this post was submitted on 08 Mar 2024
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Um, scary TIL...
I wonder if this compounds in any way for people who've been infected multiple times.
From the article: " Reinfection with the virus contributed an additional two-point loss in IQ, as compared with no reinfection." So yes, there can be a compounding. It's research like this that makes me want to keep my 'mask, handwash, neti washing, indoor air filtration, avoid crowds indoors, etc' policy in place. Sigh.
Thank you, I must've missed that part 😅
I agree with you there.
I think a lot of people who don't care about the virus are the ones who should be the most concerned about these findings
I would have to agree. Alas, it's entirely possible that their loss of cognitive function, decreased I.Q., is preventing them from this sort of understanding.
they also started a good shuffle on over to the left of the mean
Yes it does. Every time someone gets infected, it does more damage. And a lot of that damage is essentially permanent. eg. damage to blood vessels, heart tissue etc.
I know some people in my extended family that are up to their 6th or 7th time getting covid now. My anecdotal data suggests yes. It's hard to be sure, of course. There are so many reasons why they could seem even dumber now. But I like to hope it's mostly the physical damage done to their brains.
Not a doctor so may be a stupid question, but wouldn't the blood brain barrier protection stuff degrade or shut down when you die? Could it have leaked in after death?
One of the studies cited in the article found that COVID-19 damages (or can damage) the blood-brain barrier.
Considering the number of people who end up with "brain fog" this seems a likely way for it to enter the brain.
My understanding is it can happen while alive.
Here is an article explaining it: https://asm.org/Articles/2020/April/How-Pathogens-Penetrate-the-Blood-Brain-Barrier