and taste. Some had nausea or diarrhea. Some had arrhythmias or even heart attacks. Some had damaged kidneys or livers. Some had headaches, blood clots, rashes, swelling, or strokes. Many had no symptoms at all.
By June, clinicians were swapping journal papers, news stories, and tweets describing more than three dozen ways that COVID-19, the disease the coronavirus causes, appears to manifest itself. Now researchers at UC San Francisco and around the world have begun taking a closer look at this dizzying array of symptoms to get at the diseases root causes. They are learning from people inside the hospital and out; people on the brink of death and only mildly sick; people newly exposed and recovered; people young and old, Black, brown, and white. And they are beginning to piece together the story of a virus unlike any known before.

How infection sets in

Viruses lead a curious purgatorial existence of being neither fully alive nor dead. Enveloped in a protein cloak, a virus consists almost entirely of genetic material DNA or RNA, the blueprints for all of life. But it cant reproduce on its own. To survive, it must break into a cell and co-opt the cells gene-copying machinery.
The novel coronavirus, an RNA virus named SARS-CoV-2, has become notorious for its skill at breaking and entering human cells. Its tools of choice are the protein spikes protruding from its surface a feature that distinguishes all coronaviruses. The spikes of SARS-CoV-2 are the crème de la crème: By the luck of the evolutionary draw, they are able to easily grab hold of protein gates on human cells known as ACE2 receptors and, like jackknives, pry these gates open.
You can think of an ACE2 receptor like a docking site, says Faranak Fattahi, Ph.D., a UCSF Sandler Fellow. When the coronavirus pandemic hit San Francisco, Fattahi repurposed her laboratory to study this key receptor, which normally plays a role in regulating blood pressure. When the virus lands on it, she says, it initiates a molecular process that brings the virus inside the cell.
If youre exposed to SARS-CoV-2 say, from a cough or sneeze the virus will likely first encounter ACE2 receptors on cells in your nose or throat. But these receptors also populate your heart, gut, and other organs. Fattahis team has found evidence suggesting that male sex hormones such as testosterone may increase the number of ACE2 receptors that cells produce, which could help explain why SARS-CoV-2 seems to wreak greater havoc on men than on women and why kids rarely get sick. The fewer ACE2 receptors, the less risk of infection  thats the idea, she says, adding that this hypothesis for the diseases gender gap is only one of several.
Once inside a few initial host cells, the virus sets them to work churning out copies of itself. Within hours, thousands of new virus particles begin bursting forth, ready to infect more cells. Although SARS-CoV-2 is less deadly than the original SARS virus, which emerged in 2002, it replicates more rapidly. Also unlike SARS, which primarily infects the lungs, SARS-CoV-2 replicates throughout the airway, including in the nose and throat, making it highly contagious  like the common cold.
However, infection with SARS-CoV-2 usually doesnt feel like a cold. Fewer than 20 percent of infected people who eventually show up at a hospital report having had a sore throat or runny nose. During the first few days of being infected, youre more likely to have a fever, dry cough or, peculiarly, lose your sense of smell or taste.
Most likely, though, you wont feel sick at all. When UCSF researchers tested people for SARS-CoV-2 in San Franciscos Mission District, 53 percent of those infected never had any symptoms. Thats much higher than expected, says Monica Gandhi, M.D., MPH, a UCSF professor of medicine with expertise in HIV. Surveys of outbreaks in nursing homes and prisons show similar or even higher numbers. If we did a mass testing campaign on 300 million Americans right now, I think the rate of asymptomatic infection would be somewhere between 50 percent and 80 percent of cases, Gandhi says. Millions of people may be spreading the virus without knowing it, she points out, making asymptomatic transmission the Achilles heel of efforts to control the pandemic  and highlighting the importance of universal masking.
The majority of people who have COVID-19 are out in the community, and they are either asymptomatic or only mildly ill, says Sulggi Lee, M.D., Ph.D., a UCSF assistant professor of medicine. When the coronavirus pandemic hit San Francisco in early March, Lee conceived a study to investigate why. She scrambled to assemble a team and procure funding and equipment. She borrowed a colleagues mobile clinic  a van outfitted with an exam table and a phlebotomy chair  so that her team could drive around the city, collecting samples from infected people. Lee hopes data from the study, called CHIRP (COVID-19 Host Immune Response Pathogenesis), will show how peoples immune systems respond as SARS-CoV-2 starts to gain a foothold in their bodies.
A lot is riding on that initial response, she says. If Lee and her collaborators can figure out the biological processes that allow some infected people to stay relatively well, they can perhaps use that knowledge to prevent others from falling severely ill.

Battling in the lungs

True to its name, SARS-CoV-2 (which stands for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2) is first and foremost a bad respiratory virus. If your immune system doesnt defeat it at its landing site in your nose or throat, it will advance down your windpipe, infiltrating the cells lining your lungs branching air tubes. At the tubes ends, tiny air sacs called alveoli pass oxygen to your blood. As the virus multiplies, the alveoli may fill with fluid, shutting down this critical gas exchange. Your blood-oxygen level may drop and, typically about six days into an infection, you may start feeling short of breath.
What causes this mayhem? Some of it is definitely caused by the virus itself, says Michael Matthay, M.D., a UCSF professor of medicine who has studied acute respiratory diseases for more than 30 years. Inevitably, a fast-replicating virus will kill or injure many of the lung cells it infects; the more cells it infects, the more ruin it will leave in its wake.
