CORONA Main Coronavirus thread

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
I wonder what vitamin D dosage that study was using, and what levels they achieved. I take 15,000 IU plus K2. Showing around 50 test results.

I think it's what your body needs. If you're not sure, get your blood tested and see what your level is and if you need to supplement to get to a better one. Not specifically addressing you on this, I think you are on top of it. Just in general.
 

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
(fair use applies)


Vitamin D Found to Strengthen Defense Against COVID-19 and Influenza, and Prevents Long COVID
Nikhil Prasad Fact checked by:Thailand Medical News Team
Feb 16, 2026

A major new scientific review has revealed that vitamin D plays a powerful and complex role in strengthening the body’s immune defenses against serious viral infections such as COVID-19, long COVID, and influenza. Researchers found that maintaining adequate vitamin D levels may help reduce disease severity, improve recovery, and enhance the body’s ability to fight respiratory viruses.

The research was conducted by scientists from the Faculty of Medicine and Biological Sciences at Stefan cel Mare University of Suceava in Romania, the Suceava Emergency Clinical County Hospital in Romania, and the Department of Clinical Pharmacy and the Department of Quantitative and Computational Biology at the University of Southern California in the United States. This Medical News report highlights the critical findings and explains why vitamin D has become a focus of global health research.

Vitamin D Activates Powerful Antiviral Defenses
Scientists explained that vitamin D functions as more than just a nutrient. It acts as a hormone that directly regulates the immune system. One of its key roles is stimulating immune cells such as macrophages and natural killer cells, which identify and destroy viruses. Vitamin D also triggers the production of antimicrobial peptides such as cathelicidin and defensins, which can directly attack and neutralize viruses before they spread.

In addition, vitamin D strengthens the body’s protective barriers, especially in the respiratory tract. These barriers act as the first line of defense against airborne viruses, helping prevent viral entry into lung tissue. Vitamin D also supports immune balance by reducing excessive inflammatory reactions that can cause tissue damage.

Low Vitamin D Linked to Severe COVID 19 Outcomes
The review found consistent evidence that individuals with vitamin D deficiency face a greater risk of severe COVID-19 outcomes. Studies showed that patients with lower vitamin D levels were more likely to require hospitalization, intensive care, and mechanical ventilation. They also faced higher risks of prolonged illness and complications.

Vitamin D may also influence how the virus interacts with ACE2 receptors, which are used by SARS-CoV-2 to enter human cells. By regulating immune responses and reducing harmful inflammation, vitamin D may help limit tissue damage and improve survival outcomes. However, researchers emphasized that while associations are strong, more clinical trials are needed to confirm direct cause-and-effect relationships.

Emerging Evidence Shows Role in Preventing Long COVID
Researchers also found growing evidence that vitamin D deficiency may contribute to long COVID, a condition in which symptoms persist long after initial infection. Patients with lower vitamin D levels appear more likely to experience prolonged fatigue, respiratory issues, and inflammator y symptoms.

Vitamin D’s ability to regulate immune activity and suppress chronic inflammation may help reduce the persistence of symptoms. However, scientists stressed that additional controlled trials are needed to determine whether vitamin D supplementation can directly prevent or treat long COVID.

Protective Effects Also Seen Against Influenza
The review also examined vitamin D’s role in influenza prevention. Several randomized trials and observational studies found that adequate vitamin D levels were associated with reduced infection risk and milder disease symptoms. Vitamin D enhances antiviral immune activity while also limiting excessive inflammation in lung tissue.

Although some studies showed mixed results, overall findings suggest that maintaining healthy vitamin D levels may provide modest protection against influenza and other respiratory infections, particularly in individuals who are deficient.

Global Vitamin D Deficiency Remains a Major Concern
Researchers warned that vitamin D deficiency remains extremely common worldwide. Limited sun exposure, aging, chronic illness, and poor nutrition all contribute to reduced vitamin D levels. This widespread deficiency may leave millions of people more vulnerable to infections and immune system dysfunction.

Conclusion
The study findings provide compelling evidence that vitamin D plays a vital role in regulating immune defenses and protecting against respiratory viral infections. By strengthening immune responses, enhancing antiviral activity, and reducing harmful inflammation, vitamin D may help lower the risk of severe COVID-19, long COVID, and influenza. While vitamin D should not be viewed as a standalone treatment, maintaining sufficient levels represents a safe, affordable, and practical strategy to improve immune resilience and support overall health, particularly in populations at risk of deficiency. Continued research will help clarify optimal dosing and clinical applications.

The study findings were published in the peer reviewed journal: Nutrients.
 

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
(fair use applies)


Korea Holds Pandemic Simulation Backed By WEF & Gates Foundation Plotting Rapid Vaccine Rollout
Documents show a full-system vaccine rehearsal.

Natalie Winters
Feb 16, 2026

On February 5, 2026, South Korea hosted what officials described as a “landmark pandemic simulation exercise.”

But this was not just a routine emergency drill.

It was a coordinated rehearsal of a rapid vaccine deployment system built by the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations, financed in part by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, integrated with the World Health Organization, and originally launched at the World Economic Forum in 2017.

The stated purpose of the exercise was to simulate a fictional, never-before-seen deadly virus spreading rapidly through the population. Officials gathered regulators, vaccine researchers, and manufacturing stakeholders to walk through how they would respond.

The language used in the official description is revealing.

The meeting brought together organizations working “from threat detection through to licensure of life-saving medical tools” to rehearse coordination “across research and development, manufacturing and other parts of the vaccine chain” in order to identify bottlenecks before a real health emergency.

Read that again.

This was not framed around protecting civil society.

Not around safeguarding individual liberties.

Not around debating tradeoffs.

It was explicitly about strengthening the vaccine chain.

“Rapid vaccine development and supply during a pandemic is a national priority directly tied to protecting people’s health and a core pillar of national security,” said Dr. Lim Seung-kwan, Commissioner of the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency.


The 100-Day Doctrine

The exercise fits squarely into CEPI’s “100 Days Mission,” the global push to develop and deploy vaccines within 100 days of identifying a new pathogen.

CEPI was formally launched at the World Economic Forum annual meeting. From the beginning, it was structured as a public private partnership backed by governments and major philanthropic money, including the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

South Korea is not a random host. It is home to the International Vaccine Institute, an international organization working closely with CEPI, WHO, and pharmaceutical partners to accelerate vaccine research and licensure.

The infrastructure is already in place. The simulation tested how quickly it can move.


The Event 201 Shadow


For many people, pandemic simulations carry an uncomfortable memory.

On October 18, 2019, the World Economic Forum partnered with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and Johns Hopkins to host Event 201, a tabletop exercise simulating a global coronavirus outbreak.

Months later, COVID-19 became reality.

Now, six years later, many of the same institutions are still aligned. Davos convenes. Gates finances. WHO integrates. CEPI coordinates. Vaccine acceleration remains the centerpiece.

The difference today is that rapid vaccine rollout is openly framed as national security infrastructure.

That framing matters.

The Korea simulation makes one thing clear. The next pandemic response is being designed around rapid pharmaceutical deployment at global scale. The regulatory compression, the manufacturing pre-alignment, and the public private coordination are assumed.

The fictional virus was imaginary.

The governance framework is not.
 

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
(fair use applies)


Inactivated COVID-19 Virus Triggers Fertility and Fetal Damage Sparks Alarm
Nikhil Prasad Fact checked by:Thailand Medical News Team
Feb 09, 2026

A new experimental study has revealed disturbing evidence that exposure to an inactivated form of the SARS-CoV-2 virus can still trigger intense inflammation that disrupts fertility, damages sperm quality, and impairs pregnancy outcomes, even without active viral replication. The findings raise fresh concerns about how viral components alone may affect reproductive health.

Study Explores Effects Beyond Active Infection
Researchers from the Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Fundação Oswaldo Cruz (FIOCRUZ), Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, and Universidade do Estado de Minas Gerais investigated how inactivated SARS-CoV-2 particles influence reproduction using K18-hACE2 transgenic mice. These mice carry human ACE2 receptors, making them highly relevant for studying COVID-related biological responses.

The study exposed both male and female mice to the inactivated virus through the nasal route, mimicking respiratory exposure. Importantly, the virus used could not replicate, allowing scientists to isolate the effects of immune activation alone. This Medical News report highlights that inflammation, not infection itself, was the main driver of damage.

Pregnancy Loss and Inflammatory Lung Damage

Female mice exposed during early pregnancy showed a significant reduction in viable fetuses and a sharp rise in embryonic resorptions. Researchers also noted reduced placental efficiency, meaning fetuses received less nourishment despite normal placental structure. These changes were accompanied by strong lung inflammation, including elevated levels of TNF, IL-6, and interferon-gamma, key inflammatory molecules linked to tissue damage.

Microscopic analysis revealed thickened lung tissue and inflammatory cell infiltration, resembling viral pneumonia. These findings suggest that immune signals triggered in the lungs may indirectly disrupt the maternal-fetal environment.

Male Fertility Severely Affected
Male mice exposed to the inactivated virus experienced an 18 percent drop in total sperm count. Even more concerning was a dramatic reduction in healthy, forward-moving sperm, alongside a rise in immobile and abnormally shaped sperm. Structural defects in sperm heads and tails were significantly more common, despite testicular tissue appearing largely normal under the microscope.

When these males were paired with healthy females, mating was delayed, fewer pregnancies occurred, and pregnancies that did succeed showed higher fetal loss. This indicates that sperm damage translated directly into poorer reproductive outcomes.

Inflammation As the Central Culprit
The researchers concluded that viral structural proteins likely activate Toll-like receptor 4 pathways, triggering excessive immune responses. This inflammatory cascade appears sufficient to harm r eproductive systems and fetal viability without live virus present.

Conclusions And Broader Implications
The study demonstrates that exposure to inactivated SARS-CoV-2 can compromise fertility in both sexes and disrupt pregnancy through inflammation-driven mechanisms. These findings underscore the need to better understand immune-mediated reproductive risks associated with viral exposure and highlight inflammation as a critical target for protecting reproductive health in future pandemics.

The study findings were published on a preprint server and are currently being peer reviewed.
 

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
(fair use applies)


Greek Doctors Warn of Sudden Testicular Failure in Some Men After COVID-19
Nikhil Prasad Fact checked by:Thailand Medical News Team
Feb 16, 2026

Medical News: COVID Infection Linked to Sudden Male Sterility Shock
A disturbing new medical case has revealed how a COVID-19 infection may trigger sudden and irreversible testicular failure in men, potentially causing complete infertility. Researchers warn that the virus may activate the immune system in ways that attack the body’s own reproductive organs, especially in individuals who already have hidden genetic vulnerabilities. This Medical News report highlights a rare but alarming example that sheds light on how COVID-19 could silently disrupt male fertility.

Researchers Investigate Rare Infertility Case Linked to COVID
The case involved a 40-year-old man who experienced a rapid and unexplained decline in fertility over just a few months. He was treated and evaluated by specialists from the General Hospital of Chalkidiki in Polygyros, the School of Medicine at Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, St. Luke’s Hospital in Thessaloniki, Istoiatriki Pathology Laboratory, and the Zeginiadou Fertility and Andrology Laboratory, all located in Greece.

At the beginning of 2025, the man’s sperm levels were slightly below normal but still present. However, within months, his sperm count dropped dramatically. Laboratory tests showed severe damage to sperm quality, including poor movement, abnormal structure, and fragmentation of sperm DNA. Eventually, doctors found almost no sperm remaining in his semen, indicating near total reproductive failure.

Immune System Turned Against the Testes
Further investigations revealed that the man’s immune system had begun attacking his own testicular tissue. This condition, known as autoimmune orchitis, is extremely rare and occurs when immune cells mistakenly destroy sperm-producing cells.

Microscopic examination of testicular tissue revealed large numbers of immune cells, including CD3+, CD4+, and CD8+ T-cells. These immune cells are normally used by the body to fight infections. However, in this case, they had invaded the testes and triggered inflammation that damaged the delicate structures responsible for producing sperm.

The damage was extensive. The sperm-producing tubules were severely impaired, and only immature sperm cells remained. Fully developed sperm were essentially absent, confirming that the testicles had lost their ability to function properly.

Evidence Points to COVID-19 Infection as The Trigger

One of the most striking findings was the presence of extremely high levels of antibodies against SARS-CoV-2, the virus responsible for COVID-19. These antibody levels were thousands of times above the normal threshold, indicating recent exposure to the virus.

Importantly, the patient had not received a recent COVID vaccination and did not recall having any symptoms. This suggests the infection may have been silent or mild but still triggered a powerful immune response.

Researchers believe the virus may have acted as an immunological trigger, activating immune cells that then attacked the testes. The testes are particularly vulnerable because they contain receptors such as ACE2 and TMPRSS2, which allow the virus to interact with reproductive cells. This interaction may spark inflammation and immune-mediated damage.

Hidden Genetic Vulnerability Made Situation Worse
Genetic testing revealed the man carried a rare chromosomal abnormality known as a balanced translocation between chromosomes 2 and 8. This condition can weaken sperm production and make the reproductive system more vulnerable.

Scientists believe COVID-19 acted as a “second hit.” The genetic abnormality had already made the testes fragile. When the immune system was activated by the viral infection, it accelerated the damage dramatically.

This explains why the man’s fertility declined so rapidly. His sperm count went from low to almost zero within months, a progression that is rarely seen in normal infertility cases.

Hormonal Changes Confirm Complete Testicular Failure
Hormone tests showed rising levels of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH). These hormones increase when the testes stop functioning properly, as the body attempts to stimulate sperm production.

Despite these signals, the testes were unable to recover. Follow-up testing revealed only a single sperm cell present in a semen sample. This confirmed complete testicular failure, meaning natural fertility was no longer possible.

Doctors were able to preserve a small amount of sperm through cryopreservation before total failure occurred. This offers the patient a possible chance of fatherhood through assisted reproductive technologies such as IVF.

Scientists Warn of Broader Fertility Implications

Researchers emphasize that this is a rare case, but it raises serious concerns. It shows that COVID-19 can potentially trigger immune-mediated damage to reproductive organs, especially in men with underlying genetic vulnerabilities.
The study also highlights the importance of early fertility testing in men who notice sudden reproductive changes after viral infections. Early sperm preservation may be the only way to protect future fertility.

Scientists are calling for more research to understand how COVID-19 affects male reproductive health. They stress that while most men recover fully, a small subset may experience severe and permanent consequences.

Conclusion

This case provides compelling evidence that COVID-19 infection can trigger immune-mediated destruction of sperm-producing cells, especially in genetically vulnerable individuals. The findings show how a silent infection may activate immune responses that permanently damage the testes and cause infertility.

Although rare, this case highlights the urgent need for fertility monitoring and early intervention in affected men. Understanding these mechanisms is essential to prevent irreversible reproductive damage and to protect male fertility in the future.

The study findings were published in the peer reviewed journal: Cureus.
 

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
You need a subscription to read the entire study, this is just the abstract; see next post for a substack article about this study.


(fair use applies)


The causes of Australian excess deaths in 2021, and beyond: An ecological study considering COVID-19, the lockdowns, and the vaccines
Raphael Lataster raphael.lataster@sydney.edu.au
Research article - First published online February 14, 2026
OnlineFirst https://doi.org/10.1177/09246479261426743
Restricted Access


Abstract

Background

Numerous concerns have been raised about excess mortality persisting beyond the COVID-19 pandemic. COVID-19 and the lockdowns are typically offered as explanantia, with some suggesting that COVID-19 vaccines could be contributing. With its relative isolation it is prudent to pay attention to Australia, which provides a unique opportunity to consider what effectively became a large-scale vaccine safety trial.

Objective
The purpose of this study is to determine the plausibility of COVID-19 vaccination contributing to Australia’s excess mortality.

Methods
Various regions of Australia displaying excess mortality were identified, and then the plausibility of three explanantia were considered in turn: COVID-19, the lockdowns, and COVID-19 vaccines.

Findings
I found that in 4 of Australia’s 8 major regions excess mortality was present, correlating with rapid and thorough COVID-19 vaccination programs, before mass exposure to COVID-19, and in the absence of lengthy and highly restrictive lockdowns.

Conclusions
Combined with increasing evidence that the efficacy/effectiveness and safety of COVID-19 vaccines have been greatly exaggerated, including acknowledgements from the Australian and American governments that several deaths have been caused by the vaccines, these findings make it a near-certainty that COVID-19 vaccines have been – and continue to be – contributing to excess mortality.
 

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
(fair use applies)


PROOF! Excess deaths caused by COVID vaccines, not just COVID or lockdowns
Raphael Lataster (BPharm, PhD)
Feb 16, 2026

An article published by Sage, one of the top 5 academic publishers, has just been released, not just noting the curious phenomenon of excess mortality, and how it happens to correlate with the COVID-19 vaccination program, but pretty much proving that the jab is involved, by explaining that governments already admit to COVID-19 vaccine deaths, but also - and more satisfyingly - ruling out the typical alternative explanations of COVID-19 itself and the lockdowns, via an ecological study focused on 4 Australian regions. Source.

This is my Australian excess deaths paper I’ve mentioned a few times, kind of inspired by the curious words of officials in 2021 about Australian hospitals being full, even in areas largely untouched by COVID-19, and later data indicating that the jab is causing a heap of cardiovascular issues and other adverse effects here.

There are basically two arguments in the article, one quick and cheap, the other far more satisfying. The short argument is that since health officials have admitted to COVID-19 vaccine deaths, deaths which were of course unexpected and premature, it is obvious that the vaccines are contributing to our excess mortality problem. This is indisputable. We can argue over the amount. The bigger argument is my makeshift ecological study.

Four of Australia’s states and territories are the focus here. They all experienced excess deaths during the pandemic. I noticed that, no doubt partly because of the country’s relative isolation and natural oceanic borders, in the regions of Queensland, Western Australia, South Australia, and the Norther Territory, deaths from COVID-19 only became a (relatively) big deal from 2022 onwards. For example, there were no COVID-19 deaths in the NT in 2020, the crucial pandemic year before the vaccines arrived, and a whopping 2 COVID-19 deaths in 2021, comprising a very small proportion of overall excess deaths, with double digit COVID-19 deaths in the following years (see pic below). WA even saw COVID-19 deaths decrease from 2020 to 2021, to *zero*, before shooting up in 2022, when everyone was supposed to be ‘protected’ by the vaccines. Weird, huh?
Source: Australian Bureau of Statistics

Also for these 4 regions, unlike the situation in Sydney and Melbourne, any lockdowns tended to be very short, and still allowed for medical appointments. Interestingly, like the rest of the country, pretty much everyone received their COVID-19 vaccines in 2021. Remember all those studies on excess mortality, with some (including my own on Europe) wondering if the jab might be playing a role? Those who find that possibility too unpalatable tend to point the finger at COVID-19 itself, or the lockdowns. Blaming COVID-19 is risky because we would have to have been undercounting COVID-19 deaths, by a lot, when the evidence indicates the opposite, that COVID-19 deaths have been hyped up, partly because it was very common practice to call any death around a positive case a ‘COVID-19 death’ (also see our FOI request on whether a COVID-19 death occurred in a jabbed or unjabbed person). And blaming the lockdowns is just plain weird, since the same people that gave us the jab, often mandating it, locked us down. Either way, they’d be responsible for these deaths.

