Free Republic
Browse · Search
General/Chat
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Blood type not a Covid-19 risk factor in US; inhaled asthma drug may keep mild illness from worsening
timeslive.co.za ^ | 17 April 2021 - 11:54

Posted on 04/17/2021 7:42:20 PM PDT by BenLurkin

None of the blood types — A, B, AB or O — was linked with their risk of becoming infected, need for hospitalisation or intensive care, according to a report published in JAMA Network Open. Smaller studies from China, Italy and Spain have linked type A blood to higher COVID-19 risks and type O blood to lower risks, and a large study from Denmark tied blood type to Covid-19 severity.

An inhaled steroid commonly used to treat asthma can help keep patients with mild Covid-19 from getting sicker, according to results from a trial published in The Lancet Respiratory Medicine.

Within a week of developing symptoms, 73 patients were randomly assigned to receive inhaled budesonide twice a day, and another 73 were assigned to receive only usual care. On average, patients used budesonide for 7 days.

Ultimately, 15% of patients receiving usual care needed an urgent-care visit or hospitalisation, compared to only 3% of those treated with budesonide. Patients who got budesonide also had fewer days with fever, fewer days of taking medicines to prevent fever, and recovered on average one day faster.

(Excerpt) Read more at timeslive.co.za ...


TOPICS: Health/Medicine
KEYWORDS: asthmadrug; bloodtype; bloodtypes; covid19; inhaler

1 posted on 04/17/2021 7:42:20 PM PDT by BenLurkin
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: BenLurkin

I have noticed that flu is helped by my COPD Breo inhaler.


2 posted on 04/17/2021 7:45:12 PM PDT by Fai Mao (It is time, past time and almost too late.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: BenLurkin

My blood is A+.

I have very smart blood.


3 posted on 04/17/2021 7:56:22 PM PDT by OrangeHoof (Chinese communism will look different once the masks come off.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: BenLurkin

I’m on a low dose of inhaled corticosteroid for my “mild persistent asthma.” So.... I guess that’s good right now, except since the pandemic started supplies have been constrained.


4 posted on 04/17/2021 8:32:36 PM PDT by shaven_llama
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: BenLurkin

I got it on the DC bastille day...Jan 6th.
A year ago, I talked with my retired pulmonologist about this thing and he said to double up my doses of my inhalers.

Symbicort and Albuteral.

Did that and got through it, no worse than a bad chest cold. But the dam residuals..lasted for three months.

All in all, it was less a problem than the Obama flu back in 09 or 10. That one gave me problems till mid July. I got it in the prior Dec.


5 posted on 04/17/2021 9:06:12 PM PDT by crz
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Fai Mao

A steroid nebulizer is probably more effective.


6 posted on 04/17/2021 9:40:51 PM PDT by grumpygresh (Civil disobedience by jury nullification. )
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: OrangeHoof

We have the same blood type. Let me know if you are ever in need of a transfusion!


7 posted on 04/17/2021 10:00:01 PM PDT by Atticus
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: grumpygresh

I have that too. But the thing makes me more hyper than a tweaker at Taco Bell


8 posted on 04/17/2021 11:24:33 PM PDT by Fai Mao (It is time, past time and almost too late.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 6 | View Replies]

To: BenLurkin

Bttt


9 posted on 04/18/2021 12:01:58 AM PDT by Eagles6 (Welcome to the Matrix circa 1984.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: BenLurkin

A Doctor in TX was using this treatment way back. He was “shouted down” of course.

https://www.texasstandard.org/stories/some-texas-doctors-are-treating-covid-patients-with-a-silver-bullet-drug-that-hasnt-been-fully-tested/


10 posted on 04/18/2021 12:24:37 AM PDT by garandgal
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Eagles6

See this; from almost a year ago:

https://www.texasstandard.org/stories/some-texas-doctors-are-treating-covid-patients-with-a-silver-bullet-drug-that-hasnt-been-fully-tested/


11 posted on 04/18/2021 12:27:00 AM PDT by garandgal
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 9 | View Replies]

To: garandgal

(Excerpted from your post)

One night in late June, while his wife and children slept, Javier Bejarano typed out his will. Bejarano, a contractor from Odessa, had contracted COVID-19. He could barely breathe, his lungs had become so inflamed from the virus.

“I couldn’t sleep,” Bejarano said. “I was afraid to go to sleep because I was afraid I wasn’t going to wake up.”

He was scared, unsure of what would happen to him and his family. He was just about to go to the emergency room, when he reached out to a friend of his, who connected him with Dr. Richard Bartlett, a west Texas physician.

