COVID-19 reinfection common with BA.5 variant
- July 31, 2022
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
No Comments
COVID-19 reinfection common with BA.5 variant
Subject: Science and Technology
Section: Biotechnology
- Compared with the earlier Omicron BA.2 subvariant, currently dominant Omicron BA.5 is linked with higher odds of causing a second SARS-COV-2 infection regardless of vaccination status
- The researchers said 10% of BA.5 cases were reinfections, compared to 5.6% of BA.2 cases, which suggests a reduction in protection conferred by previous infection against BA.5 compared to BA.2,
- The vaccines appeared to be less effective in reducing the risk of severe outcomes for BA.5 compared with BA.2.
- Among those infected with 5, booster vaccination was associated with 77% and 88% reduction in risk of COVID-19 hospitalisation and death, respectively, while higher risk reduction was found for BA.2 cases, with 93% and 94%, respectively
- The spike protein on its surface that SARS-CoV-2 uses to break into heart muscle cells also triggers a damaging attack from the immune system
- They found that in infected heart muscle cells, only SARS-CoV-2 spike interacted with the so-called TLR4 proteins (Toll-like receptor-4) that recognise invaders and trigger inflammatory responses.
- A new monoclonal antibody combination can prevent and treat Omicron infections in monkeys, researchers reported in Nature Microbiology.
- The antibodies, called P2G3 and P5C3, recognise regions of the spike protein the SARS-CoV-2 virus uses to enter cells. “P5C3 alone can block all SARS-CoV-2 variants that had dominated the pandemic up to Omicron BA.2
Two monkeypox cases in India not linked to Europe
- Genome sequences of the first two imported cases of monkeypox detected in Kerala clearly show that they belong to a small cluster — A.2 — that was very different from the one that was first detected in the U.K. on May 6 this year and has since spread to more than 75 countries.
- The genomes from the major outbreak of monkeypox cases in Europe and the rest of the world belong to the B.1 lineage.
- All the three imported cases detected in Kerala were in men who had arrived from the Middle East.
- The large outbreak that began in Europe in early May this year and since grown to over 21,000 cases globally has been spreading primarily through human-to-human transmission.
- The sustained transmission among humans has predominantly been among men who have sex with men (MSM) and had spread across Europe in a matter of few days due to two superspreader events.
- The small 2 cluster is starkly different from the large B.1 cluster that represents the virus that began spreading in Europe.