Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
International

Science summary: A look at novel coronavirus research around the globe

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Apr, 2020 05:17 PM

    Thousands of scientists around the world are working on problems raised by the COVID-19 pandemic. Here is a summary of some recent research from peer-reviewed academic journals and scientific agencies:

    ---

    A team led by a University of British Columbia scientist says it's found a trial drug that closes the door the novel coronavirus uses to enter a cell. In findings published in the journal Cell, researchers describe altering a protein that acts as a receptor for the virus on the surface of a cell. Their paper says the altered protein reduced the presence of the virus by a factor of up to 1,500. The drug, called APN01, is soon to be tested by the European biotech company Apeiron Biologics.
     
    ---

    Canadian Blood Services has joined an international effort to find out if plasma from those recovering from COVID-19 can be used to keep others from catching it. When people contract a virus, their bodies develop antibodies against it which remain in blood plasma to shield against future infection. Those antibodies could help others with the same virus. Researchers are designing a national trial of the theory. Once it has begun, Canadian Blood Services will contact potential plasma donors. Australia, China, France, Germany, Italy, Singapore, South Korea, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom and the United States are part of the same effort.

    ---

    A survey of United Kingdom residents, the day after a national lockdown was declared to fight the pandemic, found that people reduced their contact with others by an average of 73 per cent. In an unreviewed report, the U.K.'s Centre for Mathematical Modelling of Infectious Disease calculates that should be enough to reduce the average amount of reinfection from existing cases to less than a quarter of what it would have been without social distancing. However, that impact won't show up for a while because of the length of time COVID-19 takes between infection and the onset of symptoms.

    ---

    The University of Pittsburgh says it has created a COVID-19 vaccine that creates antibodies against the virus in mice. In a paper published in EBioMedicine, researchers describe a new way to deliver the drug that they say increases its potency. They used an array of 400 tiny needles in a fingertip-sized patch that goes on like a Band-Aid. The needles, made of sugar and the vaccine components, simply dissolve into the skin. The vaccine generated a surge of antibodies within two weeks. The authors are applying for an investigational new drug approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and hope to start a human trial in the next few months.

    ---

    The Canadian Medical Association Journal says COVID-19 is likely to strain Canada's palliative care providers. It says while end-of-life decision-making is usually shared between doctors and patients, a pandemic could restrict patients' choice of life-prolonging measures or where they will die. It's advising clinicians to stockpile palliative care medications, train staff to meet palliative care needs, work to reduce isolation of patients and ensure all patients are cared for equitably.

    ---

    An article in the International Journal of Biological Sciences outlines research into the use of traditional Chinese medicine in fighting COVID-19. In China, there are currently 50 trials using such medicine against the novel coronavirus. That country's National Health Commission reported that 85 per cent of China's COVID-19 patients had at least some traditional treatments. Previous research done into treatments for SARS, a similar virus, found some potential benefits of combining traditional and western medicine, but a lack of high-quality studies means no firm conclusion can be made.

    ---

    Bob Weber, The Canadian Press

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Pakistan To Close Kartarpur's Gurdwara Darbar Sahib For Non-Sikhs For Guru Gobind Singh’s Birthday

    The Kartarpur corridor in Pakistan's Punjab province connects Darbar Sahib in Kartarpur with Dera Baba Nanak shrine in Gurdaspur district of Punjab in India.

    Pakistan To Close Kartarpur's Gurdwara Darbar Sahib For Non-Sikhs For Guru Gobind Singh’s Birthday

    USA Warns Air Carriers To Avoid Pakistan Airspace, Cites Threat By Militants

    USA Warns Air Carriers To Avoid Pakistan Airspace, Cites Threat By Militants
    US aviation regulator FAA on Thursday warned America’s airlines and their pilots that there is risk involved in operating flights in Pakistan airspace due to “extremist or militant activity”, according to an official document.    

    USA Warns Air Carriers To Avoid Pakistan Airspace, Cites Threat By Militants

    Golden Globes Will Serve Plant-Based Meal At Awards Ceremony

    Golden Globes Will Serve Plant-Based Meal At Awards Ceremony
    LOS ANGELES - The Golden Globes, known as the “party of the year,” is going with a meatless menu for its 77th annual awards show.    

    Golden Globes Will Serve Plant-Based Meal At Awards Ceremony

    Watch: Shahid Afridi Says He Smashed TV After Daughter Imitated 'Aarti' Scene While Watching Show

    An old video of Pakistani cricketer Shahid Afridi boasting about smashing a TV on seeing his daughter perform the "aarti" has gone viral on social media. Netizens called out the cricketer for being disrespectful.

    Watch: Shahid Afridi Says He Smashed TV After Daughter Imitated 'Aarti' Scene While Watching Show

    'Civilization Is At Stake': Democrats Versus Trump Will Be 2020's Main Event

    'Civilization Is At Stake': Democrats Versus Trump Will Be 2020's Main Event
     If history is indeed written by the victors, the story of America's epic 2020 title fight will read either like a heroic Hollywood script or a Season-8 "Simpsons" farce, depending on who wins.

    'Civilization Is At Stake': Democrats Versus Trump Will Be 2020's Main Event

    Pakistan Players Treated Danish Kaneria Unfairly As He Is Hindu: Shoaib Akhtar

    Kaneria, only the second Hindu to play for Pakistan after his maternal uncle Anil Dalpat, took 261 wickets in 61 Tests at an average of 34.79. He also played 18 ODIs.    

    Pakistan Players Treated Danish Kaneria Unfairly As He Is Hindu: Shoaib Akhtar