But SARS-CoV-2 doesnt appear to be a savage destroyer of cells. Although its too early to know for sure, the viruss fatality rate seems to be roughly 10 times that of the flu. You would think thats because its just a killing machine, says Max Krummel, Ph.D., UCSFs Smith Professor of Experimental Pathology and chair of the Bakar ImmunoX initiative. So far, however, the science suggests otherwise.
One of the weirder things about this new coronavirus is it doesnt seem to be incredibly cytopathic, by which we mean cell-killing, Krummel says. Flu is really cytopathic; if you add it to human cells in a petri dish, the cells burst within 18 hours. But when UCSF researchers subjected human cells to SARS-CoV-2, many of the infected cells never perished. Its pretty compelling data that maybe were not dealing with a hugely aggressive virus, Krummel says.
The bigger provocation, he suspects, may be your own immune system. Like any pathogen, SARS-CoV-2 will trigger an immune attack within minutes of entering your body. This counterstrike is extraordinarily complex, involving many tactics, cells, and molecules. In a UCSF study called COMET (COVID-19 Multi-Phenotyping for Effective Therapies), Krummel and other scientists have been observing this immune warfare in more than 30 people admitted to UCSF hospitals with COVID-19 and other respiratory infections. What were doing is looking at patients blood, their genes, and the secretions from their noses and lungs, and were asking, Whats your army? Whats your response strategy?
Its pretty compelling data that maybe were not dealing with a hugely aggressive virus.
Max Krummel, Ph.D.
An early analysis of COMET data, Krummel says, suggests that the immune systems of many hospitalized patients mobilize differently  and more aggressively  against SARS-CoV-2 than against influenza viruses, which cause the flu. Their lungs are ravaged, these data suggest, not by the virus alone but by the detritus of an immunological battle gone awry. This rogue immune response could explain why, around day 11 of a COVID-19 infection, patients often develop a severe pneumonia known as acute respiratory distress syndrome, or ARDS.
Ultimately, COMET seeks to find COVID-19 therapies that can rein in an overeager immune system in order to prevent or treat ARDS. But that feat wont be easy, says Carolyn Calfee, M.D., MAS 09, an ARDS expert, UCSF professor of medicine, and co-leader of the study. Too much or the wrong kind of intervention, she explains, could cripple a persons immune system to the point where it cant clear an infection. Its a fine line between therapeutic and deleterious, Calfee says. Were trying to find that balance.
Typically, people who die from COVID-19 ARDS die around day 19. Reported rates of mortality have varied widely, with the highest rates being where the pandemic has hit hardest, overwhelming hospital resources and staff. At UCSF hospitals  likely due to the citys early shelter-in-place orders, which prevented an initial surge of COVID-19 cases  so far only 10 of 85 critically ill patients have died.
The good news is that weve been doing clinical trials of best-care practices for ARDS since 1998, Matthay says. Thanks to research by him and others, for example, clinicians have long known which ventilator settings result in the fewest deaths and how to flip patients onto their stomachs  a technique known as proning  to best help them breathe. If public health measures can keep hospital admissions low so that frontline providers can make good use of the skills and knowledge they already have, we may find that we have less to fear from SARS-CoV-2 than we thought.
On the other hand, the virus behaves in ways that are still mysterious.

Heart failure

In April, Susan Parson, M.D., a Bay Area medical examiner, made a startling discovery. For nearly two months, officials had believed that the first people in the U.S. to die from COVID-19 had died of respiratory failure in Washington state in late February. At the time, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention limited testing to people who had respiratory symptoms and had recently traveled to China or otherwise been exposed to the virus. Those restrictions, however, turned out to be misguided.
As a medical examiner for Californias Santa Clara County, Parson had done a routine autopsy on a 57-year-old woman named Patricia Dowd, who had died suddenly at home on February 6. In Dowds tissues, Parson found the cause of her death: SARS-CoV-2. But the virus hadnt wrecked Dowds lungs. In fact, she had only mild pneumonia. Instead, SARS-CoV-2 had ruptured her heart.
Meanwhile, epidemiologists began learning that preexisting heart disease and related conditions put people at greater risk of suffering and dying from COVID-19. Were finding that many patients who have more severe forms of the illness are obese, they are diabetic, they are hypertensive, says cardiologist Nisha Parikh, M.D., a UCSF associate professor who specializes in population health research. Such risk factors, she says, are unusual. Theyre not ones that really stood out in prior epidemics.
Clinicians, too, were seeing surprising numbers of COVID-19 patients develop heart problems  muscle weakness, inflammation, arrhythmias, even heart attacks. Were not used to respiratory viruses having such dire consequences on the heart in such apparently high numbers, says cardiologist Gregory Marcus, M.D., MAS 08, UCSFs Endowed Professor of Atrial Fibrillation Research. Many patients whose hearts acted up also had failing lungs. But others had no other symptoms or, like Dowd, only mild ones.
Since March, Marcus has co-led one of the largest community surveys to better understand the spread of SARS-CoV-2 and its myriad effects. The study, dubbed COVID-19 Citizen Science, has so far enrolled more than 27,000 people; anyone with a smartphone can participate. Marcus plans to also start collecting data from wearable devices, including Fitbits and Zio patches, which wirelessly monitor heart rhythms. There may be large numbers of people who are suffering from cardiovascular effects of COVID-19 in the absence of other symptoms, Marcus says. Im worried were missing those cases.
