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residual impairments


residual impairments01-08-2020 22:34
keepit
★★★★★
(3058)
Covid19
Residual impairments (kidney damage, blood vessel damage, brain damage) aren't mentioned very often on the cable news channels but they do exist. If they happen to a youngster they will have a problem for a long time.
Going into a classroom is like going into a minefield. In this case the number of mines in the classroom is increasing with time so the chance of contacting one of the minefields increases.
Sometimes residual impairments can't be felt. Kidney damage is a good example.
Think of a person as being like a candle. The candle can only burn down so much. If a residual impairment occurs, then the next insult to that organ, even if in a few years or decades, will eventually be felt and the person's lifespan will be shortened.
Edited on 01-08-2020 23:03
01-08-2020 23:07
IBdaMannProfile picture★★★★★
(14389)
keepit wrote:Residual impairments (kidney damage, blood vessel damage, brain damage) aren't mentioned very often on the cable news channels but they do exist.

Same for quasars.

keepit wrote: Going into a classroom is like going into a minefield.

I think it would be safe to say that you don't know anything about minefields.

keepit wrote: In this case the number of mines in the classroom is increasing with time so the chance of contacting one of the minefields increases.

I just had a wild thought. Imagine telling Afghan children that a classroom is like a minefield. That would set the world record for perceived absurdity.

keepit wrote:Sometimes residual impairments can't be felt. Kidney damage is a good example.

Almost always it's a paranoid hypochondriac complaining of feeling residual impairments that are simply not there while claiming that printing dollars doesn't increase the number of dollars.

keepit wrote: Think of a person as being like a candle.

Like her? ... you know, "hot"?


... or like her? ... you know, "waxy"?


... or like her? ... you know, "cylindrical"?


.


I don't think i can [define it]. I just kind of get a feel for the phrase. - keepit

A Spaghetti strainer with the faucet running, retains water- tmiddles

Clouds don't trap heat. Clouds block cold. - Spongy Iris

Printing dollars to pay debt doesn't increase the number of dollars. - keepit

If Venus were a black body it would have a much much lower temperature than what we found there.- tmiddles

Ah the "Valid Data" myth of ITN/IBD. - tmiddles

Ceist - I couldn't agree with you more. But when money and religion are involved, and there are people who value them above all else, then the lies begin. - trafn

You are completely misunderstanding their use of the word "accumulation"! - Climate Scientist.

The Stefan-Boltzman equation doesn't come up with the correct temperature if greenhouse gases are not considered - Hank

:*sigh* Not the "raw data" crap. - Leafsdude

IB STILL hasn't explained what Planck's Law means. Just more hand waving that it applies to everything and more asserting that the greenhouse effect 'violates' it.- Ceist
02-08-2020 00:07
Into the NightProfile picture★★★★★
(21588)
keepit wrote:
Covid19
Residual impairments (kidney damage, blood vessel damage, brain damage) aren't mentioned very often on the cable news channels but they do exist. If they happen to a youngster they will have a problem for a long time.

Making up shit again.
keepit wrote:
Going into a classroom is like going into a minefield.

I assure you, no one has bothered to mine the classrooms.


The Parrot Killer

Debunked in my sig. - tmiddles

Google keeps track of paranoid talk and i'm not on their list. I've been evaluated and certified. - keepit

nuclear powered ships do not require nuclear fuel. - Swan

While it is true that fossils do not burn it is also true that fossil fuels burn very well - Swan
02-08-2020 01:28
HarveyH55Profile picture★★★★★
(5196)
keepit wrote:
Covid19
Residual impairments (kidney damage, blood vessel damage, brain damage) aren't mentioned very often on the cable news channels but they do exist. If they happen to a youngster they will have a problem for a long time.
Going into a classroom is like going into a minefield. In this case the number of mines in the classroom is increasing with time so the chance of contacting one of the minefields increases.
Sometimes residual impairments can't be felt. Kidney damage is a good example.
Think of a person as being like a candle. The candle can only burn down so much. If a residual impairment occurs, then the next insult to that organ, even if in a few years or decades, will eventually be felt and the person's lifespan will be shortened.


If you would bother to check your sources of fear-mongering misinformation, you would know that these 'alarming' findings, are all discovered during post-mortem examinations. In other words, the patient no longer has to worry about any long term effects of Covid-19, nor will there being any further study of those cadavers.