But that’s all kind of moot here, because for these Australian regions we can rule out COVID-19 and the lockdowns. It’s the jabs. If these regions that saw excess deaths rise along with mass vaccination with the COVID-19 vaccines, and they didn’t really have a COVID-19 problem or the sort of lockdowns that can cause widespread health crises, it is obvious that the jab - already acknowledged by Australian and other governments as causing deaths - is playing a significant role. I go through quite a lot of the evidence indicating that this hypothesis is not just possible and plausible, but probable - much of which OTN readers would already be familiar with:
  • JECP4. The exaggerated efficacy/effectiveness & safety estimates of the jabs in observational studies and clinical trials. More people are noticing. Related research reveals that most of the jabs didn’t show a COVID-19 mortality benefit in their own trials, highlights the impact of the healthy vaccinee effect (which means these exaggerations are greater), and indicates that there may have been fraud in the ‘Pfizer trial’.
  • Negative effectiveness. Sounds utterly absurd and yet there is quite a bit of evidence that the jabs might actually increase the chance of COVID-19 infection/hospitalisation/death, and it’s even been discussed in major journals.
  • Cardiovascular side effects. Too much to go into, but the notion that they are all transient is ludicrous. Remember, even the myocarditis risks alone could outweigh the benefits in healthy children. Maybe beyond? Let’s also not forget that Pfizer is *still* trying to figure out “if COMIRNATY is safe and effective, and if there is a myocarditis/pericarditis association that should be noted”, God bless ‘em.
  • Cancer. There’s been studies on cancers being up in the jabbed and the jab being linked to certain cancers. And when experts realised that there are mechanistic links between cancer and COVID-19 I mentioned that the same links exist between cancer and COVID-19 vaccines. Recall also that the DNA contamination conspiracy theory turned out to be true, which increases the chance of oncogenicity. There is even some suspicion that such research is being suppressed.
  • It is beyond obvious that COVID-19 vaccine side effects are undercounted. High-profile doctors have spoken out about this and a recent study just about confirmed it.
  • The highly influential Watson et al. study, absurdly claiming that the jabs saved tens of millions of lives in just 1 year, has been thoroughly debunked directly (with the critique reaching the FDA and the US Senate), and indirectly (and the attached comments show this one didn’t go far enough). Several other modelling studies have also been debunked.
  • Both the American and Australian (source) governments have acknowledged that the COVID-19 vaccines have killed people. Pretty much the same in the UK. No wonder authorities are starting to dial back vaccine recommendations, even acknowledging that for some the risks outweigh the benefits. It also looks very suspicious that the UK government apparently refused to publish data that could link COVID-19 vaccine to excess deaths.
  • Back to the curious phenomenon of (especially post-pandemic) excess deaths (when we should actually see negative excess mortality), there’s quite a bit to catch up on. As early as 2022 experts and reporters were discussing the oddity, with some daring to wonder if the jabs are to blame. Suspicions continued to be raised in 2023, with some noticing that the jabbed were at times overrepresented in COVID-19 and total deaths. In 2024 even an article in a Lancet journal was touching on the issue. Governments and scholars were looking into it, and I also weighed in, noting that the lesser vaccinated countries in Europe appeared to have less of an issue. I addressed the sole published critique of that article in 2025, remarking: “Given the size, power, and funding of the group of researchers arguing for the effectiveness and safety of the COVID-19 vaccines, the paucity and poor quality of their responses to more critical research is astonishing. We should expect better.”
  • There’s more. Maybe that’s why even a US government under Biden, with RFK Jr not yet involved, acknowledged that they got so much wrong on the pandemic, including on the vaccines.

So there you have it. And I think I’ve found the same phenomenon (excess deaths alongside COVID-19 vaccination, with the COVID-19 and lockdown excuses being untenable) in other parts of the world, like the US, and Asia, but that will have to wait for another day. Pretty tired now.

TL;DR: 4 Australian regions saw excess deaths rising alongside COVID-19 vaccine use in 2021, while not really having a big COVID-19 or lockdown problem. This adds to the increasing evidence that the jabs are a really bad idea.
 

Tristan

TB Fanatic
(fair use applies)


Korea Holds Pandemic Simulation Backed By WEF & Gates Foundation Plotting Rapid Vaccine Rollout
Documents show a full-system vaccine rehearsal.

Natalie Winters
Feb 16, 2026

On February 5, 2026, South Korea hosted what officials described as a “landmark pandemic simulation exercise.”

But this was not just a routine emergency drill.

It was a coordinated rehearsal of a rapid vaccine deployment system built by the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations, financed in part by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, integrated with the World Health Organization, and originally launched at the World Economic Forum in 2017.

The stated purpose of the exercise was to simulate a fictional, never-before-seen deadly virus spreading rapidly through the population. Officials gathered regulators, vaccine researchers, and manufacturing stakeholders to walk through how they would respond.

The language used in the official description is revealing.

The meeting brought together organizations working “from threat detection through to licensure of life-saving medical tools” to rehearse coordination “across research and development, manufacturing and other parts of the vaccine chain” in order to identify bottlenecks before a real health emergency.

Read that again.

This was not framed around protecting civil society.

Not around safeguarding individual liberties.

Not around debating tradeoffs.

It was explicitly about strengthening the vaccine chain.

“Rapid vaccine development and supply during a pandemic is a national priority directly tied to protecting people’s health and a core pillar of national security,” said Dr. Lim Seung-kwan, Commissioner of the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency.


The 100-Day Doctrine

The exercise fits squarely into CEPI’s “100 Days Mission,” the global push to develop and deploy vaccines within 100 days of identifying a new pathogen.

CEPI was formally launched at the World Economic Forum annual meeting. From the beginning, it was structured as a public private partnership backed by governments and major philanthropic money, including the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

South Korea is not a random host. It is home to the International Vaccine Institute, an international organization working closely with CEPI, WHO, and pharmaceutical partners to accelerate vaccine research and licensure.

The infrastructure is already in place. The simulation tested how quickly it can move.


The Event 201 Shadow

For many people, pandemic simulations carry an uncomfortable memory.

On October 18, 2019, the World Economic Forum partnered with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and Johns Hopkins to host Event 201, a tabletop exercise simulating a global coronavirus outbreak.

Months later, COVID-19 became reality.

Now, six years later, many of the same institutions are still aligned. Davos convenes. Gates finances. WHO integrates. CEPI coordinates. Vaccine acceleration remains the centerpiece.

The difference today is that rapid vaccine rollout is openly framed as national security infrastructure.

That framing matters.

The Korea simulation makes one thing clear. The next pandemic response is being designed around rapid pharmaceutical deployment at global scale. The regulatory compression, the manufacturing pre-alignment, and the public private coordination are assumed.

The fictional virus was imaginary.

The governance framework is not.


Oh, crap! Here it comes!


(maybe)
(Nervous laughter...)
 

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
(fair use applies)


The Two Traits Every Successful COVID Variant Must Have
By Immunity & Inflammation
February 10, 2026

As population immunity continues to grow, understanding how immune responses influence both disease outcomes and viral evolution has become increasingly important.

Years of vaccination and repeated exposure have left many people with some level of protection against COVID 19. Even so, scientists are still sorting out a key question: how do neutralizing antibodies relate to how sick someone gets, and how do those antibodies push the virus to change over time?

Researchers led by Prof. Genhong Cheng at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) analyzed patient data from different phases of the COVID-19 pandemic to examine how neutralizing antibody responses influenced SARS-CoV-2 evolution and disease progression. Using a single-center, retrospective longitudinal cohort, the team connected real-world illness patterns with laboratory measurements of antibody strength.


Antibody Levels Paint a Complex Clinical Picture

The researchers analyzed serum samples from individuals infected during the initial pandemic wave (pre-vaccine), during and after the Omicron wave. For the first-wave patients, they sorted people into three groups based on serum virus neutralization titers: lower (S25), middle (S50), and upper (S75) antibody-level groups. Neutralization titers reflect how well antibodies in a blood sample can block the virus in a lab test, but they do not capture every part of immunity.

The results pointed to a more complicated story than a simple “more antibodies equals milder disease” narrative. People in the lower antibody group tended to have symptoms that lasted longer and underwent more PCR testing, which lines up with slower viral clearance. Yet none of the S25 patients developed severe disease. Meanwhile, some patients with midrange or higher neutralizing levels needed medications or respiratory support.

One way to interpret this pattern is that antibody levels may sometimes act as a marker of how the body is responding, not only how well it is protected. Severe illness can be shaped by many factors beyond neutralizing antibodies, including how quickly the immune system coordinates its response and how much inflammation builds up in the process. That broader view fits the authors’ conclusion that “neutralizing antibodies are a key, but not sole, determinant of COVID-19 clinical outcomes,” the authors pointed out.


The Evolutionary Clue: Escaping Immunity vs. Gaining Entry

The study also explored how antibody pressure can steer viral evolution. By comparing serum collected at different times against a panel of historical variants, the team saw a consistent decline in neutralization potency when older antibodies were tested against newer strains. In practical terms, immune defenses shaped by early infections often struggled to recognize later variants.

Antibodies generated from early infections showed a remarkable reduction, or even complete loss, of effectiveness against newer variants such as Omicron sub-lineages. Antibodies elicited by newer infections performed better against contemporaneous viruses, but still not perfectly, suggesting the immune system updates its playbook while the virus keeps rewriting its own.

That dynamic helps explain why the virus repeatedly favors mutations that change the parts of the spike protein antibodies most commonly target, and why matching immunity to the current viral landscape remains a moving target.

This pattern confirms that population-wide antibody responses exert a powerful selective pressure, driving the virus to mutate and evade detection. However, escape alone is insufficient for a variant to become dominant. The researchers highlighted the case of XBB.1.5.

“While it possessed a similar ability to evade antibodies as its predecessor XBB.1, a single mutation (S486P) in its spike protein significantly increased its affinity for the human ACE2 receptor,” the authors highlighted.

This enhanced binding capability provided the critical fitness advantage that propelled XBB.1.5 to global dominance. The study thus establishes that successful variants must evolve under dual constraint: reducing vulnerability to neutralization while maintaining or improving their efficiency in infecting cells.


Implications for Public Health and Surveillance


This long-term cohort study offers several important implications. It provides a molecular epidemiological explanation for the seemingly contradictory clinical observation of mild-but-prolonged illness, linking it directly to lower antibody efficacy. Furthermore, it definitively shows that pre-existing population immunity is a primary driver of viral evolution.

“These findings emphasize that our immune history actively shapes the virus’s future,” the authors noted. “Monitoring must therefore account for both immune escape potential and changes in receptor binding, as these combined traits define the next successful variant.”

This understanding reinforces the need for alert genomic surveillance that tracks these dual characteristics. It also provides a data-driven foundation for designing improved vaccination strategies, potentially focusing on antigens that elicit broad protection against evolving viral fitness landscapes.

Reference: “Impacts of neutralizing antibody responses on SARS-CoV-2 evolution and its associated disease progression” by Lulan Wang, Saba Aliyari, Nathaniel Sands, Brian Lee, Anthony Yu, Shangzhou Xia, Eliana L. Jolkovsky, Shilei Zhang, Jocelyn Kim and Genhong Cheng, 27 January 2026, Immunity & Inflammation.
DOI: 10.1007/s44466-025-00020-2
 

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
(fair use applies)


Researchers Report Unexpected Persistence of COVID-19 Vaccine Components in Blood and Tissues Months After Shots
Nikhil Prasad Fact checked by:Thailand Medical News Team
Feb 12, 2026

A new systematic review has raised fresh scientific questions about how long components of COVID-19 mRNA vaccines may remain inside the human body. The study, conducted by researchers from multiple institutions including the Institute for Medical and Health Sciences (IMA Health) in the United States, the University of Guelph in Canada, and United Memorial Medical Center in Houston, Texas, examined published evidence on the persistence of vaccine-derived materials after injection.

In this Medical News report, we break down what the researchers found, what it could mean, and why it matters.


Early Assumptions About Rapid Clearance
When the Pfizer-BioNTech (BNT162b2) and Moderna (mRNA-1273) vaccines were first introduced, health authorities explained that the modified messenger RNA (mRNA) would quickly break down in the body. Because natural RNA molecules are fragile and degrade rapidly, it was widely assumed the vaccine’s genetic instructions would behave the same way.

However, the review found that real-world studies conducted after mass vaccination campaigns began reporting something different. Several independent investigations detected fragments of vaccine mRNA, spike protein, and lipid nanoparticles in blood and certain tissues weeks or even months after vaccination.


What the Review Examined
The researchers followed internationally recognized PRISMA guidelines for systematic reviews. They searched medical databases for studies that tested bodily fluids and tissues for the presence of vaccine-related components.

The review focused on 16 different bodily fluids, including plasma, saliva, breast milk, urine, cerebrospinal fluid, and others. It also included studies examining lymph nodes and additional tissues. Only studies that used laboratory methods capable of detecting spike protein, modified mRNA, or lipid nanoparticles were included.

Importantly, the review excluded studies where spike protein detection was clearly linked to active COVID-19 infection rather than vaccination.


Key Findings on Persistence

One of the most notable findings was that vaccine-derived spike protein and mRNA were detected beyond the timeframes originally expected. In some studies, spike protein was found in blood samples up to 24 days after vaccination. In others, fragments of spike protein were identified in certain immune cells more than 100 days later, with some cases extending beyond 200 days.

Modified mRNA was also detected in lymph nodes up to 30 days after vaccination in certain individuals. Researchers pointed out that the lipid nanoparticles used to deliver the mRNA may play a role in protecting the genetic material from rapid degradation.


Possible Biological Explanations
The authors discus sed several potential mechanisms that might explain this persistence. One factor is the chemical modification of the mRNA itself. COVID-19 vaccines use nucleoside-modified mRNA, which is designed to be more stable and less inflammatory than unmodified RNA. Laboratory data prior to 2020 had shown that such modified RNA decays more slowly than natural RNA.

Another possibility is that lipid nanoparticles may accumulate in certain tissues and release their contents over time. There is also discussion about whether stable complexes could form within tissues, acting as temporary reservoirs.

The review emphasized that distinguishing true biological persistence from laboratory detection artifacts remains essential. Some assays are extremely sensitive and may detect very small fragments that do not necessarily indicate active protein production.


Why This Matters

The researchers stressed that understanding how long vaccine components remain detectable is important for improving future mRNA-based therapies. mRNA technology is now being explored for cancer treatments and other infectious diseases. Accurate knowledge of biodistribution and clearance patterns will help refine dosing, design, and safety monitoring.

The clinical significance of prolonged presence remains unclear.


Conclusion

The review highlights a phenomenon that was not fully anticipated during early vaccine rollouts. While the presence of vaccine-derived materials for extended periods does not in itself prove danger, it does underscore the need for deeper investigation. Transparent research into biodistribution, decay kinetics, and long-term biological behavior will be essential not only for public confidence but also for the safe advancement of next-generation mRNA therapeutics. Careful scientific scrutiny, rather than speculation, should guide the next phase of research.

The study findings were published in the peer reviewed journal: Future Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences.
 

ginnie6

Veteran Member
Firm believer in Vit D all fall/winter. I'm outside enough Spring and Summer that I think I'm good then. First sign of sniffles Vit C. Massive doses too. Throw in some potassium and I've not had flu in years. Had a little head cold this year earlier but our weather...today is going to be 80 and Monday will be 40.
I also air the house out any chance I get. Open the windows and let some fresh air in for at least a few minutes even if its cold. Staying cooped up inside all the time and not getting fresh air is not good for you.
When a fried was moving and I was helping her we were inside her apt complex all day. She moved from one apt to another. By the end of the day it just felt like I couldn't breathe, the air was just stale. Once I got outside and get a few deep breathes I was fine.
 

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This Is Why the Same Virus Hits People So Differently
By Salk Institute
February 12, 2026

Scientists have mapped how genetics and life experiences leave lasting epigenetic marks on immune cells. The discovery helps explain why people respond so differently to the same infections and could lead to more personalized treatments.

The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted just how differently people can respond to the same infection. Some individuals experience mild symptoms, while others become severely ill. This striking contrast raises an important question. Why would two people infected by the same pathogen have such different outcomes?

Much of the answer lies in differences in genetics (the genes you inherit) and life experience (your environmental, infection, and vaccination history). These influences shape our cells through subtle molecular modifications known as epigenetic changes. These changes do not alter the DNA sequence itself. Instead, they control whether specific genes are turned “on” or “off,” helping determine how cells behave and function.

Researchers at the Salk Institute have introduced a comprehensive epigenetic catalog that separates the effects of inherited genetics from those of life experiences across multiple immune cell types. This new cell type-specific database, published in Nature Genetics on January 27, 2026, provides insight into why immune responses vary from person to person and could help guide the development of more precise, personalized treatments.

“Our immune cells carry a molecular record of both our genes and our life experiences, and those two forces shape the immune system in very different ways,” says senior author Joseph Ecker, PhD, professor, Salk International Council Chair in Genetics, and Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator. “This work shows that infections and environmental exposures leave lasting epigenetic fingerprints that influence how immune cells behave. By resolving these effects cell by cell, we can begin to connect genetic and epigenetic risk factors to the specific immune cells where disease actually begins.”


Understanding the Epigenome and Gene Regulation


Every cell in the body contains the same DNA. Even so, cells can look and function very differently depending on their role. This variation is partly explained by epigenetic markers, small chemical tags attached to DNA that help determine which genes are active and which remain silent. The full set of these modifications within a cell is known as its epigenome.

Unlike the fixed DNA sequence, the epigenome is dynamic. Some epigenetic differences are strongly influenced by inherited genetic variation, while others develop over time through life experiences. Immune cells are shaped by both factors. However, until this study, scientists did not know whether inherited and experience-driven epigenetic changes influence immune cells in the same way.

“The debate between nature and nurture is a long-standing discussion in both biology and society,” says co-first author Wenliang Wang, PhD, a staff scientist in Ecker’s lab. “Ultimately, both genetic inheritance and environmental factors impact us, and we wanted to figure out exactly how that manifests in our immune cells and informs our health.”


How Infections and Environment Leave Epigenetic Marks

To explore how genetics and life experiences affect immune cell epigenomes, the Salk team analyzed blood samples from 110 individuals with diverse genetic backgrounds and exposure histories. These participants had encountered a range of conditions and exposures, including flu; HIV-1, MRSA, MSSA, and SARS-CoV-2 infections; anthrax vaccination; and exposure to organophosphate pesticides.

The researchers focused on four major immune cell types. T cells and B cells are responsible for long-term immune memory, while monocytes and natural killer cells respond quickly and more broadly to threats. By examining epigenetic patterns in each cell type, the team assembled a detailed catalog of epigenetic markers, referred to as differentially methylated regions (DMRs).

“We found that disease-associated genetic variants often work by altering DNA methylation in specific immune cell types,” says co-first author Wubin Ding, PhD, a postdoctoral fellow in Ecker’s lab. “By mapping these connections, we can begin to pinpoint which cells and molecular pathways may be affected by disease risk genes, potentially opening new avenues for more targeted therapies.”


Genetic Versus Experience-Driven Epigenetic Changes

A major achievement of the study was distinguishing epigenetic changes tied to inherited genetics (gDMRs) from those linked to life experiences (eDMRs). The team discovered that these two categories tend to cluster in different regions of the epigenome. Genetically influenced gDMRs were more commonly found near stable gene regions, particularly in long-lived T and B cells. In contrast, experience-related eDMRs were concentrated in flexible regulatory regions that help control specific immune responses.

These findings suggest that inherited genetics helps establish stable, long-term immune programs, while life experiences fine-tune more adaptable and context-specific responses. Further studies will be needed to clarify how these influences ultimately affect immune performance and disease outcomes.