It stands to reason that SARS-CoV-2 affects the heart. After all, heart cells are flush with ACE2 receptors, the viruss vital port of entry. And, indeed, laboratory experiments suggest that the virus can enter and replicate in cultured human heart cells, says Bruce Conklin, M.D., a professor of medicine and an expert in heart-disease genetics at UCSF and the Gladstone Institutes.
But Conklin doesnt think SARS-CoV-2 necessarily kills heart cells outright. Rather, in the process of copying itself, the virus steals pieces of the genetic instructions that tell the heart cells how to do their job. Its hauling away and hijacking stuff thats necessary for the heart to beat, he says. He is currently testing this hypothesis using human heart cells grown in cup-sized vessels in the lab of Todd McDevitt, Ph.D., a bioengineer at UCSF and the Gladstone Institutes.
Its also possible, however, that an infected persons own immune system may do the majority of the damage in the heart, as it appears to do in the lungs. The heart probably gets infected by a lot of other viruses, and they dont have a lethal effect, Conklin says. What makes this one different?
Graph with three bars. Bar at left has 80 percent at top and Non-Severe at bottom. Bar in middle has 15 percent at top and Severe at bottom Bar at right has 5 percent at top and Critical at bottom. Text below graph reads: Most symptomatic cases of COVID-19 are mild. To left of graph, small circle with the letter i in the middle opens to text reading: Graph Data: Wu et al., JAMA 2020. Livingston et al., JAMA 2020. Garg et al, MMWR 2020. Stoke et al., MMWR 2020. Left of graph: illustration of a coronavirus.

Stranger things

Toward the end of March, as San Francisco began to warm up, Sonia got cold feet. She put on wool socks and turned up her heater. Still, her feet felt frozen. Three days later, her soles turned splotchy purple. Red dots appeared on her toes. At night, her cold feet itched and burned. Walking hurt. And she was exhausted, napping through afternoon Zoom meetings. It was so bizarre, says Sonia, a San Francisco resident. A week later, her symptoms were gone.
Yes, COVID, wrote Lindy Fox, M.D., a UCSF professor of dermatology, replying to an email describing Sonias case. Sonia wasnt surprised. Anyone, like her, whos been following news of the pandemic has probably heard about COVID toes, a painful or itchy skin rash that sometimes pops up in young adults with otherwise mild or asymptomatic cases of COVID-19. It looks like what we call pernio, or chilblains, Fox says, which is a pretty common phenomenon when somebody goes out in cold weather  they start to get purple or pink bumps on their fingers or toes.
Many people with rashes like Sonias dont test positive for COVID-19, Fox says, which has made some clinicians skeptical of the connection; when patients have both, its just a coincidence, they believe. But Fox doesnt think so. For one thing, the time of year is wrong, she says. Pernio usually shows up in the dead of winter. Even more compelling, dermatologists around the world are getting crazy numbers of calls about it, Fox says. In the last three weeks, Ive had somewhere between 10 and 12 patients.
Normally, I have four a year.
And its not just dermatologists who are adding their observations to COVID-19s ever-expanding symptom list. Gut specialists are finding that 20 percent to 40 percent of people with the disease experience diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting before other symptoms, says gastroenterologist Michael Kattah, M.D., Ph.D., a UCSF assistant professor. If you swallow virus particles, he says, theres a good chance they will infect cells lining your stomach, small intestine, or colon. As in the lungs and heart, these cells are studded with vulnerable ACE2 portals.
Especially disconcerting, Kattah says, is how long the virus seems to persist in the gut. About 50 percent of patients with COVID-19 have virus particles in their stools, often for weeks after their nose swabs test negative, he points out. Laboratory studies show that these particles are often still alive and can infect cells in a petri dish. Whether fecal transmission occurs between people, however, is an open question. If the answer is yes, people recovering from COVID-19 may need to stay quarantined even after they feel well, and the rest of us will need to be as meticulous about bathroom hygiene as weve become about handwashing and mask-wearing.
Other specialists are also raising flags. Neurologists worry about reports of COVID-19 patients with headaches, brain fog, loss of the sense of smell, dizziness, delirium, and, in rare cases, stroke. Nephrologists worry about kidney stress and failure. Hepatologists worry about liver injuries. Ophthalmologists worry about pink eye. Pediatricians, meanwhile, worry about a peculiar COVID-related inflammatory syndrome thats showing up in kids and young adults.
Theres a lot of smoke. We need to figure out where the fire is coming from.
Michael Wilson, M.D.
Researchers are still sorting out the causes for this constellation of effects. If you come down with a particular symptom, is it because the virus is attacking your cells? Because your immune system is overreacting? Or just because youre very sick? In any severe illness, for example, the kidneys must work extra hard to filter waste and control nutrients and fluid; if overtaxed, they may begin to fail. Similarly, cognitive problems can result from increased blood toxins due to stressed kidneys or from low oxygen due to respiratory distress. Theres a lot of smoke, says Michael Wilson, M.D. 07, MAS 16, the Rachleff Distinguished Professor at UCSFs Weill Institute for Neurosciences. We need to figure out where the fire is coming from.
Recently, theres been speculation that some of COVID-19s seemingly disparate symptoms may stem from trouble in the blood. Blood clots, for example, are showing up in cases of COVID-19 frequently enough for clinicians to take notice. Theres something unique about the coagulation system in these patients, says nephrologist Kathleen Liu, M.D. 99, Ph.D. 97, MAS 07, a UCSF professor of medicine. In caring for COVID-19 patients on dialysis machines, shes been surprised to see blood clots block dialysis tubes more than usual. Clotted tubes are common, she says, but this is extreme.
