Excess Death Rate Highest After National Influx Of Covid Vaccine Consumption | New Information On How COVID Causes Loss Of Smell | New Mechanism Of Cytokine Storm Explained
If you have haven’t seen the most recent COVID data, you really should take a few minutes to read through it below. What’s it about? Well, interestingly, weekly excess Canadian deaths have peaked substantially since a massive influx of vaccine uptake. Next, there’s new data out on how COVID-19 affects smell loss. Read through the summaries below to get caught up, and certainly check out the sources. Finally, share this with friends and family so they can be informed.
Canadian Excess Mortality Ages 0 to 44
Weekly excess Canadian deaths (including millennials) peaked >25% in October 2021 with drastic ascent beginning July 2021. From there, the immediate increase of weekly excess deaths post 1st & 2nd dose of COVID vaccines can not be attributed to suicides, cancers, overdoses
https://health-infobase.canada.ca/covid-19/epidemiological-summary-covid-19-cases.html
SARS-CoV-2 syncytia formation of multi-nucleated cells activate the cGAS-STING-INF (INF1) pathway enhancing the excess production of cytokines that hasten severe COVID19 symptoms. This could partly explain the cytokine storm experienced in severe cases
https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/scisignal.abg8744
Why Omicron causes less loss of smell.
The answer- tropism of the variants to olfactory epithelium and brain transport via olfactory neuron axons. In other words, the ability of each variant to infect tissues (nerve & brain) differently
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2022.04.12.487379v1
MORE ON LOSS OF SMELL, NERVE & MICROVASCULAR DAMAGE: Olfactory nerve (smell) and microvascular damage in patients with COVID19 was much higher than in controls. That evidenced by higher mean axon pathology score of 1.9 VS 1.1 (control) & mean microvasculopathy score 1.9 VS 1.4(control). Ironically, in those with COVID-19 associated sensation loss, axon and microvascular pathology scores were not associated with clinical severity
https://jamanetwork.com/.../jamaneuro.../fullarticle/2790735
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