“Our human population immune cell atlas will also be an excellent resource for future mechanistic research on both infectious and genetic diseases, including diagnoses and prognosis,” says co-first author Manoj Hariharan, PhD, a senior staff scientist in Ecker’s lab. “Often, when people become sick, we are not immediately sure of the cause or potential severity—the epigenetic signatures we developed offer a road map to classify and assess these situations.”


Predicting Disease Risk and Personalizing Treatment

The results underscore how both nature and nurture shape immune cell identity and overall immune system behavior. The new catalog also provides a starting framework for more personalized approaches to prevention and treatment.

Ecker explains that as more patient samples are added, the database could eventually help predict how individuals might respond to infections. For example, if sufficient COVID-19 patient data are included, researchers might find that survivors share a common protective eDMR. Clinicians could then examine whether newly infected patients possess this same epigenetic marker. If not, scientists might target related regulatory mechanisms to improve outcomes.

“Our work lays the foundation for developing precision prevention strategies for infectious diseases,” says Wang. “For COVID-19, influenza, or many other infections, we may one day be able to help predict how someone may react to an infection, even before exposure, as cohorts and models continue to expand. Instead, we can just use their genome to predict the ways the infection will impact their epigenome, then predict how those epigenetic changes will influence their symptoms.”

Reference: “Genetics and environment distinctively shape the human immune cell epigenome” by Wenliang Wang, Manoj Hariharan, Wubin Ding, Anna Bartlett, Cesar Barragan, Rosa Castanon, Ruoxuan Wang, Vince Rothenberg, Haili Song, Joseph R. Nery, Andrew Aldridge, Jordan Altshul, Mia Kenworthy, Hanqing Liu, Wei Tian, Jingtian Zhou, Qiurui Zeng, Huaming Chen, Bei Wei, Irem B. Gündüz, Todd Norell, Timothy J. Broderick, Micah T. McClain, Lisa L. Satterwhite, Thomas W. Burke, Elizabeth A. Petzold, Xiling Shen, Christopher W. Woods, Vance G. Fowler Jr., Felicia Ruffin, Parinya Panuwet, Dana B. Barr, Jennifer L. Beare, Anthony K. Smith, Rachel R. Spurbeck, Sindhu Vangeti, Irene Ramos, German Nudelman, Stuart C. Sealfon, Flora Castellino, Anna Maria Walley, Thomas Evans, Fabian Müller, William J. Greenleaf and Joseph R. Ecker, 27 January 2026, Nature Genetics.
DOI: 10.1038/s41588-025-02479-6

Other authors include Anna Bartlett, Cesar Barragan, Rosa Castanon, Vince Rothenberg, Haili Song, Joseph Nery, Jordan Altshul, Mia Kenworthy, Hanqing Liu, Wei Tian, Jingtian Zhou, Qiurui Zeng, and Huaming Chen of Salk; Andrew Aldridge, Lisa L. Satterwhite, Thomas W. Burke, Elizabeth A. Petzold, and Vance G. Fowler Jr. of Duke University; Bei Wei and William J. Greenleaf of Stanford University; Irem B. Gündüz and Fabian Müller of Saarland University; Todd Norell and Timothy J. Broderick of the Florida Institute for Human and Machine Cognition; Micah T. McClain and Christopher W. Woods of Duke University and Durham Veterans Affairs Medical Center; Xiling Shen of the Terasaki Institute for Biomedical Innovation; Parinya Panuwet, and Dana B. Barr of Emory University; Jennifer L. Beare, Anthony K. Smith, and Rachel R. Spurbeck of Battelle Memorial Institute; Sindhu Vangeti, Irene Ramos, German Nudelman, and Stuart C. Sealfon of Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai; Flora Castellino of the US Department of Health and Human Services; and Anna Maria Walley and Thomas Evans of Vaccitech plc.

The work was supported by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (N6600119C4022) through the US Army Research Office (W911NF-19-2-0185), National Institutes of Health (P50-HG007735, UM1-HG009442, UM1-HG009436, 1R01AI165671), and National Science Foundation (1548562, 1540931, 2005632).
 

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MicroRNAs Linked to Long COVID Damage

Nikhil Prasad Fact checked by:Thailand Medical News Team
Feb 13, 2026


Medical News: Persistent Gene Regulators May Explain Chronic Symptoms
Long COVID continues to puzzle doctors worldwide, with millions reporting fatigue, breathlessness, “brain fog,” heart issues and metabolic problems months after recovering from acute infection. A new scientific review sheds light on an unexpected culprit: microscopic strands of RNA known as microRNAs.

The study was conducted by researchers from the Laboratory of Cancer Biology and Molecular Immunology at the Faculty of Sciences-I, Lebanese University in Beirut; the Department of Biomedical Sciences, School of Pharmacy, Lebanese International University; University Grenoble Alpes, CEA, Inserm, IRIG, UA13 BGE, Biomics in France; and the Department of Natural and Applied Sciences, The American University of Iraq-Baghdad.

MicroRNAs are short pieces of genetic material that act like dimmer switches, controlling how strongly certain genes are turned on or off. According to this Medical News report, these tiny regulators may hold the key to understanding why inflammation and organ damage continue long after the virus is gone.


Persistent Inflammation After Infection
The review explains that some microRNAs that normally calm inflammation are reduced in long COVID patients. One example is miR-146a, which usually acts as a brake on inflammatory pathways. When its levels drop, inflammatory signals such as IL-6 and NF-?B remain active, potentially explaining lingering fatigue and systemic inflammation.

At the same time, other microRNAs such as miR-155 and miR-21 may be elevated. These molecules amplify immune responses and promote tissue scarring. The imbalance creates a state of chronic, low-grade inflammation that affects multiple organs, including the heart, lungs and brain.


Mitochondria And Energy Collapse
Another striking finding involves the cell’s energy factories, known as mitochondria. Certain microRNAs like miR-210 and miR-34a interfere with mitochondrial function. They reduce the cell’s ability to generate ATP, the molecule that powers nearly every biological process.

The researchers describe how this disruption can lead to reduced exercise tolerance, post-exertional malaise and cognitive fatigue. Increased oxidative stress, triggered by dysfunctional mitochondria, may further damage tissues and prolong inflammatory cycles.


Blood Vessels and Fibrosis
Long COVID has also been linked to vascular injury and abnormal clotting. The review highlights reduced levels of miR-126, a microRNA essential for maintaining healthy blood vessel linings. Lower levels may impair repair mechanisms and increase clot risk.

Meanwhile, reduced miR-29 and increased miR-21 may encourage fibrotic remodeling, a process in which normal tissue is replaced with stiff scar-like material. This mechanism mirrors what is seen in chronic lung and h eart diseases, suggesting overlapping pathways.


Biomarkers and Future Therapies

Because microRNAs circulate in blood and are remarkably stable, they may serve as non-invasive biomarkers. Measuring specific microRNA patterns could help doctors identify high-risk patients, cluster symptoms, and monitor disease progression.

Even more promising is the idea of therapeutic targeting. Scientists are exploring microRNA mimics and inhibitors designed to restore balance. Although still largely experimental, these strategies represent a precision-medicine approach to treating long COVID at its molecular roots.


Conclusion

The evidence presented suggests that long COVID is not simply lingering infection but a complex molecular disturbance involving immune, metabolic and vascular pathways. Dysregulated microRNAs appear to connect these systems, acting as master regulators that sustain inflammation, mitochondrial dysfunction and fibrosis. While further clinical validation is needed, these findings open a new frontier in diagnostics and targeted therapy, offering hope for millions struggling with persistent symptoms.

The study findings were published in the peer reviewed journal: Biomolecules.
 

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All Wheels Turning, No Ground Gained: Metastability Is Not Stability!

Geert Vanden Bossche

Feb 22, 2026

Having read some of my comments on X: https://x.com/GVDBossche/status/2018977086036132218

as well as a recent Substack article of mine (Everyone knows a pus-filled abscess will eventually burst. However, nothing is more difficult than predicting exactly when it will burst...),

one of my followers compares the current viral evolutionary dynamics to a car trying to drive up a slippery, snow-covered slope on winter tires.

I thought it was worth fleshing out the metaphor in more detail because it actually captures, in a fairly simple way, the current interplay between the virus and the immunity of highly COVID-19 (C-19)-vaccinated populations in a vivid and straightforward manner.

One could, indeed, compare the present viral landscape to a car attempting to climb an increasingly steep, snow-covered hill. The driver has equipped the car with winter tires, analogous to the strengthened, yet still suboptimal adaptive immune response mounted against accumulated spike (S) mutations of SARS-CoV-2 (SC-2) immune escape variants. Initially, those tires provide improved grip. But as the slope continues to steepen, even good winter tires begin to lose traction!

The car still moves forward, but only marginally. The wheels begin to spin. The driver adjusts the gears repeatedly but the vehicle advances more slowly with each attempt until it barely progresses at all, the wheels eventually spinning wildly in place. The engine revs higher, exhaust emissions increase and the consumption of oil and fuel rises sharply. The highly increased mechanical strain serves as an image for the vaccine-associated side effects observed in highly C-19-vaccinated populations while reflecting the growing mutational effort and evolutionary ‘cost’ required for the virus to maintain transmissibility under mounting population-level immune pressure.

In evolutionary terms, this corresponds to the current co-circulation of multiple SC-2 lineages, including BA.3.2-derived (sub)lineages. Despite carrying extensive S remodeling, these lineages expand only slowly and fail to dominate decisively. Their slow, constrained propagation does not signal relaxed immune selection pressure or benign endemic stabilization. Rather, it reflects a system operating near the limits of incremental viral adaptation.

The wheels spin harder. Additional mutations accumulate. Convergent substitutions appear across different lineages. Yet phenotypic gains in transmissibility remain modest. The system appears metastable - not because it has reached equilibrium, but because further forward progress through incremental change is becoming mechanically constrained.

Anyone who has experienced such a situation knows what tends to follow. When traction becomes insufficient and the slope continues to steepen, the car eventually begins to slide backward. And once backward motion begins, gravity accelerates the descent. What initially appeared as slow progress turns into rapid loss of control.

According to my theory and interpretations, such rapid loss of control would correspond to a qualitative evolutionary shift - not further gradual optimization but a phase transition.

In other words, the current co-circulation of SC-2-derived immune escape variants without decisive dominance can be interpreted not as benign stabilization, but as the final struggle for traction before the system crosses a critical threshold.

Whether that threshold is near or distant cannot be determined with precision. But the present pattern, i.e., slow expansion, constrained dominance, mutational convergence without decisive fitness advantage, is consistent with a system operating under high mechanical strain rather than relaxed evolutionary equilibrium.

In my humble opinion, these observations are the harbinger of an imminent catastrophic transition to a phenotype that will reveal highly virulent in highly C-19-vaccinated populations (the so-called HI-VI-CRON). But no one takes that ‘gentle’ harbinger seriously. It’s not for nothing that I -much to the annoyance of the many who mock me- keep repeating that society in highly C-19-vaccinated regions will be caught off-guard.
 

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Shocking 41 Percent of Long COVID Survivors Develop Dangerous Heart Rhythm Disorders, Metformin May Offer Protection
Nikhil Prasad Fact checked by:Thailand Medical News Team
Feb 13, 2026


Medical News: High Rates of Hidden Heart Rhythm Problems After Severe COVID-19
A new study from Mexico is raising fresh concerns about the long-term impact of COVID-19 on the heart. Researchers from the Unidad de Cardiología at Hospital Civil Fray Antonio Alcalde and the Instituto de Terapéutica Experimental y Clínica at the Centro Universitario de Ciencias de la Salud, Universidad de Guadalajara, have found that 41 percent of patients who survived severe COVID-19 and required hospitalization later developed cardiac arrhythmias as part of long COVID.

Arrhythmias are abnormal heart rhythms that can make the heart beat too fast, too slow, or irregularly. In this study, 53 adults who had been hospitalized with confirmed COVID-19 were evaluated at least three months after infection. All underwent electrocardiograms, 24-hour Holter monitoring, and echocardiograms to assess heart structure and rhythm.


Atrial Fibrillation Most Common and Symptoms Often Overlooked
Of the 53 patients studied, 22 were found to have arrhythmias. The most common was atrial fibrillation, seen in 32 percent of those with rhythm problems. Other arrhythmias included sinus bradycardia, sinus tachycardia, atrial flutter, supraventricular tachycardia, and even third-degree atrioventricular block, a potentially serious conduction disorder.

Many patients reported symptoms that might easily be dismissed. Shortness of breath was present in over 80 percent of participants, while 41.5 percent experienced palpitations. Some even reported fainting or near-fainting episodes. Importantly, standard echocardiograms showed largely normal heart pumping function, suggesting that rhythm disturbances can occur even when the heart’s structure appears preserved.


Age And Longer Hospital Stays Raise the Risk
The study found that older age significantly increased the risk of developing arrhythmias. Patients with rhythm disorders were, on average, more than a decade older than those without. Each additional year of age slightly increased the odds of arrhythmia.

Another key risk factor was length of hospital stay. Patients who developed arrhythmias had stayed in hospital an average of 11 days, compared to six days in those without rhythm issues. Statistical analysis confirmed that longer hospitalization independently increased the likelihood of later arrhythmia.

This Medical News report highlights that severe COVID-19 appears to leave a lasting electrical footprint on the heart, especially in older individuals and those who required prolonged inpatient care.


Metformin Shows Surprising Protective Effect
One of the most intriguing findings involved metformin, a commonly used diabetes medication classified as a biguanide. Patients taking metformin were significantly less likely to develop arrhythmias. Statistical models showed a strong inverse association between metformin use and rhythm disturbances.

Researchers suggest that metformin’s anti-inflammatory and metabolic effects may stabilize heart cells and reduce electrical instability. The drug is known to activate AMP-activated protein kinase, reduce oxidative stress, and limit fibrosis, all of which may help prevent abnormal electrical signaling in the heart.

Interestingly, while diabetes itself is usually linked to higher cardiovascular risk, the apparent protective effect in this study seems tied to the medication rather than the disease.


What This Means for Long COVID Patients
The findings underscore the need for structured cardiac follow-up in people who survived severe COVID-19. Even months after recovery, a substantial proportion may harbor silent but potentially dangerous rhythm abnormalities.

In conclusion, this study demonstrates that arrhythmias are common among patients who experienced severe COVID-19 requiring hospitalization. Older age and longer hospital stays significantly increase risk, while metformin use may offer meaningful protection. These results emphasize the importance of cardiac monitoring in long COVID survivors and open the door for future research into preventive strategies that could reduce long-term cardiovascular complications.

The study findings were published in the peer reviewed journal: Life.
 

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SARS-CoV-2 Rewrites Human Cells Using Tiny Protein Switches
Nikhil Prasad Fact checked by:Thailand Medical News Team
Feb 13, 2026


Medical News: Jilin University Scientists Reveal How Viral Protein Tweaks Help COVID-19 Evade Immunity

In a sweeping new scientific review, researchers from the Department of Cadre Ward, The First Hospital of Jilin University, Changchun, China, and the General Department, The First Hospital of Jilin University (The Eastern Division), Changchun, China, have uncovered how SARS-CoV-2 skillfully rewrites human cell behavior using microscopic chemical changes known as post-translational modifications. Their work shows that the virus does far more than simply inject genetic material into cells. Instead, it reprograms human proteins after they are made, flipping molecular “switches” that control immunity, inflammation, and viral replication.


Understanding the Virus Beyond Its Genes

Most people think of viruses as relying purely on their genes to cause infection. However, this Medical News report highlights how SARS-CoV-2 depends heavily on post-translational modifications, or PTMs. These are tiny chemical tags added to proteins after they are produced. While small, they can completely change how a protein behaves.

The researchers describe several major PTMs, including phosphorylation, ubiquitination, SUMOylation, and glycosylation. Each one acts like a fine-tuning dial. By manipulating these processes, the virus alters protein stability, movement inside cells, immune signaling, and even how efficiently new viral particles are assembled.


Phosphorylation Controls Viral Switching

One of the most striking findings involves phosphorylation of the virus’s nucleocapsid, or N protein. The team explains that adding phosphate groups to specific spots on this protein determines whether it tightly binds viral RNA for packaging or loosens its grip to assist in viral replication.

When heavily phosphorylated, the N protein becomes more flexible and supports viral RNA production. When dephosphorylated, it shifts toward compact genome packaging. This reversible switch allows SARS-CoV-2 to carefully time its replication cycle. Researchers also note that certain host enzymes such as SRPK1 and GSK3 are hijacked to carry out these modifications, making them possible drug targets.


Ubiquitination Shapes Immune Battles

Another major battlefield lies in ubiquitination, a process that normally marks proteins for recycling or regulates immune signals. The review details how viral proteins like ORF6 and ORF10 interfere with host ubiquitin pathways to suppress interferon responses, which are essential for antiviral defense.

In some cases, host enzymes fight back by tagging viral proteins for destruction. For example, specific E3 ligases can target viral enzymes and limit replication. However, the virus often counteracts this by degrading or bypassing those same ligases. This tug-of-war demonstrates that ubiquitination is not merely a housekeeping system but a central arena o f conflict.


SUMOylation and Viral Persistence
The scientists also highlight SUMOylation, another protein-tagging process that affects nuclear signaling and immune responses. They describe how SUMO modification of the viral N protein enhances its ability to cluster and suppress immune detection. Conversely, certain host enzymes can SUMOylate viral proteins in ways that reduce replication accuracy.

Interestingly, abnormal SUMO-related immune reactions may contribute to long COVID. Evidence suggests that some patients develop antibodies targeting SUMO-modified proteins, hinting that virus-triggered PTMs could spark longer-term immune imbalance.


Glycosylation Creates a Protective Shield

Finally, glycosylation of the spike protein forms a sugary shield that helps SARS-CoV-2 hide from antibodies while still binding efficiently to the ACE2 receptor. Specific glycan sites regulate how tightly the virus attaches to cells and how strongly it may trigger inflammatory molecules such as interleukin-6.


Conclusion

Together, these findings reveal that SARS-CoV-2 is not merely a genetic invader but a master manipulator of human protein chemistry. By orchestrating multiple post-translational modifications simultaneously, the virus fine-tunes replication, evades immunity, and shapes inflammation with remarkable precision. Targeting these host–virus modification pathways may offer broader antiviral strategies that remain effective even as viral variants continue to emerge. Understanding these molecular switches opens new possibilities for therapies aimed not just at the virus itself, but at the cellular systems it exploits.

The study findings were published in the peer reviewed journal: Frontiers in Microbiology.
 

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Scientists Finally Solve the Mystery Behind Rare COVID Vaccine Blood Clots
By McMaster University
February 14, 20267

A rare but serious clotting disorder linked to certain COVID-19 vaccines and natural adenovirus infections has puzzled scientists for years.

An international team of researchers from McMaster University (Canada), Flinders University (Australia), and Universitätsmedizin Greifswald (Germany) has identified why a very small number of people developed serious blood clots after receiving certain COVID-19 vaccines or after a natural adenovirus infection. Their findings point to an unexpected mistake by the immune system, which in rare cases targets the wrong molecule.

The study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, explains how the body can sometimes produce harmful antibodies that attack its own blood proteins, leading to vaccine-induced immune thrombocytopenia and thrombosis (VITT). The researchers pinpointed the exact viral component capable of triggering this response under unusual conditions.

They also described a previously unknown biological pathway showing how a normal immune defense can shift into a harmful reaction. This insight may help scientists better understand other rare, antibody-driven side effects linked to infections, medications, or environmental exposures.

