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Why Do I Put My Life on the Line Pandemic Trauma Haunts Health Workers

Table of Contents ‘Why Do I Put My Life on the Line?’ Pandemic Trauma Haunts Health Workers. Dr. Brittany Bankhead-Kendall scrubs her arms and hands at Texas Tech University Medical Center. Nationwide, doctors and other health professionals have been called on to work double duty during the pandemic. Courtesy of Dr. Bankhead-Kendall Brittany Bankhead-­Kendall, 34, was a newly minted surgeon when the COVID-19 pandemic began. At first, like thousands of other health care professionals, she worked tirelessly in crisis mode. But by last fall, she was experiencing random and repeated physiological symptoms, including a racing heart and dimmed vision. She diagnosed herself as suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder.

mRNA vaccines spur lymph nodes for longer-term protection; Surgery delay advised after COVID-19

Along with inducing antibodies for immediate defense, mRNA vaccines against COVID-19 also stimulate the lymph nodes to generate immune cells that provide protection over the long term, a new study confirms. When possible, surgery should be delayed for at least seven weeks after infection with the new coronavirus, and patients who still have symptoms at that point may benefit from further delay, researchers advise in Anaesthesia.

mRNA vaccines spur lymph nodes for longer-term protection; COVID-19 test accuracy may vary by time of day

Antifungal Drugs and Dietary Changes May Heal Gut Inflammation in Crohn s Disease

Antifungal Drugs and Dietary Changes May Heal Gut Inflammation in Crohn’s Disease Source: ChrisChrisW/Getty Images March 15, 2021 Science, researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and the Cleveland Clinic have discovered that a salt-tolerant fungus Debaryomyces hansenii, used in the food industry for surface ripening of cheese and meat products, latches on to injured and inflamed regions in the guts of patients with Crohn’s disease, causing wounds to fester, abdominal pain, bleeding, diarrhea and other unpleasant symptoms. The researchers also show, treating infected model mice with antifungal medication eliminates the fungus and allows the wounds to heal, suggesting antifungal drugs and dietary changes targeted to reduce fungal growth in the gut, are potential new therapeutic approaches to improving intestinal wound healing and managing the symptoms of Crohn’s disease.

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