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Cake day: July 14th, 2024

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  • There’s a feature of some Long COVID cases (~50%) which is also the defining feature of an illness called ME/CFS which has been caused by various forms of viral infections throughout history. (It is thought that a lot of Long COVID cases are ME/CFS). Anyways this feature is, Post-Exertional Malaise, a worsening of the illness after exertion beyond a certain threshold, which can entail hundreds of symptoms and be permanent.

    This paper is a review of some of the biomedical studies looking at what could possibly cause this, and finds there is repeated data of Microvascular (blood vessels) and immunometabolic (metabolic markers relating to immune function) differences with healthy controls.

    The leading hypotheses are that this is caused by mitochondrial dysfunction which is mediated by a dysregulated immune system.

    Some of my colleagues were co-authors on this paper. I’ll forward the feedback that it is jargony.





  • Hey I have a MD with residency in Neurology. Then I did a PhD in Neuroimmunology with board certification.

    I’m currently doing a hectic mix of teaching two med courses, working on Long COVID research (biomarkers), and working in an understaffed long COVID (now post-viral disease) clinic.

    Nice to meet you.

    I mostly lurk on lemmy, but that’s because I haven’t found a place I’d like to consistently contribute yet. Maybe here?










  • Neurologist@mander.xyzOPtoPoems@reddthat.comPlague Poems
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    1 month ago

    If you’re healthy.

    Sucks to be disabled or immunocompromised or at risk in any other way…

    Also, it’s still killing at much higher rates than the flu.

    And I won’t even start getting into Long COVID, which I’m currently researching. But it is a major crisis. 2-4 million people unable to work in the US because of it.






  • Neurologist@mander.xyzOPtoPolitical Memes@lemmy.worldEfficient distribution of labour my ass
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    2 months ago

    Not really.

    There have been extensive sociological studies over this. Condition in a capitalist society and the promotion of the “homo economicus” model continually reinforces “greediness” and leads to people in capitalist societies being far “greedier” on average.

    It isn’t a natural thing, it is conditioned. Obviously everyone is greedy to an extent. But in anthropological examinations of different forms of societies, altruism scored far higher than greediness in non-capitalistic societies.

    Kate Raworth, Oxford Economist, wrote an excellent chapter about this in her book called “doughnut economics”. The chapter is “Nurture Human Nature”.

    The view that all humans are greedy and rational was promoted by Adam Smith and John Stuart Mill and is the precursing foundation of capitalism. But modern economics have rejected this view as it has been proven to be inaccurate, and increasingly rely on theoretical models built within behavioural economics.