“This study shows, with molecular precision, how a normal immune response to an adenovirus can very rarely go off-track. By identifying the exact viral protein involved and the specific antibody change that drives this misdirection, we now understand not only what happens in VITT but why,” says Theodore Warkentin, corresponding author of the study and professor emeritus in the Department of Pathology & Molecular Medicine at McMaster University.

“What’s exciting is that we can now point to a specific viral component that can be redesigned. It means future adenoviral vaccines can keep all their advantages while sidestepping the rare immune misfire that causes VITT,” he adds.


The discovery

The researchers determined that VITT can develop after repeated exposure to adenovirus, whether through vaccination or natural infection, but only in individuals who carry a particular inherited version of an antibody gene (IGLV3-21*02 or *03). Since this gene variant is present in up to 60 percent of the population, it cannot alone explain why the complication remains extremely rare.

The process begins with the immune system responding to an adenovirus protein known as protein VII (pVII). This viral protein closely resembles part of a human blood protein called platelet factor 4 (PF4). In exceptionally rare instances, while the immune system is producing antibodies against pVII, a single mutation can occur in one antibody-producing cell.

This mutation (called K31E) replaces one positively charged amino acid with a negatively charged one. Although the change involves just a single building block, it is enough to redirect the antibody’s focus from pVII to PF4. When the altered antibody binds to PF4, it activates platelets, leading to the abnormal clotting and reduced platelet counts characteristic of VITT.

Importantly, the scientists found the same K31E mutation in every VITT patient antibody they analyzed. When they reversed this mutation in laboratory-engineered antibodies, the harmful clotting activity disappeared. This confirmed that the mutation is essential for the condition to develop.

To uncover this mechanism, the team used advanced laboratory techniques. They sequenced antibodies from patients with VITT, analyzed their structures using mass spectrometry, and created engineered versions to observe how the antibodies changed and behaved. The findings were further validated in a humanized mouse model. In these experiments, antibodies carrying the VITT-associated mutation caused clotting, while the “back-mutated” antibodies did not.

“Many people know that mutations in DNA explain things like congenital abnormalities or cancer, but to have an immune cell that is making its expected antibodies triggered by a virus abruptly change its reactivity against a self-protein due to a specific mutation is a spectacular finding that is unprecedented in the scientific literature,” says Warkentin.


Why it matters

This discovery answers five long-standing questions about VITT:
  • Why adenoviral-vector vaccines – and natural adenovirus infection – can trigger it
  • Why PF4 is the target (mimicry between pVII and PF4)
  • Why VITT is extraordinarily rare (it requires a specific, chance mutation in a predisposed person);
  • Why does the incidence differs between populations (the involved antibody gene is more common in people of European ancestry) and
  • Why many cases occurred after a first vaccine dose (it stems from boosting pre-existing anti-pVII immunity from low baseline antibody levels).
Just as importantly, the discovery provides a practical roadmap for vaccine developers to design even safer vaccines without losing the global advantages of adenoviral vaccine technology.

Reference: “Adenoviral Inciting Antigen and Somatic Hypermutation in VITT” by Jing Jing Wang, Linda Schönborn, Theodore E. Warkentin, Luisa Müller, Thomas Thiele, Lena Ulm, Uwe Völker, Sabine Ameling, Sören Franzenburg, Lars Kaderali, Ana Tzvetkova, Alex Colella, Tim Chataway, Chee Wee Tan, Bridie Armour, Alexander Troelnikov, Lucy Rutten, James McCluskey, Roland Zahn, Tom P. Gordon and Andreas Greinacher, 11 February 2026, New England Journal of Medicine.
DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa2514824

The study was supported by the American Society of Hematology (Global Research Award), Competence Center for Genomic Analysis (Kiel), Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG), DFG Research Infrastructure Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) Competence Center / NGS Competence Network, Else Kröner-Fresenius Stiftung, European Medicines Agency, Flinders Foundation (Health Seed Grant), Gates Foundation, National Health and Medical Research Council (Ideas Grant) and Universitätsmedizin Greifswald (Gerhard Domagk Research Program).
 

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Flavonoids from Dark Chocolate Can Help Treat Long COVID Chronic Fatigue
Nikhil Prasad Fact checked by:Thailand Medical News Team
Feb 14, 2026

A remarkable new clinical trial has revealed that natural flavonoids extracted from cacao—the key ingredient in dark chocolate—can dramatically reduce chronic fatigue and inflammation in individuals suffering from long COVID. The discovery could represent a major breakthrough for millions worldwide who continue to struggle with persistent exhaustion, weakness, and poor quality of life long after recovering from the initial SARS-CoV-2 infection.

The study was conducted by scientists from Clínica de Especialidades Indianilla at the Instituto de Seguridad y Servicios Sociales para los Trabajadores del Estado (ISSSTE) in Mexico City, the VA San Diego Health Care system in the United States, and the Escuela Superior de Medicina at Instituto Politécnico Nacional in Mexico.

Their findings provide strong clinical evidence that cacao-derived flavonoids may help restore physical function and energy in long COVID patients.


Long COVID Fatigue Remains a Major Health Burden

Long COVID is now recognized as a serious medical condition affecting a significant percentage of COVID-19 survivors. One of the most common and debilitating symptoms is chronic fatigue, which can persist for months or even years.

Scientists believe this fatigue is driven by ongoing inflammation, impaired mitochondrial function, and damage to the endothelium—the delicate inner lining of blood vessels. These disruptions reduce oxygen delivery and impair cellular energy production, leaving patients feeling persistently weak and exhausted. This Medical News report examines how cacao flavonoids may help reverse some of these underlying biological disruptions.


Clinical Trial Tested Epicatechin Rich Cacao Supplement
The randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial involved 46 adults with long COVID and chronic fatigue.
The participants had an average age of approximately 52 years and had experienced fatigue symptoms for at least six months following infection.

Participants were divided into two equal groups. One group received capsules containing cacao flavonoids enriched with epicatechin twice daily for 90 days. The other group received placebo capsules.

Researchers evaluated fatigue severity, muscle strength, quality of life, inflammatory biomarkers, and markers of endothelial damage before and after the treatment period.


Fatigue Levels Dropped Dramatically
Patients receiving the cacao flavonoid supplement experienced a striking 51 percent reduction in fatigue levels. In comparison, the placebo group showed only modest improvement.

Participants also reported meaningful improvements in overall quality of life, including reduced breathlessness, improved mobility, and lower levels of discomfort and emotional distress.

These improvements suggest that cacao flavonoids d irectly target the biological causes of long COVID fatigue rather than simply masking symptoms.


Muscle Strength Significantly Improved
Muscle weakness is another common feature of long COVID. To evaluate physical function, researchers measured handgrip strength, which is widely recognized as an indicator of overall muscle health.

Patients receiving cacao flavonoids showed significant increases in muscle strength. In contrast, those in the placebo group showed little to no improvement.

This increase in strength suggests that cacao flavonoids may help restore muscle energy metabolism and physical performance.


Inflammation And Blood Vessel Damage Reduced
Blood tests revealed major reductions in key inflammatory markers, including IL-1ß, IL-6, and TNF-a, in patients receiving cacao flavonoids. These inflammatory molecules are known to contribute to chronic fatigue, tissue damage, and prolonged illness.

Researchers also observed significant reductions in syndecan-1, a marker of endothelial damage. This indicates improved health and repair of blood vessel linings, which are essential for delivering oxygen and nutrients to tissues. Improved blood vessel function likely plays a crucial role in restoring energy levels.


How Cacao Compounds Help Restore Energy
Cacao is rich in a unique group of plant compounds known as flavonoids, particularly flavanols. The most important of these include epicatechin, catechin, procyanidins, and oligomeric proanthocyanidins. These phytochemicals are powerful antioxidants and cellular protectors that play multiple roles in restoring energy and reversing damage caused by long COVID.

Epicatechin, one of the most abundant and biologically active flavonoids in cacao, has been shown to enhance mitochondrial biogenesis, which means it helps cells produce more mitochondria. Since mitochondria are responsible for generating cellular energy in the form of ATP, increasing their number and efficiency directly improves energy production.

Epicatechin and related flavonoids also improve endothelial function by increasing nitric oxide production. Nitric oxide helps blood vessels relax and widen, improving blood flow and oxygen delivery to muscles and organs. This improved circulation ensures that cells receive the oxygen and nutrients needed for optimal energy production.

Procyanidins and catechins found in cacao further protect mitochondria from oxidative stress and damage caused by inflammation. These compounds neutralize harmful free radicals and prevent cellular damage, allowing mitochondria to function more efficiently.

In addition, cacao flavonoids help preserve and repair the glycocalyx, a delicate protective layer lining blood vessels. Damage to this layer is common in long COVID and contributes to poor circulation, inflammation, and fatigue. By protecting the glycocalyx, flavonoids help restore vascular integrity and improve oxygen delivery.

These phytochemicals also suppress inflammatory signaling pathways, reducing the production of harmful cytokines such as IL-6 and TNF-a. Lower inflammation reduces tissue stress and allows the body’s energy systems to recover.

Collectively, these mechanisms improve mitochondrial efficiency, enhance oxygen delivery, protect blood vessels, and reduce inflammation—allowing the body to regain strength and energy.


Conclusions

The findings from this clinical trial provide strong evidence that cacao flavonoids, especially epicatechin, can significantly reduce fatigue, improve muscle strength, enhance vascular health, and lower inflammation in individuals with long COVID. By targeting mitochondrial dysfunction, endothelial damage, and chronic inflammation, these natural compounds help restore the body’s energy production systems. While further large-scale studies are needed, cacao flavonoids represent a promising, safe, and natural therapeutic approach that could transform the management of long COVID fatigue and improve recovery outcomes for millions of patients worldwide.

The study findings were published in the peer reviewed Journal of Clinical Medicine.
 

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CPQ Gene Discovery May Explain Severe Omicron Cases
Nikhil Prasad Fact checked by:Thailand Medical News Team
Feb 16, 2026


Medical News: Chinese Scientists Identify CPQ as Key Regulator of Lung Inflammation
In a breakthrough that could reshape how doctors understand severe COVID-19 and other respiratory infections, researchers in China have identified a little-known gene that appears to play a powerful role in controlling inflammation in the lungs. The gene, known as CPQ (Carboxypeptidase Q), may determine why some people develop serious illness after infection while others experience only mild symptoms.

The study was led by scientists from West China Hospital of Sichuan University, in collaboration with researchers from University of Iceland and Karolinska Institute. Their work focused on individuals infected for the first time with the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant during China’s massive outbreak in late 2022.


A Rare Opportunity to Study First-Time Infections
Unlike earlier studies conducted during mixed waves of different coronavirus variants, this research examined 5,151 people infected during a period when nearly all cases in China were caused by Omicron. Among them, 269 individuals developed severe disease requiring hospital care or significant medical treatment.

By analyzing the complete genetic profiles of these patients, researchers performed a genome-wide association study. They discovered a significant genetic signal on chromosome 8, specifically at a location known as 8q22.1. The strongest variant, called rs7817424, sits within the CPQ gene.

This Medical News report highlights that the discovery reached the strict statistical threshold required for genome-wide significance, meaning the finding is highly unlikely to be due to chance.


What Does CPQ Actually Do?
CPQ belongs to a family of enzymes that break down small protein fragments. Before this study, it had not been linked to infectious diseases. However, deeper genetic mapping showed strong evidence that CPQ was the gene responsible for the newly identified risk signal.

The researchers found that people carrying certain genetic variants had altered CPQ activity. Importantly, the risk variants appeared to increase CPQ expression at both the RNA and protein levels.

Single-cell RNA sequencing of lung tissue revealed that CPQ is especially active in immune cells called macrophages and monocytes. These cells are frontline defenders in the lungs. They detect viruses and trigger inflammation to fight infection.

However, in severe COVID-19 patients, CPQ levels were lower in key lung immune cells compared to healthy controls. This suggested that reduced CPQ activity might contribute to uncontrolled inflammation.


A U-Shaped Pattern in Immune Cells
When scientists tracked how CPQ behaves as monocytes mature into macrophages, they observed a U-shaped pattern. CPQ levels first dropped and then recovered during immune cell tra nsition. This dynamic change suggests CPQ plays a regulatory role during immune activation.

Gene network analysis showed that CPQ is connected to pathways involving protein breakdown and signal control, particularly processes linked to the NF-?B inflammatory pathway. NF-?B is known to drive cytokine production, including TNF-a and IL-6, two major inflammatory molecules elevated in severe COVID-19.


Laboratory Proof of Anti-Inflammatory Effects
To confirm these genetic observations, researchers conducted laboratory experiments.

In human THP-1 immune cells engineered to overexpress CPQ, exposure to bacterial toxin LPS triggered significantly lower levels of TNF-a and IL-6 compared to normal cells. This demonstrated that higher CPQ levels dampen inflammatory responses.

In mice injected with LPS to simulate systemic inflammation, lung CPQ levels dropped sharply. This indicates that inflammation may suppress CPQ, potentially removing an important brake on immune overreaction.
Together, these experiments show that CPQ acts as a natural anti-inflammatory regulator.


Why This Discovery Matters
The study suggests CPQ may protect against dangerous immune overreactions during respiratory infections. While the findings were observed in Omicron infections, the mechanisms involved likely apply to other viral and inflammatory lung diseases.

The researchers conclude that CPQ represents a previously unrecognized genetic factor influencing infection severity. Its ability to suppress excessive cytokine production highlights its potential as a therapeutic target. If future studies confirm these results across different populations and respiratory illnesses, drugs designed to enhance CPQ activity could one day help prevent life-threatening inflammation.

Importantly, this discovery moves beyond simple association and provides functional biological proof. By combining genetics, single-cell analysis, and laboratory experiments, the team presents a comprehensive picture of how CPQ regulates immune balance in the lungs.

The study findings were published on a preprint server and are currently being peer reviewed.
 

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FDA reverses surprise rejection of Moderna’s mRNA flu vaccine
Trump admin’s vaccine chief overruled FDA scientists to initially reject the shot.

Beth Mole
Feb 18, 2026 12:08 PM

The Food and Drug Administration has reversed its shocking refusal to consider Moderna’s mRNA flu vaccine for approval.

The refusal was revealed last week in a sharply worded press release from Moderna. Subsequent reporting found that the decision was made by political appointee Vinay Prasad, the Trump administration’s top vaccine regulator, who overruled a team of agency scientists and a top career official in rejecting Moderna’s application.

In an announcement Wednesday morning, Moderna said the FDA has now agreed to review its vaccine after the company held a formal (Type A) meeting with the FDA and proposed a change to the regulatory pathways used in the application.

“We appreciate the FDA’s engagement in a constructive Type A meeting and its agreement to advance our application for review,” Stéphane Bancel, Moderna’s CEO, said in the announcement. “Pending FDA approval, we look forward to making our flu vaccine available later this year so that America’s seniors have access to a new option to protect themselves against flu.” The agency is expected to provide a decision on the vaccine by August 5, 2026.

Prasad’s ostensible reason for initially refusing to review the application was based not on Moderna’s vaccine, mRNA-1010, but on the established flu vaccine Moderna used for comparison in its Phase 3 trial. Moderna used licensed standard-dose influenza vaccines, including Fluarix, made by GlaxoSmithKline, in the trial, which involved nearly 41,000 adults aged 50 and older. In a letter to Moderna dated February 3, Prasad said this choice “does not reflect the best-available standard of care,” and therefore the trial was not “adequate and well-controlled.”

Moderna acknowledged that FDA scientists had previously suggested that the company use a recommended high-dose flu vaccine in trial participants 65 and older. But the agency ultimately signed off on the trial design with the uniform standard dose, calling it “acceptable.” Moderna, meanwhile, agreed to add a comparison of a high-dose vaccine to some older participants and provide the FDA with additional analysis.


Anti-vaccine agenda

Agency insiders told reporters that a team of career scientists was ready to review the vaccine and held an hourlong meeting with Prasad to present the reasons for moving forward with the review. David Kaslow, a top career official responsible for reviewing vaccines, also wrote a memo detailing why the review should proceed. Prasad rejected the vaccine application anyway.

According to today’s announcement, the FDA reversed that rejection when Moderna proposed splitting the application, seeking full approval for the vaccine’s use in people aged 50 to 64 and an accelerated approval for use in people 65 and up. That latter regulatory pathway means Moderna will have to conduct an additional trial in that age group to confirm its effectiveness after it’s on the market.

Andrew Nixon, spokesperson for the US Department of Health and Human Services, confirmed the reversal to Ars Technica. “Discussions with the company led to a revised regulatory approach and an amended application, which FDA accepted,” Nixon said in a statement. “FDA will maintain its high standards during review and potential licensure stages as it does with all products.”

The FDA typically takes a levelheaded approach to working with companies, rarely making surprising decisions or rejecting applications outright. While Prasad claimed the rejection was due to the control vaccine, the move aligns with Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s broader anti-vaccine agenda.

Kennedy and the allies he has installed in federal positions are particularly hostile to mRNA technology. Moderna has already lost more than $700 million in federal contracts to develop pandemic vaccines. Next month, Kennedy’s MAHA Institute is hosting an anti-vaccine event that alleges there’s a “massive epidemic of vaccine injury.” The event description claims without evidence that use of mRNA vaccines is linked to “rising rates of acute and chronic illness.”

Vaccine makers and industry investors, meanwhile, are reporting that Kennedy’s relentless anti-vaccine efforts are chilling the entire industry, with companies abandoning research and cutting jobs. In comments to The New York Times, Moderna’s president, Stephen Hoge, said, “There will be less invention, investment, and innovation in vaccines generally, across all the companies.”
 

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Americans Report Far More Long COVID Brain Fog Than the Rest of the World

By Northwestern University
February 18, 2026

A global study of long COVID patients found that brain fog and mental health symptoms are reported far more often in the U.S. than in countries like India and Nigeria. Researchers believe the gap reflects culture and access to care rather than biology. Credit: Shutterstock

A sweeping international study of more than 3,100 long COVID patients has uncovered a striking global divide in brain-related symptoms.

A large international study led by Northwestern Medicine has found that people with long COVID in the United States report much higher levels of brain fog, depression, and other cognitive problems than patients in countries such as India and Nigeria.

Researchers stress that this does not necessarily mean the illness is more severe in the U.S. Instead, the heavier symptom burden reported by American patients may reflect lower stigma around mental health and better access to neurological and psychological care.


First Cross Continental Study of Neurological Effects

This is the first study to directly compare long COVID neurological symptoms across multiple continents. Scientists followed more than 3,100 adults receiving care for long COVID at academic medical centers in Chicago; Medellín, Colombia; Lagos, Nigeria; and Jaipur, India.

Most participants were not hospitalized during their initial COVID infections. Among these patients, 86% in the U.S. reported brain fog. That compares with 63% in Nigeria, 62% in Colombia, and just 15% in India.

A similar pattern appeared for emotional distress. Nearly 75% of non-hospitalized patients in the U.S. said they experienced depression or anxiety. In Colombia, about 40% reported those symptoms, while fewer than 20% did so in Nigeria and India.

“It is culturally accepted in the U.S. and Colombia to talk about mental health and cognitive issues, whereas that is not the case in Nigeria and India,” said Dr. Igor Koralnik, senior study author and chief of neuro-infectious disease and global neurology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.

“Cultural denial of mood disorder symptoms as well as a combination of stigma, misperceptions, religiosity and belief systems, and lack of health literacy may contribute to biased reporting. This may be compounded by a dearth of mental health providers and perceived treatment options in those countries.”

The findings will be published Jan. 28 in Frontiers in Human Neuroscience.


Most Common Neurological Symptoms

Across all four countries, the most frequently reported neurological symptoms included brain fog, fatigue, myalgia (muscle pain), headache, dizziness, and sensory disturbances (such as numbness or tingling).