Old age, and serious, pre-existing conditions are still the top two factors, for those dying of Covid-19. Very few people have any trouble recovering. Pre-existing conditions, aren't always diagnosed, until there is a serious problem, which requires emergency medical treatment. Even then, doctors don't always catch some of those problems for a while. There are a lot of people born with defective heart valves, most work okay, go unnoticed until adulthood. As adults, we have to work harder, under a lot of stress, suffer more traumatic injuries. There are some other conditions people are born with, and most live normal lives, without even knowing. Any stay in the ICU, is a very traumatic experience, and survival is usually a coin-toss. Those that survive, generally have some lingering issues, most will heal and clear up, eventually. Surviving, is one thing, but walking away, good as new, is unlikely.

Put it this way. How many people who had Covid-19, and fully recovered. Just suddenly dropped dead, for no other reason, than the had Covid-19? Doctors only focus on the most pressing issue. They don't go looking around, for every potential health problem you have. They have no reason to look at your heart, they aren't going to take a look.

Mostly what's got you pants-crapping-scared, is papers written, soliciting research grants. Most of which are declined, for what they are, by people who review them. Occasionally, some do get approved, partly do to public concern, and political pressure. The knowledgeable reviews, get over-ridden, to placate. These very preliminary findings, released publically, sent to the media outlets, are just trying to get some generous free money.
02-08-2020 03:11
gfm7175Profile picture★★★★★
(3314)
keepit wrote:
Covid19
Residual impairments (kidney damage, blood vessel damage, brain damage) aren't mentioned very often on the cable news channels but they do exist. If they happen to a youngster they will have a problem for a long time.

Fear mongering yet again...

keepit wrote:
Going into a classroom is like going into a minefield.

A classroom is not a minefield.

keepit wrote:
In this case the number of mines in the classroom is increasing with time so the chance of contacting one of the minefields increases.

A classroom is not a minefield. COVID-19 is not a death sentence.

keepit wrote:
Sometimes residual impairments can't be felt. Kidney damage is a good example.
Think of a person as being like a candle. The candle can only burn down so much. If a residual impairment occurs, then the next insult to that organ, even if in a few years or decades, will eventually be felt and the person's lifespan will be shortened.

Continued fear mongering...
02-08-2020 05:06
HarveyH55Profile picture★★★★★
(5196)
A classroom has always been a breeding ground, kids are filthy, disrespectful, undisciplined... Well, anyway, schools a great place for their immune systems to learn about how to fight of common diseases, while the are mostly healthy, young, and nothing better to do. That way, when the grow up, and leave home (20-30 years), and forced to get jobs, they won't need to call in sick, every other week. They won't be coughing, sneezing, blowing snot out their nose, when on dates, so less likely to turn out gay.
02-08-2020 05:25
James___
★★★★★
(5513)
IBdaMann wrote:



keepit wrote: Think of a person as being like a candle.

Like her? ... you know, "hot"?


... or like her? ... you know, "waxy"?


... or like her? ... you know, "cylindrical"?


.



Son, you just gave 3 reasons why men overcome the challenges before them.
You'd make a great motivational speaker.
Edited on 02-08-2020 05:25
02-08-2020 07:03
keepit
★★★★★
(3058)
So now they're saying that young kids carry large amounts of covid rna. Some believe the youngsters don't get as sick. A possible reason for the youngsters not getting so sick is in the candle hypothesis, i.e. when they contract the virus, the virus does its damage but the youngsters" various "candles" still have a lot of reserve left. Hence, they hold up well against the virus.
Covid19 isn't like the cold virus, it moves on beyond the upper respiratory to other organs and does damage to various organs.
02-08-2020 07:36
IBdaMannProfile picture★★★★★
(14389)
keepit wrote: So now they're saying that young kids carry large amounts of covid rna.

Is that what you think they said? I just talked to them and what you think you heard is not what they were trying to convey. They said that kids are resilient, especially against things like a cold or the flu. No COVID virus can stand up to a kid, that's for sure.

keepit wrote: Some believe the youngsters don't get as sick.

Well, they get the same viruses but their metabolisms are locked in overdrive and just kick the crap out of viruses like COVID. There's no reason to keep kids locked away and out of school.

keepit wrote: Covid19 isn't like the cold virus, it moves on beyond the upper respiratory to other organs and does damage to various organs.

