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Old 04-15-2021, 08:57 AM
 
12,022 posts, read 11,572,686 times
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Deserterer View Post
I know 5 people who had covid and 2 died, including my aunt. 2 of the survivors were males in their 30s.



Within days of apparently recovering from the physical covid illness my aunt became non-responsive, argumentative, uncooperative, refused therapy, refused to answer her phone and refused to get out of bed. They were saying she had developed dementia, which she didn't have before covid. She died within 2 weeks and the hoaxers and denyers will be happy to know she wasn't even counted as a covid death, although she was happy, healthy, alert, active, responsive and cooperative just a few weeks earlier before she caught it and her rapid mental decline was obviously a direct result of it.
The risk of incident dementia is high among patients with ischemic stroke.

While 33.62% of all the patients had some form of neurological or psychiatric disorder in their records, for 12.84% of them, the diagnosis was new. The most common diagnoses were anxiety disorder (17.4%), followed by ischemic stroke (2.1%) and psychiatric disorder (1.4%).

Among patients who were admitted to an (ICU), the incidence of neurological or psychological sequelae rose to 46.42%. For more than 25% of patients admitted to an ICU for COVID-19, the diagnosis of neurological or psychiatric issues was new. Specific diagnoses were anxiety disorder (19.15%), ischemic stroke (6.92%), and psychotic disorder (2.77%).

 
Old 04-15-2021, 10:00 AM
 
Location: NYC
20,550 posts, read 17,701,807 times
Reputation: 25616
Quote:
Originally Posted by steiconi View Post
Taking probiotics and eating probiotic foods can help, since they contain fresh supplies of the needed bacteria. They're also cheaper and less disgusting than fecal transplant
You cannot pop something to replenish your gut microbiome. It's an ecosystem that takes a long time to establish and maintained. Typical American diet is the worst for maintaining a healthy gut microbiome. A fecal transplant is necessary for people who have issues already. It takes several months to re-establish your microbiome so that your entire body has been metabolically affected by your microbiome.

Take a probiotic doesn't help. You need to take a prebiotic. Then your microbes need to be constantly fed with a certain diet mainly good wholesome foods. The more processed foods you consume, the less flora your gut. Anything with preservatives even soft drinks kill microbes.
 
Old 04-15-2021, 11:14 AM
 
Location: Early America
3,124 posts, read 2,068,179 times
Reputation: 7867
Quote:
Originally Posted by vision33r View Post
You cannot pop something to replenish your gut microbiome. It's an ecosystem that takes a long time to establish and maintained. Typical American diet is the worst for maintaining a healthy gut microbiome. A fecal transplant is necessary for people who have issues already. It takes several months to re-establish your microbiome so that your entire body has been metabolically affected by your microbiome.

Take a probiotic doesn't help. You need to take a prebiotic. Then your microbes need to be constantly fed with a certain diet mainly good wholesome foods. The more processed foods you consume, the less flora your gut. Anything with preservatives even soft drinks kill microbes.
Right, in order to colonize good gut bacteria, they have to be fed prebiotic foods regularly - foods with inulin fiber.

Last edited by SimplySagacious; 04-15-2021 at 11:40 AM..
 
Old 04-15-2021, 11:46 AM
 
Location: NYC
20,550 posts, read 17,701,807 times
Reputation: 25616
Quote:
Originally Posted by SimplySagacious View Post
Right, in order to colonize good gut bacteria, they have to be fed prebiotic foods regularly - foods with inulin fiber.
Yes, a prebiotic is like laying seeds to get the good bacteria to colonize. A probiotic is like fertilizers to maintain the colony. I don't think probiotic pills are that good, it's too little consider how much microbes are in the body. A few of those probiotics can't do much for the billions of microbes in our bodies. The best way is to keep eating organic fiber.
 
Old 04-18-2021, 03:18 PM
 
5,713 posts, read 4,286,950 times
Reputation: 11708
Quote:
Originally Posted by lchoro View Post
The risk of incident dementia is high among patients with ischemic stroke.

While 33.62% of all the patients had some form of neurological or psychiatric disorder in their records, for 12.84% of them, the diagnosis was new. The most common diagnoses were anxiety disorder (17.4%), followed by ischemic stroke (2.1%) and psychiatric disorder (1.4%).

Among patients who were admitted to an (ICU), the incidence of neurological or psychological sequelae rose to 46.42%. For more than 25% of patients admitted to an ICU for COVID-19, the diagnosis of neurological or psychiatric issues was new. Specific diagnoses were anxiety disorder (19.15%), ischemic stroke (6.92%), and psychotic disorder (2.77%).

She had covid, not a stroke. She was on blood thinners to prevent covid clots that could lead to stroke.
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