That may be because, as growing evidence suggests, SARS-CoV-2 can infect cells in the walls of blood vessels that help regulate blood flow and coagulation, or clotting. If true, this behavior could explain some of the viruss weirder (and rarer) manifestations, such as heart attacks, strokes, and even COVID toes.
Our vasculature is a contiguous system, says cardiologist Parikh. Thus injury in one area, such as blood vessels in the lungs, can set off clotting cascades that affect multiple organs. Some of that trouble likely results from inflammation triggered by the immune system, she points out, although another culprit may be the bodys RAAS, or renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system, a hormone system that controls blood pressure and fluid balance. Because RAAS involves ACE2 receptors, Parikh suspects it may become disrupted when the virus infects cells through these receptors, thus triggering coagulation and other downstream effects. Her lab is now studying this system in COVID-19 patients to better understand how SARS-CoV-2 infection affects it.
Inevitably, some ailments may turn out to be red herrings. During a pandemic, when people are flocking to hospitals with infections, clinicians will also see a rise in other health problems, simply by the rules of statistics, points out S. Andrew Josephson, M.D., the Francheschi-Mitchell Professor, chair of UCSFs neurology department, and a member of the Weill Institute for Neurosciences. If the prevalence of infection is high, then almost any condition  a broken leg, if you will  you might conclude is associated with COVID-19.
As clinicians, we want to get information to our medical community and to the public as quickly as possible, Josephson says, but we have to be cautious about not making too big a deal of a little blip.

The long tail

As with any infection, how long a bout of COVID-19 lasts varies from person to person. If youre ill enough to need critical care, you can expect the disease to take at least a few weeks to run its course. In some cases, symptoms persist for months. For a typical milder case, though, you should feel better within a couple weeks.
At that point, the question foremost on your mind will be: Am I immune? There are now more than a dozen antibody tests on the market, but most are unreliable, according to UCSF research. And even the best tests cant tell you whether you have enough of the right kinds of antibodies to protect you against reinfection. There is a lot of hope and belief that well have an antibody test that actually informs us of immunity, but were not quite there yet, says Chaz Langelier, M.D., Ph.D., a UCSF assistant professor of medicine who is working to improve diagnostic tools for COVID-19.
What we have in the meantime are a lot of unknowns: If you do become immune to SARS-CoV-2, when and how does that occur? Will you gain immunity from a mild or asymptomatic case, as well as a severe one? How long will that immunity last?
The answers will have huge implications for social distancing and masking and for getting the economy back up and running, says Michael Peluso, M.D., a clinical fellow who came to UCSF three years ago to help fight HIV. Now hes co-leading a new study called LIINC (Long-term Impact of Infection with Novel Coronavirus), which is enrolling people who have been infected with SARS-CoV-2 and will follow them for two years. Besides illuminating changes in immunity over time, LIINC is investigating chronic effects of infection on the immune system, lungs, heart, brain, blood, and other parts of the body.
I hope people will recover and immunity will be protective and long-lasting, and that will be that, Peluso says.
Its what we all hope. We hope we will beat an infection swiftly  or, better yet, avoid the virus until there is a vaccine. We hope that if we do fall gravely ill, we will be cared for by the best providers and tended to by people we love. The reality, as we already know, is more complicated. And even if COVID-19 doesnt batter our bodies, the pandemic will surely leave scars  on our psyches, our livelihoods, our institutions, and our health  that we are only beginning to fathom. In truth, we dont know how our cards will fall, as individuals or as a people. Only time and data will tell.

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Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - coronavirus in water: Europe Battles Coronavirus Along With Hot, Dry Weather | Voice of America - English
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - Coronavirus and cyber attacks: DHS CISA Alert Warns of Chinese-Backed Malware Cyberattacks
Saved Stories - None: Epidemiologist: COVID-19 deadlier than seasonal flu
Saved Stories - None: Extreme Hair Loss Is the Latest COVID Side-Effect You Need to Know About
Saved Stories - None: Can I Get the Coronavirus From Someone Who Shows No Symptoms?
Saved Stories - None: Study analyzes how SARS-CoV-2 undermines immune defenses
Saved Stories - None: Covid-19 causing hearing loss in some
Saved Stories - None: From 'Brain Fog' to Heart Damage, Covid-19's Lingering Problems Alarm Scientists
Michael Novakhov - SharedNewsLinks: Some COVID-19 survivors suffer psychiatric disorders, Italian study says
Saved Stories - None: Coronavirus: 159 new cases in Italy, 12 more deaths
Saved Stories - None: COVID-19 deaths spike 27% even as new cases decline
Saved Stories - None: Data map shows 60% of US counties are seeing an 'uncontrollable spread' of COVID-19 cases - as ...
