Meet the Other Phone. Only the apps you allow.

Meet the Other Phone.
Only the apps you allow.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Covid

Mumsnet doesn't verify the qualifications of users. If you have medical concerns, please consult a healthcare professional.

A Supercomputer Analyzed Covid-19 — and an Interesting New Theory Has Emerged

7 replies

DGRossetti · 03/09/2020 10:37

elemental.medium.com/a-supercomputer-analyzed-covid-19-and-an-interesting-new-theory-has-emerged-31cb8eba9d63

Earlier this summer, the Summit supercomputer at Oak Ridge National Lab in Tennessee set about crunching data on more than 40,000 genes from 17,000 genetic samples in an effort to better understand Covid-19. Summit is the second-fastest computer in the world, but the process — which involved analyzing 2.5 billion genetic combinations — still took more than a week.

When Summit was done, researchers analyzed the results. It was, in the words of Dr. Daniel Jacobson, lead researcher and chief scientist for computational systems biology at Oak Ridge, a “eureka moment.” The computer had revealed a new theory about how Covid-19 impacts the body: the bradykinin hypothesis. The hypothesis provides a model that explains many aspects of Covid-19, including some of its most bizarre symptoms. It also suggests 10-plus potential treatments, many of which are already FDA approved. Jacobson’s group published their results in a paper in the journal eLife in early July.

According to the team’s findings, a Covid-19 infection generally begins when the virus enters the body through ACE2 receptors in the nose, (The receptors, which the virus is known to target, are abundant there.) The virus then proceeds through the body, entering cells in other places where ACE2 is also present: the intestines, kidneys, and heart. This likely accounts for at least some of the disease’s cardiac and GI symptoms.

But once Covid-19 has established itself in the body, things start to get really interesting. According to Jacobson’s group, the data Summit analyzed shows that Covid-19 isn’t content to simply infect cells that already express lots of ACE2 receptors. Instead, it actively hijacks the body’s own systems, tricking it into upregulating ACE2 receptors in places where they’re usually expressed at low or medium levels, including the lungs.

(contd)

OP posts:
AlecTrevelyan006 · 03/09/2020 14:59

Very interesting- thanks for posting

AmelieTaylor · 03/09/2020 18:46

@DGRossetti

A friend just sent me a link to the report So obviously I came here to see What the chat was, and I see your brother went there to work with those computers.

Just wondering (as you started a thread) what your take is on the findings?

Or anyone else's, obviously.

lljkk · 03/09/2020 19:05

Does covid have bizarre symptoms?

DGRossetti · 03/09/2020 19:06

[quote AmelieTaylor]@DGRossetti

A friend just sent me a link to the report So obviously I came here to see What the chat was, and I see your brother went there to work with those computers.

Just wondering (as you started a thread) what your take is on the findings?

Or anyone else's, obviously.[/quote]
Well if nothing else, it gives some pointers as to new areas to dig into. But it's encouraging it seems to tie all the oddities into a more coherent and plausible picture .. "Covid toes" for example.

OP posts:
Schmeebles · 03/09/2020 21:24

Was this the one that concluded it was more a vascular disease than a respiratory disease?

TracyBeakerSoYeah · 03/09/2020 23:34

Very good article & it seems to make sense that Covid is a vascular disease.
Hopefully more research & clinical testing will be done.

tobee · 03/09/2020 23:44

I read that too and thought:-

"Ooh bradykinin, not cytokine"

New posts on this thread. Refresh page