Not at all. COVID-19 is a mild version of the ordinary flu.

I don't know if I mentioned it but COVID-19 is a mild version of the ordinary flu. You know this because of the COVID designation.

I don't know if I mentioned it but COVID-19 is a mild version of the ordinary flu. You can readily tell just by comparing a COVID-19 virus with an "ordinary" flu virus and not seeing any difference.

Let's play a game. Which one(s) is(are) COVID-19?

A.

B.

C.

D.

E.

F.



I don't think i can [define it]. I just kind of get a feel for the phrase. - keepit

A Spaghetti strainer with the faucet running, retains water- tmiddles

Clouds don't trap heat. Clouds block cold. - Spongy Iris

Printing dollars to pay debt doesn't increase the number of dollars. - keepit

If Venus were a black body it would have a much much lower temperature than what we found there.- tmiddles

Ah the "Valid Data" myth of ITN/IBD. - tmiddles

Ceist - I couldn't agree with you more. But when money and religion are involved, and there are people who value them above all else, then the lies begin. - trafn

You are completely misunderstanding their use of the word "accumulation"! - Climate Scientist.

The Stefan-Boltzman equation doesn't come up with the correct temperature if greenhouse gases are not considered - Hank

:*sigh* Not the "raw data" crap. - Leafsdude

IB STILL hasn't explained what Planck's Law means. Just more hand waving that it applies to everything and more asserting that the greenhouse effect 'violates' it.- Ceist
02-08-2020 18:44
HarveyH55Profile picture★★★★★
(5196)
All of them are rendered from 3d models, not an actual virus, just a graphic representation. I'm pretty sure they are all coronaviruses, but don't know enough to guess beyond that. There are two strains, in the coronavirus family, that are among those associated with the common cold. Tend to believe Covid-19, is just another cold virus to add to that list. I don't really buy into the official designation, since the 'expert', are reluctant to use 'flu', when speaking of it. A cold isn't scary enough, and the default to 'virus'.

It's not really a big concern about kids catching cold at school, which is normal, and common. But, they bring it home with them, and it's tough to isolate them from family, friends, neighbors. Both parents tend to work, and they have to pawn off a sick kid on somebody, usually grandma...

Catching colds and flu is part of the public school experience. Kids with a public education are less likely to routinely have to call in to work, as adults. Their are more reliable, robust employes, than their sissy, private-school counterparts. Not all education comes out of books...
02-08-2020 19:05
HarveyH55Profile picture★★★★★
(5196)
keepit wrote:
So now they're saying that young kids carry large amounts of covid rna. Some believe the youngsters don't get as sick. A possible reason for the youngsters not getting so sick is in the candle hypothesis, i.e. when they contract the virus, the virus does its damage but the youngsters" various "candles" still have a lot of reserve left. Hence, they hold up well against the virus.
Covid19 isn't like the cold virus, it moves on beyond the upper respiratory to other organs and does damage to various organs.


Viruses simple invade cells, and convert them to virus factories. Cells die, and are replaced all the time. There is actually very little organ and tissue damage done by the virus. Most of the damage done during any infection, is from the immune system, and well doctors experimenting. Your immune system tries to make your entire body, a very hostile environment, since most infections are less resilient that the native cells. We also have a lot of cells, that replicate and replace damaged and dead cells. It takes about 2 weeks to produce antibodies in sufficient quantity, to tag and infection, for removal. Between the high fever, and other mechanisms, we usually beat the infection in 5-7 days, and have enough antibodies to remove what remains. The 14 day self quarantine thing, always seemed a little ambitious. Should be 14 days after the symptoms clear up.

Lying in bed, basically motionless, for days/weeks, is very bad for your circulation. Your blood tends to pool, and clot. Specially in your arms and legs. Healthy people do have the means to breakup, and remove clots naturally. Old people tend to have more trouble, and frequently, since they don't move around as much. Those that spend much of their time sitting, or lying down, are at high risk of stroke, and a few other clot related problems. When they do get up, off their lazy asses, they tend to break a few of these clots loose, which travel through the blood stream, and occasional clog up the blood supple to something important.

There really isn't nothing shocking, or surprising, about what they are finding in the dead bodies, the cut open, from the ICU. You can find out for yourself, if you look further into blood clots, and long hospital stays.




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