All the theories of the lesser afm but I'm over here wondering if the increase in covid vaccinations in children have anything to do with less afm cases. And also why tf has no one developed a vaccine for the d86 virus yet? I know the affected population is small but so what.
Damn, that's interesting!
- No clickbait
- No Racism and Hate speech
- No Imgur Gallery Links
- No Infographics
- Moderator Discretion
- Repost Guidelines
- No videos over 15 minutes long
- No "Photoshopped" posts
- Image w/ text posts must be sourced in comments
This is the best summary I could come up with:
Researchers quickly linked the rare polio-esque condition to a virus known for causing respiratory infections, often mild colds: enterovirus D68, or EV-D68 for short.
But when EV-D68 began surging, so did the mysterious paralyzing condition, called acute flaccid myelitis, or AFM.
In early September, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention sent a warning to clinicians through its Health Alert Network: EV-D68 is rising around the country.
"It's surprising, totally," Matthew Vogt, a pediatric infectious disease expert at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, told Ars.
Why do most children with EV-D68 get a mild respiratory infection and recover, while an unlucky few develop paralysis in the days afterward?
The study, appearing in the New England Journal of Medicine, found genetic material (RNA) and proteins from EV-D68 in motor neurons in the spinal cord of a 5-year-old boy who tragically died of an AFM-like illness in 2008.
The original article contains 593 words, the summary contains 148 words. Saved 75%. I'm a bot and I'm open source!