Sleep problems were also more common in the U.S. Nearly 60% of non-hospitalized American patients reported insomnia, compared with roughly one-third or fewer of patients in Colombia, Nigeria, and India.

When researchers analyzed the data statistically, they found that symptom patterns clustered by income level rather than geography. High- and upper-middle-income countries (U.S., Colombia) grouped together, while lower-middle-income countries (Nigeria, India) formed a separate cluster.


How Researchers Conducted the Study


The observational study enrolled adults with lingering neurological symptoms after COVID-19 infection between 2020 and 2025. Patients were recruited from four academic medical centers and included both those who had been hospitalized and those who had not.

Investigators used standardized tools to measure neurological function, cognitive performance, and quality of life at each location, allowing consistent comparisons across countries.


The Broader Impact of Long COVID

Long COVID affects millions of people worldwide. It refers to symptoms that continue for weeks or even years after an initial infection. Studies suggest that 10-30% of adults who contract COVID develop longer-term health problems, with cognitive and neurological issues among the most disruptive.

As the authors write, long COVID “affects young and middle-aged adults in their prime, causing significant detrimental impact on the workforce, productivity, and innovation all over the world.”

In this study, patients in the U.S. consistently described the greatest neurological and psychological burden, which “affected their quality of life and ability to work,” according to Koralnik, who also serves as co-director of the Comprehensive COVID Center at Northwestern Medicine and leads the program for global neurology at the Havey Institute for Global Health at Feinberg.


What Comes Next

The researchers say their results highlight the need for screening tools and diagnostic approaches that take cultural differences into account. They also emphasize the importance of healthcare systems that can provide long-term monitoring and treatment for people with long COVID.

Building on these findings, Koralnik and international collaborators are now testing cognitive rehabilitation programs for long COVID brain fog in Colombia and Nigeria. These programs use the same treatment protocols developed for patients at the Shirley Ryan AbilityLab in Chicago.

The study is titled “A cross-continental comparative analysis of the neurological manifestations of Long COVID.”

Reference: “A cross-continental comparative analysis of the neurological manifestations of Long COVID” by Millenia Jimenez, Melissa Lopez, Janet Miller, Njideka U. Okubadejo, Carolina Hurtado, Anurag Kumar Singh, Oluwadamilola O. Ojo, Diego F. Rojas-Gualdron, Iorhen Akase, Osigwe P. Agabi, Kamlesh Kumar, Balvir Singh Tomar, Deepak Nathiya, Rebecca Jules, Eric M. Liotta and Igor J. Koralnik, 31 December 2025, Frontiers in Human Neuroscience.
DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2025.1760173
 

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Triple Blood Thinner Therapy Clears Long COVID Microclots
Nikhil Prasad Fact checked by:Thailand Medical News Team
Feb 21, 2026

A surprising new case report from Sweden suggests that dangerous microscopic blood clots lingering after COVID-19 infection may be reduced using a combination of three commonly available blood-thinning medications. The findings offer new hope to people suffering from Long COVID symptoms such as chest pain, fatigue, and exercise intolerance that have remained unexplained for years.

The research was conducted by Dr. Lisa Noren, a Specialist in Family Medicine based in Stockholm, Sweden, who also served as the patient in this detailed clinical investigation. Additional diagnostic biomarker testing was supported through a biorepository research program at Stellenbosch University Hospital in Stellenbosch, South Africa, while clinical guidance was also associated with cardiology specialists at Karolinska University Hospital in Stockholm. This Medical News report highlights how the study sheds light on a possible mechanism behind persistent Long COVID symptoms and explores an experimental treatment approach.

Microclots Emerging as Hidden Drivers of Long COVID
Scientists have increasingly suspected that Long COVID may involve tiny clots known as microclots forming inside small blood vessels. These microclots, too small to be detected by conventional hospital clotting tests, can disrupt normal blood flow and oxygen delivery to tissues.

The patient in this study, a 52-year-old physician, developed severe symptoms following COVID-19 infection in 2020. She experienced chest pain during physical activity, abnormal heart rate responses, fatigue, and reduced ability to exercise. Despite extensive testing, including ECG scans, cardiac MRI, and angiography, major heart arteries appeared normal. However, specialized testing confirmed microvascular dysfunction, meaning the smallest blood vessels were not functioning properly.

Using advanced plasma fluorescence microscopy performed through the Stellenbosch research program, doctors discovered an extremely high microclot burden score of 15 out of 16, far above normal levels.

Triple Blood Thinner Therapy Shows Dramatic Improvements
To address the microclots, the patient initiated an experimental triple antithrombotic therapy consisting of low-dose aspirin, clopidogrel, and apixaban, along with pantoprazole to protect the stomach lining. These medications work through different mechanisms to prevent clot formation and reduce abnormal clotting activity.

Over a period of 5.5 months, remarkable improvements were observed. Walking test performance improved significantly, with completion time dropping from 289 seconds to 233 seconds. Objective measurements from wearable monitoring devices showed reduced exertion strain, indicating improved cardiovascular efficiency. Muscle endurance also improved, with chair-stand repetitions increasing from 27 to 39 before fatigue set in.

Most importantly, laboratory analysis showed that the microclot burden dropped dramatically from 15 out of 16 to just 3 out of 16.

The patient also reported reduced chest pain, improved stamina, and less post-exercise fatigue. Medication needed to control chest pain was reduced, and overall physical functioning improved substantially.

Understanding How Microclots May Cause Long COVID Symptoms

Microclots may block capillaries, the smallest blood vessels responsible for delivering oxygen to muscles, nerves, and organs. When oxygen delivery is disrupted, tissues become stressed and energy production declines. This may explain many Long COVID symptoms such as fatigue, brain fog, muscle weakness, and chest discomfort.

Researchers believe SARS-CoV-2 infection may trigger abnormal clotting through inflammation, immune activation, and damage to the inner lining of blood vessels, known as the endothelium.

Triple antithrombotic therapy may help by preventing new clot formation while allowing the body to gradually clear existing microclots and restore normal blood flow.

Important Limitations and Need for Larger Trials
Despite these promising results, researchers emphasize that this is a single case report and does not prove that the treatment works for all Long COVID patients. Spontaneous recovery or placebo effects cannot be ruled out.

Triple antithrombotic therapy also carries risks, particularly bleeding, and should only be used under medical supervision. The treatment remains experimental and is not currently considered standard care.

However, the dramatic reduction in microclots and parallel improvement in symptoms strongly support the theory that microvascular clotting plays a key role in Long COVID.

Conclusions
This case provides compelling evidence that persistent microclots may be an important and previously overlooked cause of Long COVID symptoms. The observed improvements in physical function, reduction in clot burden, and overall symptom relief suggest that targeting abnormal clotting mechanisms could represent a promising therapeutic strategy. However, large randomized controlled trials are urgently needed to confirm safety, effectiveness, and identify which patients may benefit most. Until then, this approach remains experimental but represents a potentially important breakthrough in understanding and treating Long COVID.

The study findings were published on a preprint server and are currently being peer reviewed.
 

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Ancient Swiss Herbal Text Reveals Plants That Block COVID-19 Virus

Nikhil Prasad Fact checked by:Thailand Medical News Team
Feb 21, 2026

Medical News: Ancient Remedies Revisited in Modern Labs
Scientists in Switzerland and Germany have turned to a 16th-century herbal manuscript in search of new antiviral solutions, and their findings are attracting attention. Researchers from the ZHAW Zurich University of Applied Sciences, Weihenstephan-Triesdorf University of Applied Sciences, Technical University of Munich, and the Spiez Laboratory of the Federal Office for Civil Protection investigated whether old medicinal plant recipes could help identify compounds active against SARS-CoV-2, the virus responsible for COVID-19.

The team explored a historic text known as the Receptarium of Burkhard III von Hallwyl, a Swiss herbal guide written in 1580 for ordinary people. The manuscript contains hundreds of plant-based remedies used for skin conditions and illnesses that, when interpreted using modern medicine, may have been caused by viral infections. Researchers believed that these historical clues might lead to forgotten medicinal plants with real antiviral potential.


How the Study Was Carried Out

The scientists selected ten plants described in the manuscript and prepared extracts using water and alcohol-based methods. They then tested these extracts in laboratory cell models exposed to SARS-CoV-2. The goal was to see whether the plant compounds could stop the virus from damaging cells while remaining non-toxic.

Out of 22 tested extracts, only hydroethanolic preparations showed strong activity. Four plants stood out: Artemisia vulgaris (common mugwort), Geranium robertianum (herb Robert), Sambucus nigra (elderberry leaves), and Viola odorata (sweet violet leaves). These extracts showed at least 50 percent antiviral activity at low concentrations while maintaining acceptable cell survival.

The researchers then separated these extracts into smaller chemical fractions. The ethyl acetate fractions of several plants showed nearly complete antiviral activity at very low doses, with sweet violet showing the strongest effect, reducing virus-related damage by more than 85 percent at just 1.9 micrograms per milliliter.


Why Historical Medicine Matters
This Medical News report highlights how the study demonstrates that historical medical texts can serve as valuable scientific resources. The manuscript was originally intended for common people and included practical recipes passed down through generations. Interestingly, some plant uses recorded in the text do not appear in major herbal books of the same era, suggesting that local knowledge preserved unique therapeutic insights.

Researchers emphasized that many of these plants are no longer widely used in modern evidence-based herbal medicine. Yet, the laboratory findings suggest that some forgotten remedies may still hold biological activity worth exploring. The work also shows how combining ethnopharmacology with modern virology can open new research paths.


Key Scientific Insights
The team performed advanced chemical fingerprinting to identify marker compounds in the active extracts. Compounds such as chlorogenic acid, kaempferol, and violanthin were detected, giving clues about which chemical families may contribute to antiviral action.

However, the researchers also warned that these are early-stage results. The tests were done in cell cultures using an early strain of SARS-CoV-2, and further studies are required to isolate active molecules, confirm safety, and determine whether effects remain consistent across newer viral variants.


Conclusions

The findings suggest that historical herbal knowledge can provide a surprisingly effective starting point for modern antiviral research. While the study does not prove that these plants can treat COVID-19 in humans, it strongly supports further investigation into their active compounds. The results show that several plants, once widely used but now largely forgotten, may contain potent antiviral agents worthy of deeper pharmacological study. Future research will need to confirm safety, determine mechanisms, and evaluate whether these compounds can be developed into practical therapies or preventive options.

The study findings were published in the peer reviewed journal: Frontiers in Pharmacology.
 

hd5574

Veteran Member
I wonder what vitamin D dosage that study was using, and what levels they achieved. I take 15,000 IU plus K2. Showing around 50 test results.
The big pharma people have really done a number on people and creating fear about D3.
As a child I ran around in the summer in the summer sun..for hours...getting brown as a berry...way before the days of sun screen...we don't let that stuff in our house..the best information I can find is that you get 20,000 iu on your skin in a half hour....
I was reading in one of my books...that around 100 yrs ago D3 was added to everything even beer...lol
People were getting 100,00 iu per day or most times a lot more...and nobody was sick..hospitals were in trouble...nobody needed them..people weren't getting sick..come forward to today..people are sick..on meds..and look at the daily recommended amount..in conjunction with rotten food...lol
I'm 79..on no meds..nothing wrong..I do lots...don't get sick...DH and I laughed at the covid freakout...haven't had a virus in can't remember when...i did have the really bad flu back in 1982...before I figured in out...

During covid...the family out west used 50,000 iu per to kill bad covid..in a cousin..who was "hospital " ill with it..it took 4 days to kill it ..

If I feel weird...do 50,000 iu, a 12 mg ivm..and several sprays of colloidal silver 30 ppm and keep on keeping.

Edit to correct spell check
 
Last edited:

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THIS IS A THREE PARTER. FIRST TWO ARTICLES ON THE SCIENTIFIC STUDY AND THEN A POST FROM GEERT ABOUT IT.



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Closing in on a universal vaccine: Nasal spray protects mice from respiratory viruses, bacteria and allergens

by Stanford University Medical Center
edited by Sadie Harley, reviewed by Robert Egan
February 19, 2026

In the realm of medical advancements, a universal vaccine that can protect against any pathogen has long been a Holy Grail—and about as elusive as a mythological vessel. But Stanford Medicine researchers and collaborators have taken an astonishing step forward in that quest, surprising even themselves.

In a new study in mice, they have developed a universal vaccine formula that protects against a wide range of respiratory viruses, bacteria and even allergens. The vaccine is delivered intranasally—such as through a nasal spray—and provides broad protection in the lungs for several months.

In the study, published in Science, researchers show that vaccinated mice were protected against SARS-CoV-2 and other coronaviruses, Staphylococcus aureus and Acinetobacter baumannii (common hospital-acquired infections), and house dust mites (a common allergen).

In fact, the new vaccine has worked for a remarkably wide spectrum of respiratory threats the researchers have tested, said Bali Pulendran, Ph.D., the Violetta L. Horton Professor II and a professor of microbiology and immunology who is the study's senior author. The lead author of the study is Haibo Zhang, Ph.D., a postdoctoral scholar in Pulendran's lab.

If translated into humans, such a vaccine could replace multiple jabs every year for seasonal respiratory infections and be on hand should a new pandemic virus emerge.


Pie in the sky


The new vaccine is unlike any vaccine used today.

Since the 1790s, when the English physician Edward Jenner coined the term vaccination (from the Latin vacca for cow) to refer to the use of cowpox to inoculate against smallpox, all subsequent vaccines have relied on the same fundamental principle: antigen specificity. That is, the vaccine mimics a distinctive component of the pathogen—the spike proteins that cover SARS-CoV-2, for example—to prepare the immune system to recognize and react quickly to the real pathogen.

"That's been the paradigm of vaccinology for the last 230 years," Pulendran said.

But antigen-specific vaccines fail when a pathogen mutates or when new pathogens emerge. That's why there's a new COVID-19 booster and flu shot every year.

"It's becoming increasingly clear that many pathogens are able to quickly mutate. Like the proverbial leopard that changes its spots, a virus can change the antigens on its surface," Pulendran said.

Most attempts at a so-called universal vaccine have the modest goal of inducing immunity against an entire family of virus—all coronaviruses or all flu viruses, for example—usually by mimicking evolutionarily conserved viral components that are less likely to mutate. A truly universal vaccine that can counter diverse pathogens was a pie-in-the-sky idea.

"We were interested in this idea because it sounded a bit outrageous," Pulendran said. "I think nobody was seriously entertaining that something like this could ever be possible."


Integrated immunity


The new vaccine doesn't try to mimic any part of a pathogen; instead, it mimics the signals that immune cells use to communicate with each other during an infection. This novel strategy integrates the two branches of immunity—innate and adaptive—creating a feedback loop that sustains a broad immune response.

The adaptive immune system is the workhorse of current vaccines. It produces specialized agents, like antibodies and T cells, that target specific pathogens and remember them for years to come.

The innate immune system, which deploys within minutes of a new infection, has received less attention because it typically lasts only a few days before ceding the spotlight to the adaptive immune system. It was seen as the warm-up act for the main show.

But Pulendran's team was intrigued by the versatility of the innate immune system, which consists of generalists (such as dendritic cells, neutrophils and macrophages) that destroy anything deemed a pathogen.

"What's remarkable about the innate system is that it can protect against a broad range of different microbes," Pulendran said.

Innate immunity is short-lived, but provides something approaching universal protection.

There have long been hints that innate immunity can last longer in certain circumstances. The most-studied example is the Bacillus Calmette-Guerin tuberculosis vaccine, which is given to some 100 million newborns every year.

Epidemiological and clinical studies have shown that it can decrease infant mortality from other infections, suggesting that the cross-protection could last months. But the phenomenon was inconsistent and the mechanism mysterious.

In 2023, Pulendran's team published a study in mice elucidating the mechanism. Like other vaccines, the tuberculosis vaccine induced both an innate and adaptive immune response in the mice, but unusually, the innate response was sustained for several months.

The researchers discovered that T cells recruited to the lungs as part of the adaptive response were sending signals to the innate immune cells to keep them active.

"Those T cells were providing a critical signal to keep the activation of the innate system, which typically lasts for a few days or a week, but in this case, it could last for three months," Pulendran said.

The researchers showed that as long as the innate response remained active, the mice were protected against SARS-CoV-2 and other coronavirus infections. They identified the signals sent by T cells as cytokines that activate pathogen-sensing receptors, known as toll-like receptors, on innate immune cells.

"In that paper, we speculated that since we now know how the tuberculosis vaccine is mediating its cross-protective effects, it would be possible to make a synthetic vaccine, perhaps a nasal spray, that has the right combination of toll-like receptor stimuli and some antigen to get the T cells into the lungs," Pulendran said.

"Fast forward two and a half years and we've shown that exactly what we had speculated is feasible in mice."


Double whammy

The new vaccine, for now known as GLA-3M-052-LS+OVA, mimics the T cell signals that directly stimulate innate immune cells in the lungs. It also contains a harmless antigen, an egg protein called ovalbumin or OVA, which recruits T cells into the lungs to maintain the innate response for weeks to months.

In the study, mice were given a drop of the vaccine in their noses. Some received multiple doses, given a week apart. Each mouse was then exposed to one type of respiratory virus. With three doses of the vaccine, mice were protected against SARS-CoV-2 and other coronaviruses for at least three months.

In unvaccinated mice, these viruses caused dramatic weight loss—a sign of illness—and often death; their lungs were inflamed and full of virus. Vaccinated mice lost much less weight and all survived; their lungs were nearly clear of the virus.

The vaccine is a "double whammy" against viral infection, Pulendran said. The prolonged innate response lowers the amount of virus in the lungs by 700-fold. And viruses that slip through this initial defense are met with a swift adaptive response in the lungs.

"The lung immune system is so ready and so alert that it can launch the typical adaptive responses—virus-specific T cells and antibodies—in as little as three days, which is an extraordinarily short length of time," Pulendran said. "Normally, in an unvaccinated mouse, it takes two weeks."

Amazed by the vaccine's ability to fend off different types of viral infections, the researchers expanded their testing to bacterial respiratory infections, Staphylococcus aureus and Acinetobacter baumannii. The vaccinated mice were protected against these, too, for about three months.

"Then we thought, 'What else could go in the lung?'" Pulendran said. "Allergens."

They exposed the mice to a protein from house dust mites, a common trigger for allergic asthma. Allergic reactions are caused by a type of immune response known as Th2 response. Unvaccinated mice showed a strong Th2 response and mucus accumulation in their airways. The vaccine quelled the Th2 response and vaccinated mice maintained clear airways.

"I think what we have is a universal vaccine against diverse respiratory threats," Pulendran said.

The researchers hope to test the vaccine in humans next, first in a Phase I safety trial, then, if successful, in a larger trial in which vaccinated people are exposed to infections. Pulendran thinks two doses of a nasal spray would be enough to provide protection in humans.

In the best case scenario, with enough funding, Pulendran estimates a universal respiratory vaccine might be available in five to seven years. It could be a bulwark against new pandemics and simplify seasonal vaccinations.

"Imagine getting a nasal spray in the fall months that protects you from all respiratory viruses including COVID-19, influenza, respiratory syncytial virus and the common cold, as well as bacterial pneumonia and early spring allergens," Pulendran said. "That would transform medical practice."