Michael Novakhov - SharedNewsLinks: Some COVID-19 Survivors Suffer Psychiatric Disorders, Italian Study Says
mikenov on Twitter: Some COVID-19 Survivors Suffer Psychiatric Disorders, Italian Study Says nytimes.com/reuters/2020/0
mikenov on Twitter: RT @mikenov: The FBI News Review: Russian Mob - TOC and Covid-19: Attention #FBI, #CIA, #DIA, #NSC: The event such as "COVID-19": global, c
mikenov on Twitter: Hemorrhagic Fever with Renal Syndrome: Diagnostic Problems with a Known Disease | Journal of Clinical Microbiology jcm.asm.org/content/39/9/3
mikenov on Twitter: 4:00 PM 8/3/2020 - Half of coronavirus patients at NYC hospital developed kidney issues. | M.N.: Was the differential diagnosis with the HANTAVIRUSES Infections performed? The Disease X-19: 4:00 PM 8/3/2020 - Half of coronavirus patie
Saved Stories - None: COVID-19's long-term toll signals billions in healthcare costs ahead
Michael Novakhov - SharedNewsLinks: Half of coronavirus patients at NYC hospital developed kidney issues
mikenov on Twitter: RT @MailOnline: At least 40 passengers and crew on a luxury Norwegian cruise liner have been diagnosed with COVID trib.al/aSAYwzn
mikenov on Twitter: Nearly half of coronavirus patients at NYC hospital developed kidney issues nypost.com/2020/08/03/hal via @nypmetro
Saved Stories - None: LIVE: WHO says completes groundwork in China for virus origin probe
Saved Stories - None: Under the influence: Peddling conspiracy in a pandemic
Saved Stories - None: There may never be a 'silver bullet' for COVID-19, WHO warns
Saved Stories - None: Groundwork in China for virus origin probe complete, says WHO
Saved Stories - None: WHO completes part of investigation into origins of coronavirus in China
Saved Stories - None: WHO to begin Epidemiological studies in Wuhan to identify the source of covid-19
Saved Stories - None: Li-Meng Yan: coronavirus was developed in Chinese military lab
Saved Stories - None: Anxious WHO implores world to 'do it all' in long war on COVID-19
Saved Stories - None: Why Scientists Are Studying Coronavirus Outbreaks at Mink Farms in Europe
Saved Stories - None: Midlothian immunologist believes COVID-19 was in US earlier than thought
Saved Stories - None: Near-identical protein on SARS and COVID-19 could be targeted by FDA-approved drugs
mikenov on Twitter: Severe Covid-19 can lead to kidney failure, medical studies reveal cnbc.com/2020/08/03/sev
Saved Stories - None: High odds severe Covid-19 can lead to kidney injury or failure, medical studies reveal
Saved Stories - None: Children not a major source of COVID-19, finds rapid review
mikenov on Twitter: RT @NCSCgov: OTD 1950, the SDNY charged engineer Morton Sobell with espionage conspiracy for the Soviets. He conspired with the Rosenbergs
mikenov on Twitter: 1:10 PM 8/3/2020 - Does FBI investigate Ernst Uhrlau? The Trump Investigations - Review Of News And Opinions - Blog by Michael Novakhov: 1:10 PM 8/3/2020 - Does FBI investigate Ernst Uhrl... trumpinvestigations.blogspot.com/2020/08/1
mikenov on Twitter: Deutsche Bank launches investigation into longtime banker of Trump, Kushner thehill.com/homenews/admin
mikenov on Twitter: RT @guardiannews: Killing of Pakistani anti-corruption journalist sparks protests theguardian.com/world/2020/aug
mikenov on Twitter: RT @PalmerReport: White House correspondent Brian Karem just destroyed Donald Trump palmerreport.com/analysis/brian
mikenov on Twitter: RT @PalmerReport: Theres an avalanche heading right at Donald Trump palmerreport.com/analysis/there
mikenov on Twitter: RT @SkyNews: More hot weather is on the way for large parts of the UK, with temperatures set to reach as high as 36C (96.8F) later this wee
mikenov on Twitter: RT @haaretzcom: Theres a political chasm between Israels ruling right-wingers and the overwhelmingly liberal U.S. Jewish community. But e
mikenov on Twitter: RT @nypost: Hundreds gather for secret rave under NYCs Kosciuszko Bridge trib.al/JEl0VjP pic.twitter.com/4Ll9KVLyom
mikenov on Twitter: RT @ForeignAffairs: The world desperately needs a new multilateral institution that is both global in reach and unified in vision, @siddmoh
mikenov on Twitter: RT @MiddleEastMnt: 99 refugees relocated from Greece to Germany, Finland by EU middleeastmonitor.com/20200730-99-re
mikenov on Twitter: RT @CBSNews: Biden holds slight edge over Trump in key states ahead of early voting cbsn.ws/33mt8Kg
mikenov on Twitter: RT @thehill: JUST IN: House Democrats issue subpoenas for top Pompeo aides hill.cm/r5kmQ7G pic.twitter.com/FLBGei0st7
mikenov on Twitter: RT @thehill: Deutsche Bank launches investigation into longtime banker of Trump, Kushner hill.cm/rglCOYG pic.twitter.com/cPDaKwUqgW
mikenov on Twitter: News: strains of SARS-CoV-2 - Google Search google.com/search?q=strai
mikenov on Twitter: strains of SARS-CoV-2 - Google Search google.com/search?q=strai
Michael Novakhov - SharedNewsLinks: The six strains of SARS-CoV-2
mikenov on Twitter: Frontiers in Microbiology: "Geographic and Genomic Distribution of SARS-CoV-2 Mutations." - Google Search google.com/search?q=Front
Michael Novakhov - SharedNewsLinks: Frontiers | Geographic and Genomic Distribution of SARS-CoV-2 Mutations | Microbiology
mikenov on Twitter: Frontiers | Geographic and Genomic Distribution of SARS-CoV-2 Mutations | Microbiology frontiersin.org/articles/10.33
Saved Stories - None: The six strains of SARS-CoV-2
Saved Stories - None: Risk of COVID-19 in health-care workers in Denmark: an observational cohort study
Saved Stories - None: Herd immunity seems to be developing in Mumbai slums
Michael Novakhov - SharedNewsLinks: Myths, facts and theories around Victoria's unknown COVID-19 sources