Bejarano had seen Dr. Bartlett give interviews about a treatment for COVID-19 that he called the “COVID silver bullet.” The main component was a drug called budesonide: an asthma medication taken through an inhaler or a nebulizer.

Dr. Bartlett prescribed budesonide to Bejarano. The relief was immediate.

“When you’re breathing that stuff in man, it’s like a goodness,” Bejarano said. “I finally felt like I could breathe. I could sleep at night.”

“We Have Cracked The Code”

Dr. Bartlett has been prescribing budesonide to coronavirus patients for months. It’s an old, proven medication that’s relatively inexpensive and readily available. He said he stumbled upon the idea to use budesonide for COVID patients during an emergency room shift in March.

“I laid down for a cat nap between patients. I woke up convinced that God had given me a winning strategy. And a week later I had to try it out on my first two patients, and for every patient it’s working,” Bartlett said on streaming talk show America, Can We Talk?

Dr. Bartlett works at an emergency clinic in Lubbock, and has privileges at three hospitals in west Texas, according to the Texas Medical Board. When asked, he didn’t say exactly how many people he’s treated, but he estimated that he and other doctors have prescribed budesonide to over 400 patients.

“My focus right now is not on tabulating numbers, my focus is not on curves and waves. My focus is on real Americans who need life-saving measures,” he said.

In addition to budesonide, Dr. Bartlett prescribes zinc, aspirin, and clarithromycin, which prevents bacterial infection. But the budesonide, he says, is the key.

The idea behind Dr. Bartlett’s treatment is to target inflammation in the lungs caused by the body’s response to COVID-19. In its fight against the virus, the body’s immune system can get out of control – like a runaway train – and cause inflammation in the lungs. Budesonide is anti-inflammatory that targets the lungs. Inhaling the steroid effectively slams on the immune system’s breaks. The earlier you take it, the better.

For the past few months, Dr. Bartlett’s been an evangelist for budesonide. He started a website for the treatment called covidsilverbullet.com. He’s also given over 20 interviews on the subject, from local radio, to podcasts, to conservative cable network One America News, to streaming shows like Victuras Libertas, which was removed from YouTube for violating its terms of use. The message in each interview is similar:

“We have cracked the code,” Dr. Bartlett said in one of his appearances on America, Can We Talk? “We have an answer for this. We don’t need another answer. We have an answer.”

That message is getting out there.

Dr. Bartlett’s first appearance on ‘America Can We Talk’ had millions of views on YouTube. Representative Louie Gohmert, a Republican from east Texas who contracted the coronavirus, mentioned Dr. Bartlett and budesonide in an interview about his treatment. The drug also came up during a taped Q&A between Matthew McConaughey Dr. Anthony Fauci last week.

“You know, there are people that believe that budesonide and taking zinc is working [against the coronavirus]. Is there any downside to doing it?” McConaughey asked.

“You know, there’s a placebo effect to make you feel better, and less anxious, but in reality, Matthew, it doesn’t have any effect,” said Fauci.

An Untested Treatment

As much as Dr. Bartlett has talked budesonide up as a silver bullet, as much as patients like Bejarano swear that it saved their life, there’s no evidence from clinical trials to prove that it works for COVID patients.

Some physicians think it’s dangerous to call a drug a silver bullet when it hasn’t even been tested for the virus.

“I think if you ask a lot of different doctors, I think most would say that when we hear about a silver bullet treatment, I think our ears perk up but not necessarily in the way of ‘Oh I can’t wait to get my hands on that,’” said Doctor Anoop Nambiar, an associate professor of medicine at the University of Texas Health Science Center in San Antonio, and a pulmonologist at the South Texas Veterans Administration hospital.

Clinical trials typically include hundreds or thousands of patients. The case study Dr. Bartlett published on his website includes two patients.

“The last thing I want to do for a patient of mine is give them a treatment for which I cannot say with certainty how much does it truly help, but then also be aware that it can hurt somebody and make them worse,” said Dr. Nambiar.

Other physicians said they wouldn’t use budesonide unless it had been fully vetted for COVID, regardless of anecdotal evidence. Dr. Bartlett said he’s not worried about those concerns.

He said his patients’ results show that the treatment works, and that countries with few COVID-related deaths like Taiwan and Japan can trace their success back to inhaled corticosteroids – not government-mandated mask wearing and social distancing. But there’s little evidence to support this.

Dr. Bartlett also defended the drug by pointing to trials that are happening right now, where physicians are testing budesonide and similar drugs for COVID patients.

