Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Profile of a killer: Unraveling the deadly new coronaviru­s

- By Adam Geller and Malcolm Ritter

NEW YORK » What is this enemy?

Seven months after the first patients were hospitaliz­ed in China battling an infection doctors had never seen before, the world’s scientists and citizens have reached an unsettling crossroads.

Countless hours of treatment and research, trial and error now make it possible to take much closer measure of the new coronaviru­s and the lethal disease it has unleashed. But to take advantage of that intelligen­ce, we must confront our persistent vulnerabil­ity: The virus leaves no choice.

“It’s like we’re in a battle with something that we can’t see, that we don’t know, and we don’t know where it’s coming from,” said Vivian Castro, a nurse supervisor at St. Joseph’s Medical Center in Yonkers, just north of New York City, which struggled with its caseload this spring.

Castro had treated scores of infected patients before she, too, was hospitaliz­ed for the virus in April, then spent two weeks in home quarantine. As soon as she returned to the emergency room for her first shift, she rushed to comfort yet another casualty — a man swallowing the few words he could muster between gasps for air.

“It just came back, that fear,” she said. “I just wanted to tell him not to give up.”

The coronaviru­s is invisible, but seemingly everywhere. It requires close contact to spread, but it has reached around the globe faster than any pandemic in history.

COVID-19 was not even on the world’s radar in November.

But it has caused economic upheaval echoing the Great Depression, while claiming more than 570,000 lives. In the U.S. alone, the virus has already killed more Americans than died fighting in World War I.

Even those figures don’t capture the pandemic’s full sweep. Nine of every 10 students worldwide shut out of their schools at one point. More than 7 million flights grounded. Countless moments of celebratio­n and sorrow — weddings and graduation­s, baby showers and funerals — put off, reconfigur­ed or abandoned because of worries about safety.

In short, the coronaviru­s has rescripted nearly every moment of daily life. And fighting it — whether by searching for a vaccine or seeking to protect family — takes knowing the enemy. It’s the essential first step in what could be an extended quest for some version of normalcy.

“There’s light at the end of tunnel, but it’s a very, very long tunnel,” said Dr. Irwin Redlener, director of the National Center for Disaster Preparedne­ss at Columbia University.

“There’s a lot we don’t know. But I think it’s absolutely certain we’re going to be adapting to a new way of life. That’s the reality.”

The new coronaviru­s is roughly 1,000 times narrower than a human hair. But scrutinize­d through an electron scope, it is clear this enemy is wellarmed.

Coronaviru­ses, including the newest one, are named for the spikes that cover their outer surface like a crown, or corona in Latin. Using those club-shaped spikes, the virus latches on to the outer wall of a human cell, invades it and replicates, creating viruses to hijack more cells.

Find a way to block or bind the spikes and you can stop the virus.

Once inside a human cell, the virus’ RNA, or genetic code, commandeer­s its machinery, providing instructio­ns to make thousands of virus copies.

But the coronaviru­s has a weakness: an outer membrane that can be destroyed by ordinary soap. That neutralize­s the virus, which is why health experts emphasize the need to wash hands.

 ?? TED S. WARREN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Dr. Desiree Marshall, director of Autopsy and After Death Services for the University of Washington Medicine, examines the preserved heart of a person who died of COVID-19-related complicati­ons as she works in a negative-pressure laboratory in Seattle.
TED S. WARREN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Dr. Desiree Marshall, director of Autopsy and After Death Services for the University of Washington Medicine, examines the preserved heart of a person who died of COVID-19-related complicati­ons as she works in a negative-pressure laboratory in Seattle.

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