Researchers from Emory University School of Medicine, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Utah State University and the University of Arizona contributed to the work.
Publication details

Haibo Zhang et al, Mucosal vaccination in mice provides protection from diverse respiratory threats, Science (2026). DOI: 10.1126/science.aea1260. www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.aea1260
 

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Universal vaccine to treat colds, flu and COVID developed, and a new study suggests it just might work
by Neil Mabbott, The Conversation
edited by Stephanie Baum, reviewed by Robert Egan
February 24, 2026

Vaccines have traditionally worked by teaching the immune system to recognize a specific virus or bacterium—in effect, showing it a wanted poster for a single suspect. But what if one vaccine could protect against dozens of different infections at once? Researchers have now developed a potential candidate for such a vaccine, and a study in mice, published in the journal Science, offers promising results.


What is this new vaccine, and how does it work?

Most vaccines work by introducing the immune system to a specific pathogen—a weakened version of it, or a key protein from its surface—so that the body can recognize and fight it if it is encountered later.

This vaccine takes a fundamentally different approach. Rather than targeting any one bug, it contains molecules that mimic the signals the body naturally produces when it is under attack from a virus or bacterium. The effect is to put certain immune cells into a prolonged state of high alert, ready to respond rapidly to a wide range of threats, rather than being trained to spot just one.

However, the consequences of dialing up the immune system beyond its normal state won't be known until human trials are conducted.


Why is it given as a nasal spray rather than an injection?


The nose, throat and lungs are lined with what scientists call mucosal surfaces—the moist tissues that act as the body's main point of contact with the outside world, and its first barrier against infection. The immune system in these tissues responds more powerfully when a vaccine is delivered directly to them, rather than into a muscle in the arm.

That principle already underlies the routine flu vaccine given to young children in the UK, which comes as a nasal spray. Research has also shown that COVID vaccines can block infection more effectively in animals when delivered this way, rather than by injection. Spraying the new vaccine into the nose allows it to reach immune cells deep in the lungs.


How can one vaccine protect against so many different pathogens?

The vaccine works by enhancing communication between two key types of immune cell. The first are alveolar macrophages—large cells positioned in the tiny air spaces of the lungs, where they act as a first line of defense against anything harmful that is inhaled. When primed by the vaccine, they are able to engulf and destroy invading pathogens far more rapidly than usual.

The second are T cells, which are pushed to mount faster antiviral responses. Because the vaccine is boosting these general frontline defenses rather than targeting any specific pathogen, it can in theory work against a broad range of threats.

In mice, it also appeared to suppress allergic reactions—to house dust mites, for example—because the strong inflammatory immune response it triggers appears to displace the quite different response that drives allergies.


The study was done in mice. How confident are scientists that it will work the same way in humans?

Cautiously hopeful, but not yet confident. There are well-documented differences between mouse and human immune systems, and promising results in animals frequently fail to translate to people. The critical next step will be controlled human infection studies—trials in which healthy volunteers are vaccinated, exposed to a specific pathogen under close medical supervision, and carefully monitored for both safety and immune response.


Could this really replace multiple jabs a year? Which ones, specifically?


Potentially, yes—at least for some. If it proves effective in humans, a vaccine of this kind could in principle replace the need for separate annual jabs against flu, COVID and common cold viruses, all of which are RNA-based viruses, meaning their genetic material is RNA rather than DNA. Whether it would extend to DNA-based viruses—those responsible for chickenpox or hepatitis, for example—is far less certain and would require separate investigation.


How long does the protection last, and would people need a booster?

In mice, protection lasted up to three months. This is considerably shorter than conventional vaccines in humans, some of which offer protection for years or even a lifetime. How long this type of vaccine might provide protection for humans is not currently known. A similarly short period of protection in humans could be viewed as a real limitation, but not necessarily a fatal one.

If the vaccine were given each autumn, it could provide meaningful protection to vulnerable people across the winter months, when respiratory infections peak. Even time-limited immunity, deployed strategically, could save lives.


What are the next steps before this reaches the public?


Demonstrating safety is the immediate priority. Because the vaccine is designed to keep parts of the immune system in a heightened state for an extended period, there is a need to confirm that this does not cause unintended harm to healthy tissue.

Scientists also need to establish that the strong inflammatory response it triggers does not increase susceptibility to other infections—intestinal parasites, for instance—whose biology overlaps with allergic responses.

How the vaccine performs in older people, who are most vulnerable to severe respiratory illness, is another important unknown. During aging, a low level of background inflammation, known as inflammaging, can also contribute to age-related diseases and reduce immunity to past infections.


How soon could we have this?


The study's senior author, Bali Pulendran, says that in the best-case scenario, a universal respiratory vaccine might be available in five to seven years.

However, progress will depend heavily on how early human trials perform. If the vaccine proves less potent in people than in mice, or if safety concerns emerge, the formulation will need to be revised, adding time at every stage.

A strong early showing, on the other hand, could build momentum. Either way, developing a human-ready formulation, completing safety trials, and testing how effective it is against multiple real-world pathogens is a substantial undertaking that cannot easily be rushed.


Could this work against future pandemic viruses we haven't even encountered yet?

This is arguably where the potential is greatest. Conventional vaccines against flu and COVID require regular updating because the viruses mutate. And when the vaccine strain does not closely match what is actually circulating, protection can fall short.

A vaccine that places the immune system on broad, non-specific high alert could offer a critical first layer of defense against a new pandemic pathogen, limiting serious illness and death while a targeted bespoke vaccine is developed. In a world still living with the memory of COVID, that possibility alone makes this research worth watching.

Journal information: Science
Key medical concepts
Macrophages, AlveolarT-LymphocytesRNA Viruses
Clinical categories
Infectious diseasesCommon illnesses & PreventionAllergy and immunology
 

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This is how you fuel people’s aversion to vaccines!
Geert Vanden Bossche
Feb 24, 2026


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This is the article Christine got so excited about:

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This ain’t Christine at her best!

First, I do not understand Christine’s excitement about this paper. It is one of many thousands of publications demonstrating the non-specific effects of vaccine adjuvantation and the bystander activation of heterologously stimulated antigen (Ag)-specific T cells.

TLR agonist–mediated adjuvantation induces abundant cytokine production that will - unsurprisingly - activate immune cells but also carries the risk of undesirable inflammatory side effects. Adjuvanted ovalbumin (OVA) elicits strong T-cell responses in C57BL/6J mice and consequently induces pathogen-nonspecific cytokine responses that mitigate disease symptoms caused by a wide range of non-antigenically related pathogens.

None of this is new! None of this is spectacular. And none of this is desirable in the context of universal vaccines.

After all these years, Bali Pulendran and his colleagues still appear not to have grasped that ‘bombarding’ the immune system with TLR agonists does not lead to safe and efficacious vaccines - let alone universal ones! Or perhaps they have, and that is precisely why OVA was added to the formulation. It makes the system easier to manipulate as this highly immunogenic protein (containing the dominant SIINFEKL peptide epitope) can trigger robust CD8? Tc responses even in C57BL/6J (non-transgenic) mice, particularly when heavily adjuvanted. These inbred mice express H-2K? MHC class I molecules, which are ideally suited to present the SIINFEKL peptide. Under these highly specific experimental conditions, TLR-adjuvanted OVA-based vaccines readily stimulate cytokine-secreting CD8? T cells alongside induction of CD4? T helper responses.

As explained below, this is not a viable pathway toward universal vaccines! Nor is it specific to mucosal immunization. I would not be surprised if the same effects were observed following parenteral administration - yet this comparison was not addressed in this paper.

As already noted, the observed vaccine effect is primarily driven by abundant cytokine and chemokine secretion, whether derived from innate immune cells or activated T cells. These mediators function by upregulating activation markers and Ag-presenting molecules on immune-competent cells or by directly stimulating innate immune effectors. The approach centers on amplifying immune activation rather than on targeted education of functional immune responses - for example, induction of cytotoxic, pathogenicity-specific immune effector cells.

The publication is replete with quantitative descriptors of immune activation: ‘greater abundance,’ ‘increase,’ ‘enhancement,’ ‘higher,’ ‘acceleration’ - yet it offers no genuinely novel mechanistic insight into pathogen-specific immune recognition.

There is absolutely nothing ‘amazing’ or ‘genuinely exciting’ about this work, and it is far from ‘a striking demonstration of how harnessing innate immune pathways could enable cross-pathogen defense.’
Christine’s comparison of the immunization approach described by Zhang et al. with live attenuated vaccines (LAVs) is entirely misplaced. The impact of LAVs on innate immune training and reprogramming is far stronger, broader (including Natural Killer [NK] cells) and more durable due to sustained replication and ongoing Ag synthesis. Replicating platforms engage multiple pattern-recognition pathways simultaneously and remodel tissue-level immunity in ways that non-replicating systems simply cannot.

By contrast, TLR-adjuvanted vaccines activate a far more limited repertoire of innate signaling pathways. T cells recruited by heavily adjuvanted vaccines may provide cytokine signals that transiently maintain innate immune cells in a heightened, more responsive state for weeks or months or increase their sensitivity to subsequent Ag exposure, thereby conferring some kind of ‘prolonged’ symptomatic protection. I strongly doubt, however, that this effect is truly durable. Demonstrating genuine durability would require infectious re-challenge not merely at three months, but at one year, for example -which is entirely feasible even in murine models.

It is well established that strong adjuvant-mediated priming of Ag-specific memory T cells can lead to bystander, cytokine-driven activation of unrelated Ag-specific T cells upon heterologous challenge. The same concept applies to the reported protection study using heterologous adjuvanted Ag (OVA) in previously infection-experienced mice.

Such mechanisms of immune protection are not inherently desirable: they predispose to exaggerated inflammatory responses and potential autoreactivity, thereby increasing the risk of tissue damage upon repeated exposure or challenge. That is not how one should train the immune system!

I am equally skeptical of the mouse asthma model used. It does not recapitulate the complexity of chronic human asthma. The murine model is based on artificially induced Th2-biased allergic sensitization. In this context, TLR-adjuvanted vaccine-stimulated T-cell activation mitigates allergic airway inflammation simply by shifting immune polarization from Th2 toward Th1.

This directional immune deviation suppresses allergen-specific IgE responses that were initially artificially primed under Th2-biased experimental conditions. That does not constitute broad protection against human asthma pathology. It remains unclear why results from the OT-II CD4? T-cell adoptive transfer and OVA-alum asthma model are not critically discussed in the core text.

Transitioning to outbred mice, alternative vaccine antigens or immunopathology models more representative of human disease would likely attenuate - if not abolish - the partially protective immunity observed at three months. Do the authors have the courage to test this?

Furthermore, none of the molecular ‘stamp-collection’ assays presented in the core text assess the functional capacity of stimulated T cells to eliminate pathogen-infected host cells. An ex vivo CTL (cytotoxic T lymphocyte) assay would be essential to evaluate whether CD8? T cells acquire genuine cytotoxic function. I strongly suspect such assays, whether performed or omitted, would reveal a lack of effective cytotoxic activity, thereby underscoring the inability of these vaccines to eliminate infected cells. Notably, functional outcomes of ex vivo stimulation of OVA-specific T cells are not addressed in this publication.

For immune training to be both efficacious and safe, it must involve pathogenicity-specific, cell-based innate immunity - not Ag-agnostic, cytokine-mediated amplification driven by strong adaptive immune stimulation. Broad Th1-biased cytokine release is not synonymous with safe and protective immunity.

It is striking that this approach resembles an ‘immune bombshell’ used merely to diminish disease symptoms or transiently reduce pathogen load, without preventing or sterilizing infection. That should raise concern as suboptimal immunity is a well-recognized driver of pathogen immune escape.

These vaccines cannot provide true ‘early control of infection,’ as the authors suggest, nor can they reliably limit immune pathology. Their conclusion regarding reduced immunopathology is based on decreased infection-induced inflammation following vaccination, yet they have not assessed the risk of pathology resulting from reactivation of vaccine-primed inflammatory circuits upon repeated exposure.

In conclusion, the vaccines described confer protection against symptoms, not against infection. As such, they are unsuitable as pandemic countermeasures. Non-sterilizing vaccines inevitably permit asymptomatic transmission and foster immune selection of more infectious immune escape variants, thereby undermining herd immunity and failing to halt transmission. This dynamic was clearly observed during the SARS-CoV-2 mass vaccination campaign.

Moreover, there are safety concerns. The observed symptomatic protection relies heavily on activation and recall of CD4? and CD8? T cells that secrete cytokines and chemokines capable of broadly amplifying immune responses against whatever Ag is present - potentially including self-antigens or pathogen-derived, self-mimicking Ags (!) - when induced by a strongly adjuvanted, highly immunogenic protein such as OVA.

Claims of protection against immunopathology based on an artificial allergic mouse model reflect a limited understanding of immune-mediated pathology, which is frequently associated with excessive T cell stimulation!

The authors characterize their approach as a conceptual shift from traditional pathogen-specific vaccination toward a model relying on Th1-dependent cytokine secretion to mitigate infection or disease caused by diverse pathogens. In my view, this effect is temporary, not durable as implied, and does not represent a promising path toward universal vaccines.

If universal vaccines are to be achieved, they must rely on targeted immune education of NK cells capable of recognizing and eliminating pathogen-infected or otherwise pathologically altered host cells, ideally as of an early stage of infection or pathological alteration. This requires precise epigenetic reprogramming of NK cells, not indiscriminate activation of adaptive immunity or generalized innate stimulation.

I encourage close scrutiny of further preclinical- and any clinical - development of this approach. I can already tell you upfront: it will fail. It is not only conceptually flawed but also inappropriate for pandemic preparedness, which requires vaccines capable of preventing infection and enabling sterilizing herd immunity. But the authors appear not to have drawn lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic, instead persisting with an adjuvant-centric paradigm that prioritizes inflammatory amplification over pathogen-specific or, even better, pathogenicity-specific immune control.

What they describe as ‘integrated organ immunity’ is, in my view, an inflated conceptual construct unsupported by translational proof of concept.

After decades of work in the TLR adjuvant field, no compelling evidence in humans has emerged from their efforts. What has emerged is substantial public expenditure without proportional public health return!

Back in the days when I headed the Gates Foundation’s Vaccine Discovery, none of this reckless adjuvant-euphoric pseudo-vaccine research got funded, as it neither aligns with the biological requirements for pandemic control nor with responsible universal vaccine design. It therefore has no place in global health.
 

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COVID-19 infection predicts higher risk of kidney disease, study finds
by Christine Yu, Pennsylvania State University
edited by Stephanie Baum, reviewed by Robert Egan
February 25, 2026

Approximately one in seven adults in the United States has kidney disease, where the organs responsible for filtering waste and excess water from the blood are damaged, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Over time, this condition can lead to kidney failure, heart attack and stroke. But as many as 90% of people with chronic kidney disease don't know that they have the condition because there are often no symptoms during the early stages of the disease.

"Most people aren't diagnosed until the disease has progressed to an advanced stage. We need a better way to predict who is at risk, who is more likely to develop kidney disease, so that we can detect and intervene earlier," said Djibril Ba, assistant professor of public health sciences at Penn State College of Medicine.

Now, Ba and a team of researchers from Penn State College of Medicine, have found that previous COVID-19 infection is a significant risk factor for kidney disease. Specifically, compared to influenza, those with a history of COVID-19 infection have a 2.3-times higher risk of acute kidney injury and a 1.4-times higher risk of chronic kidney disease, according to an analysis of over three million patients appearing in Communications Medicine. They are also 4.7 times more likely to experience kidney failure.

The team developed machine learning models that incorporate COVID-19 infection history as one of nine variables used to determine who is at risk for kidney disease, which they described in a previous paper published in eBioMedicine. The researchers' new models were better able to detect individuals at risk for acute and chronic kidney disease compared to prior models, even with fewer variables. Previous prediction models for kidney disease typically include 20 to 30 variables, none of which previously incorporated COVID-19.

"While we're in the post-pandemic era, this shows that COVID-19 history is an important variable when considering the long-term impact of the infection on kidney function and disease," said first author Yue Zhang, who received his doctorate in epidemiology from Penn State College of Medicine and is currently a postdoctoral scholar at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

According to the researchers, this is the first large-scale study to investigate the relationship between COVID-19 and kidney disease among a broad population and that compares the associations with influenza, another common viral infection. The findings align with case reports and observational studies that have suggested that COVID-19 increases risk of kidney disease as well as other studies examining the relationship within specific populations, such as hospitalized patients.

The researchers analyzed data of over three million working-age adults in the United States from between 2020 and 2021 gathered from MarketScan, a national database of de-identified commercial health insurance claims. Individuals were divided into three groups: those who had a history of COVID-19 infection, those who had a history of influenza but not COVID-19 and those with no history of either infection. People who were previously diagnosed with kidney disease were excluded from the analysis.

Researchers then followed the individuals between 180 and 540 days, with a median follow-up of 324 days, looking for the emergence of new acute or sudden, short-term kidney injury, chronic kidney disease and end-stage renal disease where dialysis or a transplant is required. The flu cohort was included to determine if kidney issues were a common result of viral respiratory infections or if they were unique to COVID-19. Participants were matched based on age, sex, geographical region and timing of infection to account for different variants of virus.

Both types of viral infections can influence kidney health, the researchers said, but the effect of the flu was mild and temporary. COVID-19, on the other hand, had a more sustained effect, increasing the risk of acute kidney injury, which can develop within a few hours to a few days, as well as longer-term chronic and end-stage kidney disease.

The researchers explained that other studies have observed potential pathways that could explain why SARS-CoV-2—the virus that causes COVID-19—may target the kidneys, making the organ more susceptible to injury and disease. Kidney cells express high levels of the primary protein receptors that SARS-CoV-2 uses to enter and infect cells. Kidney cells also produce specialized enzymes that help viruses enter cells.

"Individuals with COVID-19 infection may need more frequent and more prolonged monitoring of their kidney function to enable earlier detection and possible preventative interventions," said Nasr Ghahramani, J. Lloyd Huck Chair in Medicine, professor of medicine and of public health sciences at Penn State College of Medicine and co-author on the study. "This is particularly important for individuals who have predisposing factors for kidney disease such as diabetes and high blood pressure."

The research team plans to continue to test and refine the machine learning models and potentially to develop an application that clinicians can use to identify patients at risk of developing kidney disease.

Vernon Chinchilli, distinguished professor of public health sciences at Penn State College of Medicine also contributed to the paper.

Publication details
Yue Zhang et al, The risk of kidney disease increases following SARS-CoV-2 infection compared to influenza, Communications Medicine (2026). DOI: 10.1038/s43856-026-01460-6

Journal information: Communications Medicine , EBioMedicine
Key medical concepts
Chronic Kidney DiseaseCOVID-19 (Coronavirus Disease 2019)Acute Kidney InjuryKidney Failure, Chronic
Clinical categories
NephrologyInfectious diseasesCommon illnesses & Prevention
Provided by Pennsylvania State University
 

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EMPHASIS MINE


FDA to offer bonus payments to staffers who complete speedy drug reviews
By MATTHEW PERRONE
Updated 4:40 PM EST, February 26, 2026

WASHINGTON (AP) — The head of the Food and Drug Administration plans to start offering bonus payments to agency drug reviewers who complete their work ahead of schedule, the latest in a flurry of changes to longstanding norms and procedures.

FDA Commissioner Marty Makary described the effort as a pilot program during a staff presentation Thursday, saying the first quarterly bonus payments would start going out to employees around August. The Associated Press obtained slides and a recording of the presentation.

“My job as your commissioner is to be your advocate and to fight for you,” Makary told FDA staffers, adding that getting approval for the payments took “some wrangling.”

“If you don’t like it, we can get rid of it, but usually everybody loves money,” Makary said.

