Mauritio
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- Feb 26, 2018
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In this study, they looked at the difference between treating people less or more than 3 days after COVID-19 symptoms started.
They treated the people with a combination of
- Aspirin 100mg
- indomethacin 75-100mg
- omeprazole 20mg
- A combination of flavonoids: hesperidin, quercetin and vitamin C
If patients still got worse, they gave them azithromycin, bethametasone and/or heparin.
The duration of the sicknes was reduced and most importantly there were zero percent hospitalizations in the early treatment group, compared with 19% in the other group.
That basically means you could treat covid at home with mostly over the counter medications, but it's important to start treatment early.
I would make some small improvements to the protocol.
I'd favor a higher aspirin dose, meaning >500mg ,maybe even in the grams, it has less effect on blood thinning, but acts more as a metabolical aid and anti-viral. (Aspirin Is Antiviral)
If you take higher doses of aspirin, it's smart to supplement vitamin K2 ,which has good binding affinity for the spike protein, so works in your favor as well ( Vitamin K, D and A bind to the SARS‐CoV‐2 spike protein )
I'd also remove omeprazole and replace it with famotidine. There has been evidence for it having an anti-covid effect ,hence why Dr. Robert Malone treated himself with it when he had an early case of covid. Plus there's tons of studies on famotidines pro-metabolic effects.
I've come across a few studies already mentioning azithromycin for covid.
I talked about one of its mechanisms here :
(Coronavirus spike protein creates inflammation via CD147, antibiotics treat)
And they cite another paper on azithromycin for covid:
(Azithromycin: Immunomodulatory and antiviral properties for SARS-CoV-2 infection - PubMed)
There's also evidence for Quercetin and vitamin C beeing helpful,so the stack they use is quite decent (Quercetin and Vitamin C: An Experimental, Synergistic Therapy for the Prevention and Treatment of SARS-CoV-2 Related Disease (COVID-19) - PubMed)
"Clinical severity at the beginning of treatment was similar in the 2 groups. In group 1, symptom duration was shorter than in group 2 (median 6.0 days vs 13.0 days, P<0.001) and no hospitalizations occurred, compared with 19.18% hospitalizations in group 2. One patient in group 1 developed chest X-ray alterations and 2 patients experienced an increase in D-dimer levels, compared with 30 and 22 patients, respectively, in group 2. The main factor determining the duration of symptoms and the risk of hospitalization was the delay in starting therapy (P<0.001)."
(https://www.medscimonit.com/abstract/index/idArt/935379)
They treated the people with a combination of
- Aspirin 100mg
- indomethacin 75-100mg
- omeprazole 20mg
- A combination of flavonoids: hesperidin, quercetin and vitamin C
If patients still got worse, they gave them azithromycin, bethametasone and/or heparin.
The duration of the sicknes was reduced and most importantly there were zero percent hospitalizations in the early treatment group, compared with 19% in the other group.
That basically means you could treat covid at home with mostly over the counter medications, but it's important to start treatment early.
I would make some small improvements to the protocol.
I'd favor a higher aspirin dose, meaning >500mg ,maybe even in the grams, it has less effect on blood thinning, but acts more as a metabolical aid and anti-viral. (Aspirin Is Antiviral)
If you take higher doses of aspirin, it's smart to supplement vitamin K2 ,which has good binding affinity for the spike protein, so works in your favor as well ( Vitamin K, D and A bind to the SARS‐CoV‐2 spike protein )
I'd also remove omeprazole and replace it with famotidine. There has been evidence for it having an anti-covid effect ,hence why Dr. Robert Malone treated himself with it when he had an early case of covid. Plus there's tons of studies on famotidines pro-metabolic effects.
I've come across a few studies already mentioning azithromycin for covid.
I talked about one of its mechanisms here :
(Coronavirus spike protein creates inflammation via CD147, antibiotics treat)
And they cite another paper on azithromycin for covid:
(Azithromycin: Immunomodulatory and antiviral properties for SARS-CoV-2 infection - PubMed)
There's also evidence for Quercetin and vitamin C beeing helpful,so the stack they use is quite decent (Quercetin and Vitamin C: An Experimental, Synergistic Therapy for the Prevention and Treatment of SARS-CoV-2 Related Disease (COVID-19) - PubMed)
"Clinical severity at the beginning of treatment was similar in the 2 groups. In group 1, symptom duration was shorter than in group 2 (median 6.0 days vs 13.0 days, P<0.001) and no hospitalizations occurred, compared with 19.18% hospitalizations in group 2. One patient in group 1 developed chest X-ray alterations and 2 patients experienced an increase in D-dimer levels, compared with 30 and 22 patients, respectively, in group 2. The main factor determining the duration of symptoms and the risk of hospitalization was the delay in starting therapy (P<0.001)."
(https://www.medscimonit.com/abstract/index/idArt/935379)
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