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Article: What we now know about long COVID and our brains

Discussion in 'Long Covid news' started by Sly Saint, Jan 6, 2023.

  1. Sly Saint

    Sly Saint Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
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    Location:
    UK
    By Professor Tissa Wijeratne, University of Melbourne; Professor Meg Morris, La Trobe University; Associate Professor Leila Karimi, RMIT University; and Chanith Wijeratne, Monash University

    https://pursuit.unimelb.edu.au/articles/what-we-now-know-about-long-covid-and-our-brains
     
  2. rvallee

    rvallee Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    12,402
    Location:
    Canada
    Nothing that couldn't have been written on day 1. In fact, literally learned nothing since then. How can people actually write about how nothing useful was learned, nothing that we didn't already know and warned about, and find nothing wrong with that?

    The endless tolerance for failure in medicine is absurd, people can fail to deliver anything at all for decades and no one is bothered by that other than the people who are failed. It's as if the profession is no longer able to have ambition, is entirely demoralized at even trying.

    Holy confusion, Batman:

    Preliminary evidence does suggest that personalised rehabilitation and graduated exercise training may help certain people with PCNS to keep mobile.

    Activity planning, cueing and pacing of physical activities can be trialed, as well as strategies to maintain strength and balance, conserve energy and manage fatigue.

    These tactics for people with PCNS can be similar in their usefulness for managing chronic fatigue syndrome and myalgic encephalitis, along with therapeutic drugs repurposed from similar conditions – although more research is needed in this area.
     
  3. RedFox

    RedFox Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    1,245
    Location:
    Pennsylvania
    I'd disagree we've learned nothing in 3 years. We've gathered many statistics on the prevalence and symptom picture of LC. We've determined that Covid affects the brain's structure in specific ways. We've found some signs of immune dysregulation. However, your frustration is understandable because we don't understand the biology enough to identify drug targets, let alone develop them. Our biggest hope is that some repurposed drug will help a little.
    That's a facepalm. It's the only thing in the article that remotely references psychosomatic medicine.
     
    Peter Trewhitt, oldtimer and Trish like this.
  4. rvallee

    rvallee Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    12,402
    Location:
    Canada
    Nothing we didn't know before, and certainly nothing that couldn't have been done a long time ago if people bothered. Some recent research confirmed many things, problem is no one is acting on them. It amounts to very little and nothing actionable because what has been confirmed is rejected, and because most research is still useless BPS fluff.

    Professionals are supposed to and able to do a lot more than this. It's not normal to accomplish so little, our community has become so used to getting scraps we still want to say thank you even when the bowl of scraps is empty. None of this is about technical difficulties, it's lack of will and holding on to a failed ideology.
     
    Amw66 and Peter Trewhitt like this.

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