Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Post-infection jabs help, ‘air curtains’ viable

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IN THIS week’s roundup, the latest scientific research on the coronaviru­s and efforts to find treatments and vaccines suggest that post-infection vaccinatio­n may reduce cases of long COVID-19, desktop “air curtains” may deflect virus particles, and antacid aids in COVID-19 by helping limit inflammati­on.

■ Post-infection vaccinatio­ns

Vaccinatio­n after infection with SARSCoV-2 may contribute to a reduction in the burden of long-haul COVID-19 symptoms, a new study suggests.

Researcher­s tracked 6,729 volunteers aged 18 to 69, who got two shots of either AstraZenec­a’s viral vector vaccine or an mRNA vaccine from Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna after recovering from an infection with the coronaviru­s and who reported long COVID-19 symptoms of any severity at least once between February and September 2021.

The odds of reporting long COVID-19 – symptoms lasting at least 12 weeks – fell by an average of 13% after a first vaccine dose, the researcher­s reported on Wednesday in The BMJ.

The second dose, given 12 weeks after the first, was associated with a further 9% decrease in the odds of long-haul COVID-19 that persisted for at least nine weeks, on average, the researcher­s said. The odds of reporting long COVID-19 severe enough to result in functional impairment were similarly reduced, researcher­s reported.

Outcomes were similar regardless of vaccine type, the interval from infection to first vaccine dose, underlying health status, or severity of COVID-19. However, the study was not designed to detect such difference­s, nor can it definitive­ly prove that vaccines lower the odds of long COVID-19.

“Further research is required to evaluate the long-term relationsh­ip between vaccinatio­n and long COVID-19, in particular the impact of the omicron variant,” which emerged after this study ended, the researcher­s said.

■ Desktop ‘air curtains’

When people cannot maintain a safe distance to avoid the spread of COVID-19, a newly designed desktop “air curtain” can block aerosols in exhaled air, researcher­s found.

Air curtains – artificial­ly created streams of moving air – are often used to protect patients in operating rooms. At Nagoya University in Japan, researcher­s tested their new desktop device by simulating a blood collection booth in which a lab technician is close to the patient.

Aerosol particles blown toward the curtain “were observed to bend abruptly toward the suction port” without passing through the air curtain, they reported on Tuesday in AIP Advances.

Even putting an arm through the air curtain did not break the flow or reduce its effectiven­ess, they said. A high-efficiency particulat­e air (HEPA) filter can be installed inside the suction port, they added.

If further testing in real-life conditions confirms the effectiven­ess of the system, it could “be useful as an indirect barrier not only in the medical field but also in situations where sufficient physical distance cannot be maintained, such as at the reception counter,” the researcher­s said.

■ Antacid helps limit inflammati­on

Researcher­s have discovered just how the antacid famotidine, commonly sold as Pepcid by a Johnson & Johnson unit, was able to help alleviate COVID-19 symptoms in clinical trials.

In studies in mice, they found that famotidine stimulates the vagus nerve, which controls the immune system and other involuntar­y body functions.

When the vagus nerve is stimulated, it can send out signals to suppress severe immune reactions – so-called cytokine storms – in which high levels of inflammato­ry proteins are released into the blood too quickly.

When famotidine was administer­ed to the mice, it significan­tly reduced levels of inflammato­ry proteins in the blood and spleen and improved survival. However, when the vagus nerve was cut, famotidine no longer stopped the cytokine storms, according to a report published on Monday in Molecular Medicine.

The data “point to a role of the vagus nerve inflammato­ry reflex in suppressin­g cytokine storm during COVID-19,” co-author Dr. Kevin Tracey of the Feinstein Institutes for Medical Research in Manhasset, New York, said in a statement.

Direct electrical stimulatio­n of the vagus nerve is known to improve a variety of diseases. “Famotidine, a well-tolerated oral drug, could offer an additional method” of activating the vagus nerve to reduce inflammato­ry protein generation and resulting tissue damage in COVID-19 and other diseases, the researcher­s concluded.

 ?? ?? A syringe is prepared with Pfizer-BioNTech’s COVID-19 vaccine at a vaccinatio­n clinic in Chester, Pennsylvan­ia, U.S., Dec. 15, 2021.
A syringe is prepared with Pfizer-BioNTech’s COVID-19 vaccine at a vaccinatio­n clinic in Chester, Pennsylvan­ia, U.S., Dec. 15, 2021.

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