Saved Stories - None: 10:26 AM 8/3/2020 - WHO completes part of probe into origins of coronavirus in China
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - Sars-Cov-2 origins: Virus claim groundless, say experts
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - coronavirus in israel: Israel's Credit Rating Is in Jeopardy Amid Growing Debt and Budget Delays
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - coronavirus in israel: Israeli Government's Mishandling of Coronavirus Crisis Is Crushing the Young's Work Ethic
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - new york times on coronavirus: Germany's Confirmed Coronavirus Cases Rise by 509 to 210402: RKI
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - covid-19 in meat plants: Germany Moves to Protect Slaughterhouse Workers From Abuse
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - Sars-Cov-2 origins: Two more COVID-19 deaths in Jamaica; 11 new confirmed cases
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - sars cov 2: Severe fatigue common in COVID-19, independent of disease severity
Michael Novakhov - SharedNewsLinks: Google Alert - sweden herd immunity: These 'Inconvenient' Data Patterns Destroy the Established Coronavirus Narrative
Michael Novakhov - SharedNewsLinks: Google Alert - coronavirus in iran: Coronavirus bombshell: European farm outbreaks may prove humans catch virus from animals
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - coronavirus symptoms: App that tracks COVID-19 symptoms shows startling variety, including numb fingers and toes
mikenov on Twitter: unsourced cases namely infections whose origin cannot be determined remain at around 10 to 12 daily. Experts fear second wave of Covid-19 | News | ekathimerini.com ekathimerini.com/255358/article
Michael Novakhov - SharedNewsLinks: Google Alert - Sars-Cov-2 origins: Experts fear second wave of Covid-19
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - saliva coronavirus test: Read This Before You Go to the Dentist
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - coronavirus origins: Melbourne begins six-week curfew to stem rise in Covid-19 cases
Michael Novakhov - SharedNewsLinks: Google Alert - covid-19 in meat plants workers: At least 20 percent of US meatpackers may have contracted coronavirus
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - Coronavirus: various strains and illness severity: Misleading claim circulates online comparing severity of COVID-19 with swine flu
Michael Novakhov - SharedNewsLinks: Google Alert - sars cov 2: Can the novel coronavirus be transmitted through the air? UNMC study suggests it can
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - Coronavirus on Yahoo News: Coronavirus: Sewage testing for Covid-19 begins in England
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - Coronavirus and US Military: US commanders in Japan urge compliance with coronavirus measures as civilian cases mount
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - coronavirus immunity: Are Fit And Thin People Immune To COVID-19? Not Really
mikenov on Twitter: 10:26 AM 8/3/2020 - WHO completes part of probe into origins of coronavirus in China Covid-19-Review: 10:26 AM 8/3/2020 - WHO completes part of probe in... covid-19-review.blogspot.com/2020/08/1026-a
Michael Novakhov - SharedNewsLinks: WHO completes part of probe into origins of coronavirus in China
mikenov on Twitter: Epidemiological studies will begin in Wuhan to identify the potential source of infection of the early cases, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom WHO completes part of investigation into origins of coronavirus in China nypost.com/20
mikenov on Twitter: WHO completes part of investigation into origins of coronavirus in China nypost.com/2020/08/03/who via @nypost
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - coronavirus in animals: The pandemic highlights the gruesome animal abuses at US factory farms
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - coronavirus epidemiology: America continues to lead the world in COVID-19 cases, deaths
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - covid-19 superspreaders: Modelling study suggests breathing and coughing can release large amounts of COVID-19
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - Coronavirus and cyber attacks: Data leak reveals true scale of Iran's COVID-19 crisis
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - covid-19 in daily mail: Government will start testing sewage to track coronavirus and could ban domestic travel to try and ...
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - coronavirus symptoms: Slaughterhouse workers afraid to report Covid symptoms: report
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - Coronavirus and cyber attacks: Microsoft might buy TikTok here's what's going on
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - covid-19 and pork: Seoul, Busan see COVID-19 cases of unknown transmission over the weekend
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - coronavirus antibodies test: Things to know before going for your COVID-19 tests
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - Sars-Cov-2 origins: Genoa's new bridge must not collapse
mikenov on Twitter: Australia Imposes Toughest COVID-19 Restrictions as State of Disaster Declared voanews.com/covid-19-pande
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - coronavirus outbreak: Australia's Victoria State Declared Disaster Area Due to Coronavirus Outbreak | Voice of America ...
