Anonymous ID: 05f1d3 May 1, 2020, 8:24 p.m. No.8995740   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>5780 >>5799

>>8995652

>>8995666

 

check out the posts with "strings cut"

 

Future proves past.

NOTHING is a coincidence.

The MAP is the KEY.

PLANNED for [3] years.

CORRUPTION and EVIL DEEP WITHIN.

EVERYWHERE.

PATIENCE.

THERE IS NO ESCAPE.

THERE ARE NO DEALS.

TREASON AT HIGHEST LEVELS.

FOREIGN AGENTS WITHIN OUR GOV'T.

HIGHEST LEVELS.

THE PUPPET MASTERS HAVE BEEN REMOVED.

ALL VEHICLES OF DELIVERY REMOVED.

STRINGS CUT.

7TH FLOOR IS NO MORE>FBI/SD

WE SEE ALL.

WE HEAR ALL.

THE HUNT CONTINUES.

PRISON.

DEATH.

[CLAS_GITMO_ J z9-A][89]

RED_RED_

IRON EAGLE.

Q

 

Order is critical.

Strings cut to US/UK.

Expand your thinking.

Swamp drain.

1 - sexual harassment exit + future

Anonymous ID: 05f1d3 May 1, 2020, 8:57 p.m. No.8995974   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>8995872

https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/medical/houston-researchers-test-lung-inhalant-that-could-protect-healthcare-workers-from-covid-19/ar-BB11Be6X?fbclid=IwAR3Vv-ddg_QIQqGtdirUkqMjXcOPlDfZRB4OULgFz1LdR3Tw0HCio_VY1h0

 

Houston researchers test lung inhalant that could protect healthcare workers from COVID-19

By Gwendolyn Wu, Staff writer 3/23/2020

Health official says US missed some chances to slow virus

Sam Lloyd, actor on 'Scrubs,' dies at 56

Houston Chronicle logoHouston researchers test lung inhalant that could protect healthcare workers from COVID-19

A Houston company is developing a drug that could protect people in close contact with patients who have COVID-19 from contracting the illness caused by the new coronavirus.

 

a man cooking in a kitchen: Dr. Brenton Scott, chief operating officer of Houston-based Pulmotect, works in the company’s lab.© Courtesy Of Pulmotect Dr. Brenton Scott, chief operating officer of Houston-based Pulmotect, works in the company’s lab.

The drug, delivered as an aerosol known as PUL-042, was created by biopharmaceutical company Pulmotect, MD Anderson Cancer Center and Texas A&M, which have worked together to develop the drug for more than a decade. While PUL-042 has been tested on mice and had limited human trials in the United Kingdom, it is still at least a year away from approval by the Food and Drug Administration.

 

But if approved, it could provide short-term immunization for doctors, nurses and people in close proximity to COVID-19 patients until a proper vaccine is developed.

 

CORONAVIRUS UPDATES: Stay informed with accurate reporting you can trust

 

“Our lungs are the front line of defense against noxious pathogens,” said Colin Broom, Pulmotect’s chief executive. “Normally we can fight those off. But an overwhelming infection that you get from this virus? You just can’t fight that.”

 

Pulmotect and its research partners are among the many drug companies and scientists racing to find vaccines and treatment for COVID-19, the illness caused by the new coronavirus. The virus can cause severe pneumonia in patients, who may experience fevers, dry coughs and difficulty breathing, along with possible gastrointestinal symptoms, according to Baylor University researchers.

 

Pulmotect’s drug works by stimulating a thin layer of tissue that lines the inside of the lungs and training it to be hostile to invading pathogens. It differs from most vaccines because its effect is almost immediate, but temporary, while vaccines can take weeks to develop antibodies that can fight infections, but last for years, if not lifetimes.

 

Someone taking the PUL-042 would have to inhale it twice a week to maintain its effectiveness, said Dr. Burton Dickey, chair of pulmonary medicine at MD Anderson Cancer Center and one of the leading researchers.

 

On HoustonChronicle.com: Is the vaccine to thwart the new coronavirus stored in a Houston freezer?

 

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The company has successfully tested the drug on some of the world’s most vicious viruses in mice, including strains of SARS and MERS, two other coronaviruses. Researchers said it acts like “Clorox,” killing bacteria, viruses and microorganisms that cause illness.

 

“You’d expect it to work against any virus,” Dickey said, “ but this provides proof it works against highly virulent coronaviruses.”

 

What’s next

The aerosol has moved to clinical trials in the United Kingdom, examining how safe the drug is for smokers who have respiratory issues. Like other vaccines and drugs that could treat COVID-19, two things are keeping PUL-042 from becoming consumer-ready: money and federal approval.

 

Researchers have asked the FDA to approve the drug in time to address the global pandemic. Broom said they have also turned to the National Institute of Allergy and Infection Diseases and the U.S. Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority in hopes they can fast-track their drug into clinical trials in the United States.

 

CORONAVIRUS: Stay informed with accurate reporting you can trust

 

Approval from one of those federal agencies could mean a grant to study how it would work with people who could be exposed to the new coronavirus. The company, which has raised $28 million over the last 13 years, is also chasing down any private investor that would fund another round of studies.

 

Researchers estimated the trial could be completed within the year with just $5 million in funding, if not sooner given the jump in cases worldwide.

 

“At the rate cases are happening,” Dickey said, “you could be seeing in a few weeks if it’s effective.”

 

Pulmotect had originally pitched itself to the FDA as a drug that could help cancer patients who are more susceptible to respiratory infections. It’s possible, Broom and Dickey said, that as the public health crisis grows, federal officials will support funding the drug as a part of the fight against the new coronavirus.