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Vitamin C levels in patients with SARS-CoV-2-associated ARDS

ccforum.biomedcentral.com

23 points by krjachkov 5 years ago · 14 comments

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ArkVark 5 years ago

Its becoming apparent that the people dying from COVID are fundamentally unhealthy in the first place. Its a shame that we are so focused on locking up healthy people and shutting down societies and economies, instead of improving diets and removing pollution from the air.

  • smt88 5 years ago

    Your conclusion is wrong.

    You can live to an old age with common conditions like diabetes, vitamin D deficiency, and subclinical heart issues.

    Also, unless you think old age is a curable health issue, shutdowns are still the only way to keep people in that group safe.

    > improving diets and removing pollution from the air

    How does one improve the diets of billions of people in a few days?

    Shutdowns are instant. Major overhauls of civilization are not.

    • Fjolsvith 5 years ago
      • shadowgovt 5 years ago

        I wondered how long it would take you to be sucked in by the narrative that people dying of COVID aren't actually dying of COVID.

        Did you know almost nobody died of HIV? The vast, vast bulk of AIDS deaths were due to systemic collapse resulting from unchecked infections that set in when the victim's immune system was destroyed by HIV.

        Given that information, would you be okay refraining from treating an HIV infection if you had one? Do you think the time and effort spent stemming the AIDS epidemic was wasted?

        • Fjolsvith 5 years ago

          Didn't you read it was the Center for Disease Control that put this narrative out?

  • aeternum 5 years ago

    Interestingly though the shutdown did more to remove pollution and improve diets (more home cooking vs. fast-food) than anything else we've done over the last decade.

  • quattrofan 5 years ago

    Not sure that's the conclusion at all, I've certainly read quite a few stories of very fit and healthy people becoming quite ill. While we all want a quick fix to this I think we need to let the scientists do their work and approach treatment methodically rather than jumping to solutions that confirm our own biases.

    • mindfulhack 5 years ago

      This is a reply only to your comment and has no bearing on my opinion about the parent: It's very possible that those young people are outliers and unusual cases (very small numbers statistically) which is why they're stories and why you probably know about them. (That's how the media works. What's 'usual' is boring, and doesn't sell papers.) What's the data on most patients who are hospitalised or die? It may be different.

      In fact, without being a scientist, AFAIK this is one of the major problems of science and how it is consumed, understood, and used/abused in society at large, but also within the publication realm itself. If a certain scientific finding is boring and merely confirms something else (which is critical in science), there are less incentives to do it. As a result, truth becomes characterised by 'sensational' things, not necessarily true or accurate things. Scientists and followers of science fail so much to see our own biases and shortcomings. We're getting there, but we're hampered very much by our human nature.

PaulHoule 5 years ago

Did they measures vitamin c levels in other people? How do they know their test wasn't broken?

  • vertis 5 years ago

    Presumably the method for measuring vitamin-c is well established.

    I like that their conclusion is 'more information needed' rather than 'deploy all the vitamin-c'. It seems to warrant further study, even if the amount they've done so far has limitations.

    • PaulHoule 5 years ago

      Commercial labs screw up all the time, particularly if they don't do the test very often.

  • coldtea 5 years ago

    Why, because measuring vitamin C levels is some kind of novel invention?

    Or because doctors wouldn't know the baseline vitamin C levels in the general population?

    • PaulHoule 5 years ago

      This Vitamin C test from a major chain of labs is "not FDA approved"

      https://testdirectory.questdiagnostics.com/test/test-detail/...

      Practically a lab tech who works under their franchise would have a book with instructions to do the test and would have a fair chance of doing it accurately with 10 tries, a good chance of doing it accurately within 100 and not-quite-certainty of doing it accurately within 1000 tries.

      According to the that page the test requires that your blood be frozen to -70 C after drawing. They can do that a hospital but not at your Dr.'s office.

      The current Vitamin C test is based on HLPC, there was something else used prior to 2000 or so which is not comparable to the current test.

      The researchers could do that right but they could easily do it wrong. That's why "double blind" is important, it doesn't just test the hypothesis but it tests the tests.

      Also it is shocking how little questions such as "baseline vitamin C levels in the population" are researched. It is going to be variable in specific populations (e.g. people who show up sick at your clinic) because it is depressed by tobacco smoking, affected by dietary intake, etc. For a hospital with a 100,000-patient customer base sampling 1,000 patients might establish a good baseline. A fair price for that test seems to be $40, so it is $40,000 to get that baseline, just 40 cents per customer. The challenge is to get it all in one place while there are thousands of other not-FDA-approved tests that might turn up interesting results that compete for it and where everyone thinks we spend too much already.

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