Philip J Fry said:
Quote:
Yours is an incredibly absurd request, that simply because a proposed treatment with a poor mechanistic basis is endorsed by a given number of people it MUST be falsified before you'll believe it doesn't work. That thinking is the antithesis of medication and science as a whole.
That's absurd. There have been trials with HCQ + zpack, but when we note there is a missing ingredient, then the experts through their hands up and say we are asking for too much. If you are going to go through the effort of a trial, then do it right. Looks kind they were purposefully set up to fail.
Again, a misunderstanding of the scientific nuance plays the major role in the disconnect here.
HCQ has several well founded in vitro mechanisms by which it would inhibit viral replication and propagation. One, not the predominant one mind you, is that it acts as an ionophore of multiple compounds including zinc. In vitro, zinc has been shown to inhibit the replicative capacity of certain viruses and it is known that zinc deficiency can have an immunosuppressive effect. So there is a baseline level at which normal zinc levels help modulate immune function. Here's the problem with saying giving a lot more zinc helps: The relative concentration of zinc in vitro required for this mechanism of increased direct viral inhibition (not simply baseline immune function) is prohibitively high. It's why this mechanism has literally NEVER worked for ANY real world viral infection in vivo at safe doses, despite being tested on numerous types of viral infections. People have tried it with the flu, with and without ionophores, for decades. You can still buy zinc lozenges over the counter for colds/flu, but there is no good data for it.
In other words, even if this in vitro mechanism translates in vivo (and that often isn't the case) you'd never reach the concentrations necessary without giving massive doses of zinc that would cause devastating side effects to our own cells.
So giving zinc as part of this "cocktail" (a word I've grown weary of, much like "toxins") isn't being done largely because WE KNOW IT DOESNT WORK IN THE HUMAN BODY BASED ON DECADES OF RESEARCH. It's failed again and again and again.
With respect to azithromycin, this too is a failed mechanism. It's be studied for decades for its antinflammatory properties and has no good evidentiary support apart from acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive lung disease. Some lung doctors use it in end stage COPD chronically but the evidence for this is very minimal. And the claim some make about it preventing pneumonia is equally silly as most microbes that cause pneumonia (especially pneumonia secondary to a viral respiratory illness) are already resistant to it. Apart from atypical organisms, which don't generally cause bacterial pneumonia superimposed on viral pneumonia, it's fallen so out of favor that it is no longer recommended as mono therapy for community acquired pneumonia. You should not be getting a Z pack for your "respiratory infection" anymore unless in combination with another antibiotic.
So all that to say that no, it is not in fact absurd and frankly it's only to satisfy illogical outcries that many of these studies were conducted in the first place. The anomaly here is that this was entertained at all, not that more wasn't done. The initial look into HCQ AS MONOTHERAPY was worthwhile, as it's most encouraging potential mechanisms within the realms of real science (such as altering endosomal pH) needed no additional support from other medications. That was done and has not revealed promising benefits in the treatment of mild, moderate or severe disease or in primary/secondary prophylaxis.
Meanwhile, a very cheap drug without the backing of "big pharma" (and not endorsed or denounced by a notable member of either major political party) has increasingly strong evidence for benefit in hypoxic patients and almost nobody is talking about it. Why? I'll leave that for another time and another board but it's not difficult to figure out.
This isn't about trying to attack a president I voted for, and it's not about getting a cut from the pharmaceutical industry (of which I have absolutely no stake in). It's about what the evidence indicates, and what it doesn't. And frankly I'm tired of being told what I should and should not believe in and endorse by people who understand less than half of what I just typed above.
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