The plan raises a number of questions, including exactly how the payments will be distributed across large teams of staffers who typically contribute to drug reviews. Employees who are not directly involved in drug reviews — such as factory inspectors — are not eligible for the payments. The pilot also presents potential ethical dilemmas if FDA reviewers are seen as being rewarded for rushing steps needed to confirm drug safety and effectiveness.

Since the 1990s, the FDA has collected fees from drug companies to help pay for extra staffers to quickly review new prescription drugs and vaccines. Under the agreement with the industry, the FDA has timelines and metrics for completing each review. But the agency has never paid workers directly for meeting or exceeding those goals.

The bonus program is intended “to recognize and reward staff who find ways to be more efficient delivering high-quality work activities that ultimately benefit patients,” according to slides presented to FDA staff.

Senior FDA officials on the call said payments would be based on “weighted time savings” achieved by employees and their teams, as well as ratings-based “work quality and work complexity.”

“This program values speed, but never at the expense of quality,” states one of the slides.

The announcement comes as the agency loses drug review staff to retirements and resignations following broader layoffs and buyouts across many other parts of the agency. Agency records show the FDA’s drug and biologics centers — which oversee prescription drugs, vaccines and biotech drugs — have lost about 20% of their employees since President Donald Trump took office a year ago.

Additionally, some agency reviewers cannot work on certain projects because they are actively interviewing for jobs in the pharmaceutical industry.

The program could also negatively impact the public perception of the FDA, which has often been viewed as too closely aligned with the drug companies it regulates.

Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who oversees the agency, has described FDA staffers as “a sock puppet” of industry since becoming the nation’s top health official last February.

About 70% of the FDA’s drug program is financed by user-fee payments from drug companies submitting their products for review. The arrangement has allowed the agency to hire thousands of additional scientists and cut review times by more than half of what they were prior to receiving the funding.

Since arriving at the agency last April, Makary has announced a series of measures that he says will shorten FDA reviews, including offering one-month drug assessments for new medications that serve “national interests.” In the last two weeks alone, Makary said the FDA would drop its longtime standard of requiring two clinical trials for drug reviews and open a new pathway for therapies that can only be tested in a handful of patients.

The announcements promoting faster, streamlined approvals come as the agency faces criticism over its recent handling of vaccines, gene therapies and other specialty treatments.

The FDA’s chief scientist and vaccine director, Dr. Vinay Prasad, has personally overruled staff in rejecting a string of experimental therapies and biotech drugs, citing the need for additional studies and more definitive evidence.

Earlier this month, Prasad refused to accept Moderna’s application for a new mRNA flu shot, saying its clinical trial was insufficient. Then, less than a week later, the agency reversed course, saying it would review the vaccine after Moderna agreed to conduct an additional study in older people.
 

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Long-term brain effects of COVID-19 vs. flu: Study reveals key differences
by Tulane University
edited by Sadie Harley, reviewed by Robert Egan
February 25, 2026

Even a mild case of COVID-19 or the flu can impact the body long after the fever and cough fade, according to new Tulane University research that may help explain why some people struggle to feel fully recovered weeks or months later. Tulane researchers found that while both viruses can leave lasting lung damage, only SARS-CoV-2 infection caused persistent brain inflammation and small blood vessel injury, even after the virus was no longer detectable.

The findings, published in Frontiers in Immunology, help explain why long COVID often includes neurological symptoms such as brain fog, fatigue and mood changes, while influenza is more commonly associated with respiratory complications.

"Influenza and COVID-19 affect large populations worldwide and carry a significant public health toll, yet the mechanisms behind their long-term effects remain poorly understood," said Dr. Xuebin Qin, lead author and professor of microbiology and immunology at the Tulane National Biomedical Research Center.


Comparing long-term impacts in mice

To separate effects common to severe respiratory infections from those unique to COVID-19, researchers used a mouse model to examine lung and brain tissue after infection had cleared.

In the lungs, both viruses left behind a similar picture: immune cells that failed to fully stand down and increased buildup of collagen, a protein associated with scarring. Those changes can stiffen lung tissue and make breathing feel more labored—a possible biological explanation for why some people report lingering shortness of breath after respiratory infections.

But when the researchers looked more closely, they found a key difference. After the flu, the lungs appeared to switch into repair mode, sending specialized cells into damaged areas to help rebuild the lining of the airways. That repair response was largely missing after COVID-19 infection, suggesting the virus may interfere with the lung's natural healing process.


COVID's unique footprint in the brain

The most striking differences appeared in the brain.

Although neither virus was found in brain tissue, mice that had COVID-19 showed signs of persistent brain inflammation weeks later, along with tiny areas of bleeding.

Gene expression analysis revealed ongoing inflammatory signaling and disruption of pathways involved in serotonin and dopamine regulation, systems closely tied to mood, cognition and energy levels. These persistent changes were largely absent in influenza-infected animals.

"In both infections, we observed lasting lung injury," Qin said. "But long-term effects on the brain were unique to SARS-CoV-2. That distinction is critical to understanding long COVID."


What the findings could mean for patients

The study findings shed new light on how vascular and immune changes may contribute to persistent neurological symptoms.

By defining these biological changes, the research offers a clearer foundation for monitoring patients and developing treatments aimed at preventing lasting damage. As lingering symptoms continue to complicate recovery for some, understanding what is driving them is essential to reducing long-term health consequences.


Publication details


Characterization of Subchronic Lung and Brain Consequences Caused by Mouse-Adapted SARS-CoV-2 and Influenza A Infection of C57BL6 mice, Frontiers in Immunology (2026). DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2026.1755141

Journal information: Frontiers in Immunology
Key medical concepts
COVID-19 (Coronavirus Disease 2019)Post-Acute COVID-19 Syndrome
Clinical categories
Infectious diseasesCommon illnesses & PreventionNeurologyPulmonary medicine
Provided by Tulane University
 

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Researchers Warn of Lingering Heart Damage After Mild COVID-19 Infections
Nikhil Prasad Fact checked by:Thailand Medical News Team
Feb 26, 2026

The COVID-19 pandemic may feel like a chapter the world is trying to close, but for millions of survivors, the story is not over. A new updated systematic review is raising fresh concerns about the long-term effects of COVID-19 on the heart and blood vessels, even in people who had only mild infections.

Researchers from the Pulmonology II Department, Faculty of Medicine, “Carol Davila” University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Bucharest; the Department of Pneumology and the Research Department at the “Marius Nasta” Institute of Pulmonology, Bucharest; the Thoracic Surgery Department at the same institute; the Faculty of Medicine, University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Craiova; the Anatomy Department, Faculty of Medicine, “Carol Davila” University of Medicine and Pharmacy; and the Cardiology Department at the “Professor Doctor Theodor Burghele” Clinical Hospital, Bucharest, conducted the review. Their findings paint a worrying picture of how the virus may quietly damage the cardiovascular system long after recovery.


What The Researchers Examined
The team carefully analyzed ten high-quality international studies published between 2022 and 2024. These studies followed adults for at least three months after confirmed COVID-19 infection and focused specifically on measurable heart and blood vessel problems.

Out of 412 initial scientific records, only ten met strict criteria. The researchers looked at heart scans, blood tests, electrocardiograms, blood pressure readings, and measures of artery stiffness. Unlike many earlier reports that focused mainly on symptoms, this review emphasized objective medical findings.


Hidden Heart Weakness in Survivors
One of the most striking findings was subtle but measurable heart muscle dysfunction. In one large European study involving over 4,000 patients who mostly had mild or moderate infections, 8 percent showed reduced heart pumping ability. Even more concerning, 15 percent had reduced “global longitudinal strain,” an early marker of heart weakness that may not cause symptoms at first.

Abnormal heart rhythms were also common. About 6 percent developed arrhythmias, and fragmented electrical patterns were detected in nearly 9 percent. Many of these patients had no previous heart disease.

Elevated cardiac biomarkers such as troponin, a protein released during heart injury, were found in about 7 percent of patients months after infection. Around 15 percent showed abnormal ECG changes, suggesting lingering electrical instability in the heart.


Blood Pressure and Vascular Changes

The review also revealed significant blood vessel problems. In one study, 32 percent of participants developed new-onset hypertension within a year after infection. Older age, severe lung involvement during acute illness, and steroid treatment were linked to higher risk.

Other research showed increased arterial stiff ness, even in younger adults without prior health conditions. Stiffer arteries are known predictors of future heart attacks and strokes. These changes suggest the virus may injure the inner lining of blood vessels, leading to chronic inflammation and a pro-thrombotic, or clot-prone, state.


Why This Matters
This Medical News report highlights that long COVID is not simply about fatigue or breathlessness. It may involve silent, long-term cardiovascular damage that increases future health risks. The researchers stress that even people who were never hospitalized can develop measurable heart abnormalities.


Conclusion
The review clearly shows that long COVID has a distinct cardiovascular profile that includes weakened heart muscle performance, rhythm disturbances, elevated cardiac biomarkers, arterial stiffness, and new-onset hypertension. These changes occur across all levels of initial disease severity and may affect previously healthy individuals. Early detection through structured heart monitoring, standardized diagnostic protocols, and risk-based follow-up care is essential. Without systematic screening and long-term research, many patients could face preventable heart complications years after infection.

The study findings were published in the peer reviewed Journal of Respiration.
 

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Post COVID Inflammation Linked to Atrial Fibrillation Risk
Nikhil Prasad Fact checked by:Thailand Medical News Team
Feb 26, 2026

A new study is raising concerns that people who have recovered from COVID-19 may continue to face hidden heart risks months after the infection appears to be over. Researchers have found that ongoing low-grade inflammation and damage to blood vessel function could increase the likelihood of developing atrial fibrillation, a common and potentially dangerous heart rhythm disorder.

The study was conducted by scientists from the “Victor Babes” University of Medicine and Pharmacy in Timisoara, Romania; the “Vasile Goldis” Western University of Arad, Romania; and the CFR Clinical Hospital in Timisoara, Romania. Their findings shed light on how COVID-19 may leave a long-lasting mark on the cardiovascular system.


What the Researchers Investigated
The research team examined 198 adults. Half of them had recovered from COVID-19 three to six months earlier, while the other half had never had the infection. Both groups were matched for age and gender to ensure a fair comparison.

At the beginning of the study, doctors measured several blood markers linked to inflammation and blood clotting. They also assessed the health of blood vessels using a test called flow-mediated dilation, or FMD. This test checks how well an artery can expand when blood flow increases, which reflects how healthy the inner lining of blood vessels, known as the endothelium, is.

Participants also underwent 24-hour heart rhythm monitoring to detect atrial fibrillation, often called AF, a condition where the heart beats irregularly and sometimes rapidly.


Striking Differences in Inflammation and Vessel Health
The results were clear. People who had recovered from COVID-19 had significantly higher levels of inflammation markers such as C-reactive protein, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, fibrinogen, D-dimer, and interleukin-6. These substances are often elevated when the body is fighting infection or experiencing ongoing inflammation.

At the same time, their blood vessel function was much worse. The average FMD value in the post-COVID group was 7.72 percent, compared to 13.72 percent in those who never had COVID-19. Lower FMD values indicate poorer endothelial function, meaning the blood vessels are less able to relax properly.

The researchers found strong links between higher inflammation levels and worse blood vessel performance. For example, erythrocyte sedimentation rate alone explained nearly 63 percent of the variation in FMD results. In simple terms, the more inflamed the body was, the more impaired the blood vessels appeared to be.

This Medical News report highlights that such persistent inflammation may not just be a laboratory finding but could translate into real heart rhythm problems over time.


Atrial Fibrillation Risk at One Year
At the start of the study, atrial fibrillation rates were similar in both groups. However, after 12 months, a difference emerged. About 32 percent of post-COVID participants had AF detected on 24-hour monitoring, compared to 21 percent in the control group.

When researchers looked more closely, they divided participants into four groups based on their inflammation levels, using the neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio. In both the post-COVID and control groups, those in the highest inflammation category were far more likely to develop atrial fibrillation over the year. In the post-COVID group, AF rose from 8 percent in the lowest inflammation group to 60 percent in the highest.

Even after adjusting for other factors such as age, high blood pressure, obesity, smoking, cholesterol problems, and heart failure with preserved ejection fraction, having had COVID-19 was independently associated with a higher risk of atrial fibrillation at 12 months.


Why This Matters

Atrial fibrillation can increase the risk of stroke, heart failure, and other serious complications. The study suggests that COVID-19 may create a lingering inflammatory and blood vessel environment that makes the heart more vulnerable to rhythm disturbances.

The researchers caution that their study was observational and conducted at a single center, so it does not prove that COVID-19 directly causes atrial fibrillation. However, the consistent pattern linking inflammation, poor blood vessel function, and later AF provides a strong signal that deserves further investigation.


Conclusion
In summary, this study shows that people recovering from COVID-19 may continue to have elevated inflammation and impaired blood vessel function months after infection. These changes appear to be linked to a higher burden of atrial fibrillation one year later. While more large-scale studies are needed, the findings suggest that monitoring heart rhythm and managing cardiovascular risk factors carefully in post-COVID patients could be crucial in preventing long-term complications. Persistent low-grade inflammation and endothelial dysfunction may represent an important pathway connecting COVID-19 to future heart rhythm disorders.

The study findings were published in the peer reviewed Journal of Clinical Medicine.
 

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Cordycepin Mushroom Extract Blocks Dangerous Clots
Nikhil Prasad Fact checked by:Thailand Medical News Team
Feb 28, 2026

A natural compound derived from a medicinal mushroom may hold powerful promise in the fight against life-threatening blood clots, according to new research from scientists in South Korea.


A Mushroom Compound with Powerful Effects
Researchers from the Department of Applied Biosciences and KNU NGS Core Facility at Kyungpook National University in Daegu, Microbalance Inc. in Daegu, the Cardiovascular Laboratory at the Medical Center of Dong-A University in Busan, the College of Pharmacology at Kyungpook National University, and the Department of Biomedical Laboratory Science at Inje University in Gimhae have discovered that a cordycepin-enriched extract known as WIB-801CE can significantly reduce abnormal blood clot formation.

The extract comes from Cordyceps militaris, a medicinal mushroom long used in traditional medicine. WIB-801CE contains about 7 percent cordycepin, a natural compound structurally similar to adenosine.

Blood clots are essential to stop bleeding after injury. However, when platelets become overactive, clots can form inside blood vessels, leading to heart attacks or strokes. One key driver of this dangerous process is thromboxane A2, a chemical that amplifies platelet activation in a self-reinforcing cycle.


How the Extract Stops Platelets from Clumping
The research team tested WIB-801CE using a laboratory compound called U46619, which mimics thromboxane A2. When platelets were exposed to U46619, more than half rapidly clumped together. But when treated with WIB-801CE, platelet aggregation dropped dramatically in a dose-dependent manner. At certain concentrations, the extract cut platelet clumping by nearly half.

Importantly, the extract did not damage platelets or cause them to activate on its own. Tests measuring cell membrane integrity confirmed that WIB-801CE was not toxic, even at higher doses.

The study also showed that WIB-801CE blocked fibrinogen from binding to integrin aIIbß3, a receptor that plays a crucial role in stabilizing blood clots. In untreated samples, fibrinogen binding rose to nearly 66 percent after stimulation. With the extract, this binding was progressively reduced, indicating weaker clot formation.


Targeting Key Clotting Signals
On a molecular level, the extract suppressed several proteins that normally promote platelet activation, including PI3K, Akt, ERK1, p38 MAPK, and JNK1. These signaling proteins are central to the cascade that leads to clot growth.

At the same time, WIB-801CE increased phosphorylation of VASP and IP3RI, proteins that help calm platelet activity and reduce calcium release inside cells. Lower calcium levels translate to reduced platelet activation.

This dual action—blocking pro-clotting signals while boosting anti-clotting pathways—suggests a balanced mechanism rather than a blunt shutdown of clotting.


Preventing Clot Retraction Without Increasing Bleeding Risk
The extract also significantly reduced thrombin-induced fibrin clot retraction, a process that tightens and stabilizes clots. In laboratory testing, clot retraction was reduced from nearly 47 percent in controls to about 17 percent with treatment.
When pure cordycepin was added alongside WIB-801CE, the clot-inhibiting effect became even stronger, suggesting a synergistic interaction.

Crucially, tests measuring prothrombin time and activated partial thromboplastin time showed that the extract did not interfere with normal blood coagulation pathways. This indicates a lower risk of excessive bleeding, a major concern with many current antithrombotic drugs.

The extract also demonstrated antioxidant activity, scavenging free radicals that are known to promote platelet activation.


Conclusion

This Thailand Medical News report highlights compelling evidence that WIB-801CE works through multiple complementary mechanisms to reduce dangerous platelet hyperactivity without impairing normal blood coagulation. By selectively blocking thromboxane-driven signaling, suppressing key activation proteins, enhancing inhibitory pathways, and reducing clot stabilization, the extract demonstrates a sophisticated and potentially safer antithrombotic profile. While further clinical studies are needed, these findings suggest that cordycepin-enriched extracts may offer a promising new therapeutic strategy for preventing thrombosis in high-risk individuals without substantially increasing bleeding risk.

The study findings were published in the peer reviewed International Journal of Molecular Sciences.
 

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This is about adenovirus vaccines, not MRNA, ie: the Johnson and Johnson vaccine in the USA



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New Study Finally Uncovers the Molecular Trigger Behind Rare COVID Vaccine Blood Clots
By Flinders University
March 1, 2026

Scientists have identified the precise molecular trigger behind a rare blood-clotting disorder linked to certain adenovirus-based COVID-19 vaccines and, in rare cases, natural adenovirus infection.

Researchers led by Flinders University, working with international collaborators, have clarified how a rare blood clotting disorder can develop after certain COVID-19 adenovirus-based vaccines or following a natural adenovirus infection.

The team, which included scientists from Flinders University and Greifswald University, discovered that in a very small number of people the immune system can mistakenly identify a normal adenovirus protein as platelet factor 4 (or PF4), a protein found in human blood.

When this mix-up occurs, the immune system generates antibodies that activate clotting. Although the reaction is extremely uncommon, pinpointing its cause gives vaccine designers a way to alter the adenovirus protein and potentially prevent the complication, making future vaccines even safer.

Flinders University researcher Dr. Jing Jing Wang said the findings offer a practical roadmap for improving vaccine safety.

“By modifying or removing this specific adenovirus protein, future vaccines can avoid this extremely rare reaction while continuing to provide strong protection against disease,” says Dr. Wang.

The study is part of a broader international effort that has followed the story of VITT from its first appearance during the pandemic to the discovery of its underlying molecular trigger.


From Pandemic Mystery to Molecular Target


In 2021, during the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic, doctors identified a new condition called vaccine-induced immune thrombocytopenia and thrombosis (known as VITT). It was observed after vaccination with adenovirus vector-based vaccines – notably the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine, used in Australia.

Scientists determined that VITT was driven by a powerful autoantibody that targets PF4, setting off dangerous blood clotting.

In 2022, Dr. Jing Jing Wang and Professor Tom Gordon, Head of Immunology at SA Pathology in South Australia, led research that decoded the structure of the PF4 antibody and uncovered a genetic risk factor involving an antibody gene known as IGLV3.21*02. This discovery connected cases reported in different countries and laid the foundation for an ongoing partnership with Greifswald University, led by Professor Andreas Greinacher.

Additional research in 2023 by Professor Ted Warkentin at McMaster University in Canada identified a nearly identical condition involving the same PF4 antibody. In some instances, it proved fatal after a natural adenovirus (common cold) infection.

