CoVid19 May Silently Suffocate You

24 apr 2020 · 1 min. 46 sec.
CoVid19 May Silently Suffocate You
Descrizione

  Vidcast:  https://youtu.be/KMQTJr01C5Y   The new coronavirus can trigger an atypical pneumonia that creeps up on you before it kills you.   ICU docs in Germany, Baltimore, Seattle, and New York City observe...

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  Vidcast:  https://youtu.be/KMQTJr01C5Y   The new coronavirus can trigger an atypical pneumonia that creeps up on you before it kills you.   ICU docs in Germany, Baltimore, Seattle, and New York City observe that many patients, eventually diagnosed with CoVid19, barely notice respiratory symptoms as their lungs slowly deliver less and less oxygen to their vital organs.   Even patients coming in for fractures, trauma, and falls have surprisingly low oxygen levels without complaining about shortness of breath.  Their chest x-rays show advanced pneumonia but they breathe easily without chest tightness.     The reasons: CoVid halts the natural surfactant production that keeps the lung’s tiny sponge-like air chambers open.  Then too, the virus seems to drive lung micro-clotting that halts oxygen transfer into the bloodstream.   Many of such patients get better without high pressure mechanical ventilation using high flow oxygen and prone positioning.  Unnecessary incubation and ventilation can damage the voicebox as well as the lungs but also takes a vent from a patient who truly needs it.   So CoVid produces two types of pneumonias.  The usual wet lung stiffening kind with a terrible cough, and a dry, slowly suffocating type.   A silent drop in blood oxygen levels is yet another warning sign of CoVid just as fever and a loss of smell and taste.  To be on top of it, you can buy a fingertip pulse oximeter online for $30-60 dollars.   https://www.medpagetoday.com/infectiousdisease/covid19/86046   https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/20/opinion/coronavirus-testing-pneumonia.html   https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.04.15.20067017v2.full.pdf     #covid19 #coronavirus #hypoxia #oximeter #pneumonia  
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Autore Howard G. Smith MD
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