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - covid-19 in meat plants workers: How Latinos In North Carolina Are Disproportionately Affected By COVID-19
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - coronavirus epidemiology: Russia Says to Make Several Million Doses of COVID-19 Vaccines Monthly by 2021
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - Coronavirus and US Navy: USS Theodore Roosevelt's leadership changes hands for the second time in four months
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - Coronavirus and US Military: Polish-US deal on US military presence in Poland on Aug. 15 - daily
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - Coronavirus and US Military: Seven more US troops test positive for coronavirus upon arrival in South Korea
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - coronavirus new york: Latest coronavirus updates in New York: Monday, August 3, 2020
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - covid-19 in meat plants workers: Meat packers 'forced to deny coronavirus symptoms', MPs call for answers
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - Coronavirus in brooklyn: One-Third of New York's Small Businesses May Be Gone Forever
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - coronavirus vaccine: Russia plans mass production of coronavirus vaccine from next month: Report
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - coronavirus statistics: COVID cases in England aren't rising: here's why
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - Coronavirus and HIV: Coronavirus Live Updates: Epidemic Is 'Extraordinarily Widespread,' Birx Warns
mikenov on Twitter: How the Pandemic Defeated America msn.com/en-us/news/us/
Michael Novakhov - SharedNewsLinks: Google Alert - sars cov 2 as bioweapon: How the Pandemic Defeated America
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - Covid-19 blood clots: Covid-19: Data shows substantial fall in requirement for ICU beds, ventilators in last two months
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - coronavirus vaccine: Russian coronavirus vaccine 'absolutely safe and efficient', says sanitary watchdog Anna Popova
mikenov on Twitter: Study finds people can give virus to pets newcastleherald.com.au/story/6862501/ via @newcastleherald
Michael Novakhov - SharedNewsLinks: Google Alert - coronavirus in animals: Study finds people can give virus to pets
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - coronavirus in italy: Why does Italy have fewer new Covid-19 cases than Spain?
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - coronavirus in animals: Fighting COVID-19 could cost 500 times as much as pandemic prevention measures
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - Coronavirus in health care workers: San Francisco flattened the curve early. Now, coronavirus cases are surging.
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - Coronavirus in brooklyn: US coronavirus task force leader says pandemic in new phase
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - Coronavirus in brooklyn: More athletes opt out as US struggles with coronavirus
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - coronavirus: What happens in August could be key in Latin America's coronavirus fight, expert says
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - coronavirus herd immunity: Coronavirus vaccine will not change world right away
Saved Stories - None: Health News Roundup: Vietnam says origin of Danang outbreak hard to track; Australia's Victoria to toughen COVID lockdown and more devdiscourse.com/article/health
Saved Stories - None: What we are seeing today is different from March and April. It is extraordinarily widespread ... its more widespread and its both rural and urban, Birx said during an interview on CNN. cnbc.com/2020/08/02/dr-
Saved Stories - None: Its not super spreading individuals, its super spreading events and we need to stop those, Birx said. We definitely need to take more... cnb.cx/3flvhs2
Saved Stories - None: Deborah Birx warns Covid-19 now 'extraordinarily widespread' in US live theguardian.com/us-news/live/2
Saved Stories - None: Congressman Jim Clyburn: Trump has no plans to leave White House. House majority whip Jim Clyburn has compared the president to Mussolini during an appearance on CNNs State of the Union. gu.com/p/eep7h/stw
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - saliva coronavirus test: Coronavirus 90-minute tests to be provided in care homes and hospitals
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - Coronavirus: various strains and illness severity: Pre-COVID-19 coronavirus antibodies fail to neutralize SARS-CoV-2
Michael Novakhov - SharedNewsLinks: Minks and COVID-19: Scientists study coronavirus outbreaks among animals in Spain, Netherlands
mikenov on Twitter: Minks and coronavirus: Scientists study COVID-19 outbreaks among European animals abc13.com/pets-animals/s via @ABC13Houston
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - Latest coronavirus news: Coronavirus latest news: Cluster traced to pub as cases in Scotland hit two-month high
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - coronavirus epidemiology: NJ's Rising COVID Numbers Cause Concerns In NYC
Michael Novakhov - SharedNewsLinks: Google Alert - Sars Cov-2 and Animals: Minks and coronavirus: Scientists study COVID-19 outbreaks among European animals
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - coronavirus herd immunity: Several candidates in final stretch of global COVID-19 vaccine race
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - Coronavirus in health care workers: As they brace for a second wave, health care workers on the front lines of COVID-19 see their ...
Blogs from Michael_Novakhov (24 sites): The Disease X-19: 7:10 PM 8/2/2020 - M.N.: How shall we understand the patterns of the Covid-19 Pandemic WAVES in different countries and locations?
mikenov on Twitter: U.S. coronavirus 'extraordinarily widespread' - Google Search google.com/search?q=U.S.+ pic.twitter.com/VM6MaFp8ze
mikenov on Twitter: What we are seeing today is different from March and April. It is extraordinarily widespread, Birx said during an interview on CNN. Dr. Birx warns U.S. in new phase of coronavirus pandemic with 'extraordinarily widespread' cases cnb
mikenov on Twitter: RT @NBCNews: A husband and wife in California were arrested on hate crimes and vandalism charges after they were seen on cellphone video ye
mikenov on Twitter: Dr. Birx warns U.S. in new phase of coronavirus pandemic with 'extraordinarily widespread' cases cnb.cx/3flvhs2
mikenov on Twitter: "extraordinarily widespread" in rural areas as well as cities, White House coronavirus experts said on Sunday. Health News Roundup: Vietnam says origin of Danang outbreak hard to track; Australia's Victoria to toughen COVID lockdown a
Michael Novakhov - SharedNewsLinks: Vietnam says origin of Danang outbreak hard to track; Australia's Victoria to toughen COVID lockdown and more
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - Coronavirus and cyber attacks: Cybersecurity: Navigating cyber challenges in the 'new normal' times
Michael Novakhov - SharedNewsLinks: Google Alert - Sars-Cov-2 origins: Health News Roundup: Vietnam says origin of Danang outbreak hard to track; Australia's Victoria ...