In 2024, another paper led by Flinders, Greifswald, and McMaster Universities confirmed that the antibodies from vaccine-related cases and infection-related cases were indistinguishable. This established that the adenovirus itself, not a specific vaccine component, was the likely source of the trigger. But the precise molecular mechanism remained unknown.

Professor Tom Gordon says that the new research published in the eminent New England Journal of Medicine represents the culmination of years of international scientific detective work.

“It has been a fascinating journey with an outstanding international team of collaborators to complete a trilogy of publications in the New England Journal of Medicine to solve the mystery of this new group of blood-clotting disorders, and potentially translate our discoveries into safer vaccines,” says Professor Gordon.


Identifying the Missing Link

Dr. Wang said the team’s molecular analysis provided the breakthrough needed to understand the mechanism.

“A novel aspect of the paper was our use of powerful mass spectrometry sequencing to identify molecular mimicry between the adenovirus vector protein and the PF4 culprit target,” she says.

“This was the missing link that explains how a normal immune response can, in very rare cases, become harmful.”

Immunologist Professor James McCluskey from the University of Melbourne and the Peter Doherty Institute described the research as a major scientific achievement.

“It is a brilliant piece of molecular sleuthing, the culmination of a body of work that unravels the genetic and structural basis for how a normal immune response to a virus protein leads to pathogenic autoimmunity,” says Professor McCluskey.

With the precise trigger now identified, vaccine developers can modify the pVII protein in adenovirus-based vaccines to eliminate this rare risk.

Researchers say the findings will help ensure future vaccines built on this technology remain effective, accessible, and even safer, particularly in regions where adenovirus-vector vaccines are critical tools for disease prevention.

Reference: “Adenoviral Inciting Antigen and Somatic Hypermutation in VITT” by Jing Jing Wang, Linda Schönborn, Theodore E. Warkentin, Luisa Müller, Thomas Thiele, Lena Ulm, Uwe Völker, Sabine Ameling, Sören Franzenburg, Lars Kaderali, Ana Tzvetkova, Alex Colella, Tim Chataway, Chee Wee Tan, Bridie Armour, Alexander Troelnikov, Lucy Rutten, James McCluskey, Roland Zahn, Tom P. Gordon and Andreas Greinacher, 11 February 2026, New England Journal of Medicine.
DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa2514824
 

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COVID-19 Thyroid Damage May Linger for Months
Nikhil Prasad Fact checked by:Thailand Medica News Team
Mar 03, 2026


Can COVID-19 Cause thyroid damage and hormone disorders? Yes, and the damage can linger for months

Medical News: Researchers Warn of Persistent Hormone Disorders After Infection

As the world moves beyond the acute waves of COVID-19, doctors are uncovering a quieter but troubling aftermath. A new systematic review has found that the virus may trigger long-term thyroid disorders that persist for months after recovery, sometimes evolving into chronic autoimmune disease.

The research was conducted by scientists from the Department of Medical Education at Weill Cornell Medicine-Qatar, Doha, Qatar, and the Department of Premedical Education at Weill Cornell Medicine-Qatar, Doha, Qatar. Their findings suggest that COVID-19 is not just a respiratory illness but one that can significantly disrupt the body’s hormone system.

What the Researchers Found

The team analyzed 28 studies from 18 countries, covering 419 patients who developed thyroid problems after COVID-19 infection. These cases included a wide spectrum of disorders affecting how the thyroid produces hormones.

The most frequently reported condition was subacute thyroiditis, an inflammatory disorder of the thyroid that often causes neck pain, fever, and temporary spikes in thyroid hormones. A total of 80 such cases were identified.

Some patients experienced painful inflammation, while others had a painless form that still disrupted hormone balance.

Another 35 patients developed thyrotoxicosis, a condition where excess thyroid hormones circulate in the bloodstream. While many of these cases were temporary, some persisted for months.

More concerning were 147 cases of hypothyroidism, where the thyroid fails to produce enough hormones. Of these, 58 were full clinical cases with clear symptoms such as fatigue, weight gain, and depression. Eighty-six were subclinical, meaning blood tests were abnormal but symptoms were subtle. In some individuals, autoimmune thyroid disease such as Hashimoto’s thyroiditis developed weeks after infection.

In addition, six cases of Graves’ disease, a well-known autoimmune cause of hyperthyroidism, were documented after COVID-19 recovery.

This Medical News report highlights that in several studies, thyroid hormone abnormalities appeared weeks or even months after the initial infection, suggesting a delayed immune response rather than direct viral damage alone.

Why COVID Affects the Thyroid
Scientists believe multiple mechanisms are involved. The thyroid gland contains ACE2 receptors, which the coronavirus uses to enter cells. This makes thyroid tissue vulnerable to direct viral invasion.

At the same time, severe COVID-19 can trigger an intense inflammatory reaction known as a cytokine storm. This flood of inflammatory chemicals may suppress the brain’s hormone control centers or damage thyroid tissue indirectly.

The virus may also trigger autoimmune reactions through a process called molecular mimicry, where the immune system mistakes thyroid cells for viral particles and attacks them.

Who Is Most at Risk
The review suggests that people who had severe COVID-19, high inflammatory markers, or prolonged symptoms appear more vulnerable. Women were more frequently affected in several studies, especially in cases of subacute thyroiditis and autoimmune disease.

Encouragingly, many thyroid abnormalities resolved within three to six months. However, a notable portion of patients developed persistent dysfunction requiring long-term monitoring and treatment.

What This Means Going Forward
The researchers recommend routine thyroid testing in COVID-19 survivors, especially those with ongoing fatigue, heart palpitations, mood changes, or unexplained weight fluctuations. Blood tests measuring TSH, free T4, and free T3 can detect early abnormalities before complications arise.

The conclusions are clear and important. COVID-19 can lead to a broad range of thyroid disorders through direct viral effects, immune system overactivation, and autoimmune triggers. While some cases are temporary, others may progress into chronic disease. Early detection and consistent follow-up are essential to prevent long-term health consequences and improve quality of life in survivors.

The study findings were published in the peer reviewed journal: Microorganisms.
 

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Even Mild COVID-19 Can Leave Lasting Brain Damage, Study Finds
By Tulane University
March 3, 20262

A new study suggests that recovery from COVID-19 may not end when respiratory symptoms fade.

A mild bout of COVID-19 or influenza may have effects that continue long after obvious symptoms such as fever and coughing disappear. New research from Tulane University suggests these hidden changes could help explain why some people do not feel fully recovered for weeks or even months.

The research team found that both viruses can cause lasting damage in the lungs. However, only infection with SARS-CoV-2 was linked to ongoing inflammation in the brain and injury to tiny blood vessels, even after the virus could no longer be detected. The study, published in Frontiers in Immunology, offers insight into why long COVID is often marked by brain-related symptoms such as brain fog, fatigue, and mood changes, while influenza is more frequently associated with breathing problems.

“Influenza and COVID-19 affect large populations worldwide and carry a significant public health toll, yet the mechanisms behind their long-term effects remain poorly understood,” said Dr. Xuebin Qin, lead author and professor of microbiology and immunology at the Tulane National Biomedical Research Center.

Comparing the Lingering Effects of Two Viruses

To determine which aftereffects are shared by serious respiratory infections and which are specific to COVID-19, the scientists used a mouse model. They analyzed lung and brain tissue after the infections had fully cleared.

In lung tissue, the two viruses produced similar long-term patterns. Immune cells remained active instead of returning to a resting state, and collagen levels increased. Collagen is a structural protein linked to scar formation. Its buildup can stiffen lung tissue and make breathing more difficult. This may help explain why some people experience prolonged shortness of breath after respiratory illnesses.

A closer look revealed an important difference. After influenza infection, the lungs appeared to begin a structured repair process. Specialized cells moved into damaged regions to rebuild the airway lining. This recovery response was largely absent following SARS-CoV-2 infection, suggesting that COVID-19 may disrupt the lungs’ ability to heal properly.

Persistent Brain Changes After COVID-19

The most striking differences appeared in the brain.

Neither virus was detected in brain tissue. However, mice that had recovered from COVID-19 showed signs of ongoing brain inflammation weeks later. Researchers also observed small areas of bleeding. An analysis of gene activity showed continued inflammatory signaling and disturbances in pathways that regulate serotonin and dopamine, which play key roles in mood, thinking, and energy. These changes were mostly absent in animals that had influenza.

“In both infections, we observed lasting lung injury,” Qin said. “But long-term effects in the brain were unique to SARS-CoV-2. That distinction is critical to understanding long COVID.”

The study was supported by an American Heart Association award Qin received as part of a national effort to understand the long-term cardiovascular and cerebrovascular effects of COVID-19. The results provide new evidence that changes in blood vessels and immune responses may contribute to ongoing neurological symptoms.

By identifying these biological patterns, the researchers hope to improve how patients are monitored after infection and guide the development of treatments that could limit lasting harm. As persistent symptoms continue to affect many people, clarifying the underlying causes remains essential to reducing the long-term health impact.

Reference: “Characterization of subchronic lung and brain consequences caused by mouse-adapted SARS-CoV-2 and influenza A infection of C57BL6 mice” by Joshua Currey, Chenxiao Wang, Meredith G. Mayer, Yilin Chen, Ana Karina Nisperuza Vidal, Michaela J. Allen, Mst Shamima Khatun, Calder R. Ellsworth, Mohammad Islamuddin, Jefferson Evangelista, Skye M. Minor, Nadia Golden, Kevin J. Zwezdaryk, Nicholas J. Maness, Robert V. Blair, Jay K. Kolls, Derek A. Pociask, Tracy Fischer and Xuebin Qin, 23 January 2026, Frontiers in Immunology.
DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2026.1755141

This research was supported by the American Heart Association Long COVID Impact Project (AHA962950), the National Institutes of Health, including P51OD011104-62 and R01HL165265, and institutional funding.
 

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COVID lockdowns set back children's development by years, study reveals
by University of East Anglia
edited by Stephanie Baum, reviewed by Robert Egan
March 3, 2026

The COVID pandemic disrupted children's ability to self-regulate, according to new research from the University of East Anglia. A new study reveals that the pandemic hampered children's ability to regulate their behavior, stay focused and adapt to new situations—skills known collectively as executive functions. The work appears in Child Development.

The greatest impact was seen among pupils who were in reception (typically for children aged 4–5 years) when the first lockdowns began—a crucial stage when youngsters normally learn to socialize, follow routines and navigate the busy world of the classroom. These children showed less growth in their self-regulatory and cognitive flexibility scores over time compared to a second group of children who were in preschool when the pandemic started.

The research team say these children may still be feeling the effects years later.

How the research happened

Scientists were already running a long-term study tracking youngsters from toddlerhood to early school years when the COVID pandemic hit. They followed 139 children aged between 2.5 and 6.5 years old over several years, including 94 families who joined the study before COVID struck.

This meant that they had a rare baseline of children's abilities before the pandemic began, which allowed them to track exactly how development changed during and after the lockdowns.

Using a standardized assessment called the Minnesota Executive Function Scale, they were able to measure the same cognitive skills at regular intervals.

Reception pupils fell behind and struggled to catch up

Lead researcher Prof John Spencer, from UEA's School of Psychology, said, "Children who were in reception when the country shut down showed much slower growth in key self-regulation and cognitive flexibility skills over the next few years than children who were still in preschool.

"These children found it harder to shift between tasks and control impulses—abilities that usually improve rapidly once children enter structured school environments."

Why reception-age children suffered the most

"Reception is a critical year for peer socialization," said Prof Spencer. "It's when children learn classroom norms and build early friendships that shape their confidence. But for the cohort who started school in 2020, classrooms were closed, routines collapsed overnight, and opportunities for social interaction were severely limited."

Without these experiences, children's self-regulatory skills didn't develop as quickly year-on-year after the lockdowns ended. Many in this cohort also caught COVID more frequently, raising the possibility that periods of illness worsened the issue.

Key findings:
  • Individual differences in executive function abilities were remarkably stable. Children who had stronger skills at age 2.5 tended to remain ahead at age 6.5.
  • Children from lower socio-economic households consistently scored lower, echoing long-standing research on the impact of maternal education and home environment.
  • Even when controlling for age and family background, COVID's impact was evident. Children who were in reception at the start of the pandemic made more modest improvements in executive function compared to those still in preschool.
"Our findings suggest that peer socialization and the new self-regulatory skills children must master in reception might be particularly critical for the development of executive function skills. Without these experiences, reception children had a challenging time developing self-regulation and cognitive flexibility in the years that followed the pandemic," stated Prof. Spencer.

Extra support

The researchers say their work highlights a generation of children who may need more support from teachers, schools and health services in coming years. The findings also raise questions about how to protect children's development in future national emergencies.

This research was led by the University of East Anglia, in collaboration with Lancaster University and Durham University.

Publication details

Tracking the trajectory of executive function from 2.5 to 6.5 years of age and the impact of COVID-19, Child Development (2026).
Journal information: Child Development
Provided by University of East Anglia
 

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Scientists Discover Why Some COVID Survivors Still Can’t Taste Food Years Later
By University of Colorado Anschutz
March 4, 2026

A new study provides the first direct biological evidence explaining why some people continue to experience taste loss long after recovering from COVID-19.

Researchers have uncovered specific biological changes in taste buds that could help explain why a small number of people continue to struggle with taste loss long after a COVID-19 infection.

The study, published in Chemical Senses, is the first to directly connect patients’ lingering taste complaints with measurable abnormalities inside the cells responsible for detecting flavor.
What causes long-term taste loss after COVID-19?

To explore the cause of long-term taste disturbances, scientists from the University of Colorado Anschutz and two universities in Sweden examined 28 non-hospitalized individuals who reported altered taste more than one year after having COVID-19.

Key findings:
  • 8 of 28 patients showed clearly abnormal taste test scores
  • 11 patients reported specific loss of sweet, bitter, and umami taste
  • Salty and sour tastes were largely preserved

To better understand the biological basis of these symptoms, the researchers collected taste bud biopsies from 20 of the participants.

Molecular defect identified in taste receptor cells

The research team, organized by Göran Hellekant, PhD, of the University of Wisconsin and the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, found that certain taste receptor cells contained lower levels of messenger RNA (mRNA). This mRNA is needed to produce a protein known as PLCß2, which plays a central role in transmitting taste signals for sweet, bitter, and umami flavors.

“PLCß2 acts like a molecular amplifier inside taste cells,” said Thomas Finger, PhD, professor of cell and developmental biology at the University of Colorado Anschutz and corresponding author of the study. “It strengthens the signal before it’s transmitted to the brain. When levels are reduced, the taste signal weakens.”

Cells that detect salty and sour tastes rely on different signaling mechanisms and do not depend on PLCß2. This difference may help explain why those particular tastes were largely unaffected in the participants.

Structural changes also observed

Beyond the molecular findings, microscopic analysis revealed physical differences in some patients’ taste buds. While several participants had tissue that appeared typical under the microscope, others showed noticeable disorganization in the structure of their taste buds.

“Some subjects had normal-looking taste buds, while others showed structural disorganization,” Finger said. “This suggests that both molecular and architectural changes may contribute to persistent taste dysfunction.”

These results suggest that prolonged taste impairment may stem from a combination of disrupted cellular signaling and altered tissue structure.

Why does taste loss persist?

Under normal conditions, taste bud cells regenerate every two to four weeks. However, the study found evidence that disruptions in the underlying signaling pathways can last much longer in certain individuals.

Most people who lose their sense of taste during COVID-19 regain it within weeks or months. This research provides measurable biological evidence that helps explain why recovery may be delayed in a smaller group of patients.

“Our findings offer measurable evidence of long-term taste disruption in some post-COVID patients long after the virus has been cleared,” the authors write.

The researchers emphasize that more work is needed to determine whether these molecular changes can fully reverse and whether future treatments could help restore normal taste signaling.

Reference: “Taste dysfunction in long COVID” by Hanna Morad, Tytti Vanhala, Marta A Kisiel, Agnes Andreason, Mei Li, Göran Andersson, Göran Laurell, Thomas E Finger and Göran Hellekant, 29 January 2026, Chemical Senses.
DOI: 10.1093/chemse/bjaf068
 

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New Zealand’s COVID-19 Ninth Wave Drives Rising Hospitalizations
Nikhil Prasad Fact checked by:Thailand Medical News Team
Mar 04, 2026


Medical News: Rising hospitalizations signal a renewed COVID-19 surge
New Zealand is once again confronting a resurgence of COVID-19 infections as the country enters what experts describe as its ninth wave of the pandemic. Public health authorities are reporting a clear increase in hospital admissions and deaths linked to the virus, highlighting that COVID-19 remains a major health challenge even years after the first outbreak reshaped daily life across the nation.

Professor Michael Baker, a leading public health expert from the University of Otago, recently confirmed that the country recorded 184 COVID-related hospitalization’s and 19 deaths in just the past week. These figures underscore the continued burden of the virus on the healthcare system and reinforce warnings that the pandemic threat has not disappeared. According to Baker, COVID-19 remains New Zealand’s most consequential infectious disease, responsible for between 500 and 1000 deaths each year. By comparison, influenza is estimated to cause around 500 deaths annually.


Wastewater data confirms the start of a new wave
Scientists monitoring wastewater data have also identified a significant surge in viral activity. Analysis conducted by PHF Science, formerly known as ESR, indicates that viral levels detected in wastewater are now at their highest point in more than six months. Wastewater surveillance has become one of the most reliable tools for tracking community spread, especially when testing rates fluctuate or people choose not to report mild infections.

Baker explained that the rise in hospitalization’s together with increasing wastewater signals strongly indicates that a new wave of infections is underway. Interestingly, the surge does not appear to be driven by a newly evolved variant. Instead, researchers believe the primary factor behind the current wave is declining immunity among the population.

New Zealand’s strict elimination strategy during the early years of the pandemic meant that large portions of the population avoided infection in 2020 and 2021. While this strategy initially limited deaths and hospitalization’s, it also meant that immunity within the community relied heavily on vaccination. Over time, protection from both vaccines and prior infections naturally declines, making populations more vulnerable again.

Health experts say a growing sense of complacency may be contributing to the present surge. As immunity fades, the virus finds new opportunities to spread through the community.

The professor strongly recommends extreme preventive measures, especially for older adults and individuals with chronic illnesses or underlying health conditions.

Another important concern is the risk of repeated infections. Studies increasingly show that multiple infections can raise the likelihood of developing long COVID.

This Medical News report highlights COVID-19 is still aroun d and affecting many in various geolocations around the world.


Large gatherings may accelerate transmission
Anecdotal reports suggest that large gatherings may also be contributing to the spread of the virus. The Electric Avenue music festival in Christchurch recently drew about 90,000 attendees to Hagley Park across two days. Although the event itself was largely outdoors, experts say surrounding activities such as crowded bars, indoor venues, shared transportation, and communal accommodation often create ideal conditions for viral transmission.

Baker explained that festivals and major events rarely drive infection through outdoor exposure alone. Instead, transmission often occurs in the social environments that accompany these events.


Looking ahead as the virus becomes endemic
Six years have passed since New Zealand experienced its first COVID wave and the historic lockdowns that followed. The country is now in its fifth year of living with widespread viral circulation. Health authorities expect the current wave to persist for at least another month or two, potentially overlapping with other seasonal respiratory illnesses.

The upcoming final report from the Royal Commission of Inquiry into the country’s pandemic response is expected to shape future public health strategies as COVID continues to circulate at significant levels. Experts emphasize that ongoing vaccination, surveillance, and public awareness will remain critical in reducing the virus’s long-term impact on society.


References:

Stuff

The Press

https://www.tewhatuora.govt.nz/for-health-professionals/data-and-statistics/covid-19/reporting
 
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