Anonymous ID: 99d04a April 5, 2020, 4 p.m. No.8696693   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Is it possible that the Navy medical teams could have intelligence for treatment of Covid-19 that can't be released to the public because it would require release of data that cannot be shared?

 

I assume the answer is possibly yes since Q referred to cures being suppressed. So intelligence at least knew of treatment that could not outright be released.

 

So that possibility has made me focus more on the photo of the patient in Navy hospital that appears to be receiving lipid emulsion.

 

Majority appear to believe the most likely reasoning is nutrition. And maybe that is true.

 

But lipid emulsions are also utilized to treat toxicities that are lipophylic.

 

So if that patient is non-Corona related, then it is possible that sedatives, anesthetics, or other toxins could be bound by the emulsion.

 

The care team is not wearing eye protection, so I would suspect that the patient is non-Corona related.

 

Continuing with the fentanyl discussion, naloxone would be the reversal agent of choice, but fentanyl is also lipophylic.

I'm uncertain if there would be an instance of lipid use in place of or in addition to naloxone with the analog of fentanyl (Carfentanil) that has hit the streets which is much stronger and also lipophylic.

 

https://www.medscape.org/viewarticle/518441_2

 

https://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2016/10/16/region-braces-for-arrival-new-more-powerful-synthetic-opioid/uLdoivGZdopm468poRzU3J/story.html

 

 

We know that hydroxychloroquine + Azithromycin is very effective at early/mild and moderate symptomatic patients. So one would assume that all not having pre-existing heart disease would be treated with such.

 

But those with heart disease wouldn't.

 

However, ivermectin has appeared to be very effective at early reports.

 

What's interesting is that ivermectin is also lipophylic and ivermectin toxicity itself can be treated with lipid emulsion… and so far, I've not seen the mechanism of action for ivermectin stopping replication of the virus.

 

I was looking for any correlation of lipids with angiotensin converting enzymes for the complicated cases. There is a difference in lipophylic vs hydrophilic versions of ACE inhibitors and likely of mortality associated with pneumonia. So maybe there is something here for someone else to connect. But the study noted lipophylic ACE inhibitors had higher incidence of mortality.

 

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19092318

Anonymous ID: 99d04a April 5, 2020, 4:25 p.m. No.8697062   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>8696862

 

Are you just proving that notables are not endorsements with that viruses dont really exist BS?

 

That's some of the dumbest shit yet I've seen in notables in a long time.

Anonymous ID: 99d04a April 5, 2020, 4:34 p.m. No.8697214   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>8696959

 

There can be anaphylaxis due to mass death of larval stages but it is rare. many dogs were treated with what was considered a slow kill treatment by starting them on the preventative though they were positive. In reality, the adults die over time, probably doesn't actually kill them. and this is not used generally because of the duration for them to die.