Saved Stories - None: Mysterious Coronavirus Outbreak Catches Vietnam by Surprise nytimes.com/2020/07/29/wor
Saved Stories - None: In Danang, the police fanned out across the city, trying to locate outsiders who might have brought the virus with them. Mysterious Coronavirus Outbreak Catches Vietnam by Surprise - The New York Times nytimes.com/2020/07/29/wor
mikenov on Twitter: Pandemics through history and the religious response - San Diego Jewish World sdjewishworld.com/2020/08/02/pan
Michael Novakhov - SharedNewsLinks: Google Alert - sars cov 2 as bioweapon: Pandemics through history and the religious response
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - coronavirus new york: President Trump tweets about troubling COVID-19 outbreak in Australia
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - coronavirus in iran: Hezbollah's fake news training camps revealed
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - coronavirus in africa: Australian state declares coronavirus 'state of disaster,' South Africa tops 500000 cases
mikenov on Twitter: NYPD officials said eight people have been injured in accidents that occurred in Brooklyn, the Bronx, Queens and Manhattan at street-dining areas wsj.com/articles/new-y via @WSJ
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - Coronavirus in brooklyn: New York City Sees Auto Accidents at Temporary Dining Areas
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - Sars-Cov-2 origins: Two Discotheques in Spain's Almeria Spark off 20 New COVID Cases
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - sars cov 2: COVID-19 Breakthrough: Scientists Identify Possible Achilles' Heel of SARS-CoV-2 Virus
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - coronavirus: Is Turkmenistan really coronavirus-free?
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - Latest coronavirus news: Birx warns US is 'in a new phase' of coronavirus pandemic with more widespread cases
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - sars cov 2: What if Covid-19 is here to stay? | Opinion
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - sars cov 2: Russia's Initial COVID-19 Vaccine Declared Completed
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - sars cov 2: Kids might have up to 100x more coronavirus in their bodies than adults
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - sars cov 2: Study suggests young children can carry as much coronavirus viral load as adults
Saved Stories - None: Google Alert - CoronaVirus as Biological Weapon: Coronavirus outbreak latest: Aug. 2, 2020
mikenov on Twitter: The mystery of Madrids lack of coronavirus outbreaks english.elpais.com/society/2020-0 via @elpaisinenglish
mikenov on Twitter: It is unknown whether the virus spread in Danang is D614G strain or not. New coronavirus strain in Danang city is not ominous: WHO » Breaking News, Latest World News Updates - VietReader Viet Nam vietreader.com/health/8423-ne
mikenov on Twitter: New coronavirus strain in Danang city is not ominous: WHO » Breaking News, Latest World News Updates - VietReader Viet Nam vietreader.com/health/8423-ne
mikenov on Twitter: Nothing suggests that mutations of the virus caused any changes to its severity or transmissibility, Park said. New coronavirus strain in Danang city is not ominous: WHO » Breaking News, Latest World News Updates - VietReader Viet Nam
mikenov on Twitter: the new strain, each infected person may infect about 5-6 people compared to 1.8-2.2 people in the previous period. Vietnam says origin of Danang outbreak hard to track as virus cases rise - Reuters reuters.com/article/us-hea
mikenov on Twitter: RT @CBSNews: The U.S. Marines on Sunday called off the search for seven missing Marines and one Navy sailor who were missing after a vessel
mikenov on Twitter: RT @YahooNews: I think [President Donald Trump] is spreading disinformation about the virus and she is his appointee, Pelosi said of Dr.
mikenov on Twitter: Observations of the global epidemiology of COVID-19 from the prepandemic period using web-based surveillance: a cross-sectional analysis - The Lancet Infectious Diseases thelancet.com/journals/lanin
mikenov on Twitter: FBI Cincinnati helps Columbus hospital with case involving researcher who plead guilty to stealing trade secrets for company in China, court documents say fox19.com/2020/08/01/loc
mikenov on Twitter: COVID-19 pandemic has only served to strengthen the mafias foothold across Italy, according to a report released by the Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime (GI-TOC). occrp.org/en/daily/12561
mikenov on Twitter: Experts: COVID-19 Has Been a Massive Boon for the Italian Mafia occrp.org/en/daily/12561
mikenov on Twitter: Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on crime - Wikipedia en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impact_of
mikenov on Twitter: RT @bopinion: Gold is nearing all-time highs, helped by a rush of smart money trib.al/iW15eqa
mikenov on Twitter: Crime and Contagion: The impact of a pandemic on organized crime - Google Search google.com/search?q=Crime
mikenov on Twitter: Organized Crime In The Time Of Corona forbes.com/sites/richardb
mikenov on Twitter: Truth Is Less Cool Than Fiction: Nazis Rule Antarctica With UFO Tech wired.com/2007/04/truth- via @WIRED
mikenov on Twitter: The Antarctic Treaty has no teeth. BBC News - Why do so many nations want a piece of Antarctica? bbc.com/news/magazine-
mikenov on Twitter: RT @lawcrimenews: Im a White Supremacist: Man Goes on Trump Rant, Slaps Woman, Then Gets Choked (VIDEO) bit.ly/3i0AZ4d https://
mikenov on Twitter: RT @MailOnline: 'El Marro' is captured by Mexican security forces after the cartel boss was blamed for surge in crime in gang-torn Guanajua
mikenov on Twitter: RT @MailOnline: Holland's top scientists say there's no solid evidence face masks work trib.al/INoyUxl
mikenov on Twitter: Antarctic Treaty System - Wikipedia en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antarctic

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