One of them is being conducted by the Universities of Oxford and Queensland – and it may show some promise. The trial will test inhaled budesonide on about 500 coronavirus patients to test whether the steroid can mitigate the virus’ respiratory symptoms. One of the researchers, Dan Nicolau, a physician and professor of mathematics at the University of Oxford, is confident the drug will help.

“Almost no matter how you look at it, it’s difficult to see a version of the future where this does not turn out to be helpful,” Dr. Nicolau said.

In fact, from the research Dr. Nicoulau’s done so far, he’s confident that the question is not whether budesonide will help, but how much.

“There’s a big difference if we keep 10 percent of people out of hospital versus 60 percent. Both would be useful, but if we keep 60 percent of people out of hospital, then, well, that’s the kind of thing we throw a barbecue over,” said Dr. Nicolau.

Dr. Nicolau expects to complete the study this fall. He thinks the data will show that budesonide is a useful tool to help COVID patients – but not at the exclusion of social distancing, or a vaccine. A trusty socket wrench, if not a silver bullet.

“It’s Enough For Me”

In the meantime, some healthcare providers are following Dr. Bartlett’s lead, even without a full clinical trial. Andrea Malcolm is a nurse anesthesiologist at Frio Regional Hospital, about an hour south of San Antonio. In late June and early July, the hospital’s 25 beds started to fill up with COVID patients. Some just wouldn’t get better.

“Sometimes they would be there for six, seven days, and kind of look the same, and then all of a sudden they would just start going down,” Malcolm said.

Malcolm is the only critical care provider at the hospital – the doctors there practice family medicine. There were times earlier this summer when she was practically living at the hospital, occasionally sleeping there overnight.

When she and the hospital’s CEO, John Hughson, saw one of Dr. Bartlett’s videos making the rounds on Facebook, they figured it couldn’t hurt to give budesonide a try. From Malcolm’s perspective, she couldn’t afford not to try it.

“If we waited on double blind peer reviewed studies, we would have so many people dead, what would be the point? So for me, if I’m not adding a risk, it’s worth seeing if there’s a benefit,” Malcolm said.

And she says she’s had good results – most of the patients she’s treated with the drug have gone home, rather than to a bigger hospital for more extensive treatment. She knows that without a full trial, she can’t be positive that it’s the budesonide at work and not some other variable. And she knows that her sample size is small – less than 40 patients. But what results she does have are enough for her to keep using it.

“It’s enough for me,” Malcolm said. “It’s enough for me to know that I’m not putting tubes in people’s throats, knowing that they might not ever get them out.”

If you found the reporting above valuable, please consider making a donation to support it here. Your gift helps pay for everything you find on texasstandard.org and KUT.org. Thanks for donating today.


12 posted on 04/18/2021 2:18:47 AM PDT by Norski (Pilate saith unto him, What is truth?)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 10 | View Replies]

bkmk


13 posted on 04/18/2021 5:26:32 AM PDT by Faith65 (Isaiah 40:31 )
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 12 | View Replies]

To: garandgal
"But we can't use this because it hasn't been fully tested.

It's better to let people die."

But they want to force everyone to take vaccines that haven't been fully tested.

14 posted on 04/18/2021 5:43:46 AM PDT by Eagles6 (Welcome to the Matrix circa 1984.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 11 | View Replies]

To: shaven_llama

Me too. I have allergy driven asthma and take a low dose steroid inhaler once a day. Its supposed to give you 30% less chance of catching covid.


15 posted on 04/18/2021 6:21:50 AM PDT by Georgia Girl 2 (The only purpose of a pistol is to fight your way back to the rifle you should never have dropped)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: Norski

I happened to have some of that stuff on hand. When I got covid this summer, I didn’t notice any lung congestion until the second week after the illness was done. I used the inhaler to prevent a bunch of lung damage. At that second week, I began to cough up some stuff, though not much.

I felt crappy during that first week, but I’ve had flu that was much, much worse and that lasted a whole lot longer. My fever was only 2 days and it wasn’t severe.

I’ve been doing the vit. C/zinc/d3 regimen since covid was announced, and vit.d3 for a few years. I can’t say they helped or they didn’t because I may have simply acquired a lesser form of covid.
But I do think the steroid inhaler helped a bunch. Especially since I’d been a 51 year smoker and only a year into having quit. It takes time for your body to heal from smoking damage.

Anyway, even though they tried to shut up the good doctor, many other docs were utilizing steroid breathing treatments also.

Imho, the efforts to shut down relief efforts were attempts to increase death.

Imho, any doctor or health provider who fell for it, doesn’t deserve to be called doctor or nurse or whatever the title is.


16 posted on 11/15/2022 12:09:17 PM PST by PrairieLady2
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 12 | View Replies]

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
General/Chat
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson