E SUCHED: Australian scientists discover how the Coronavirus immune system fights

Scientists in Australia have said that they have identified the way the body's immune system fights the Cavid-19 virus. Research of them, published in Nature magazine during the present day, shows that people are recovering from the new virus as they would from the seasonal flu. Determining which immune cells appear [...]
Research of them, published in Nature magazine during the present day, shows that people are recovering from the new virus as they would from the seasonal flu.
Determining which immune cells appear is expected to also help develop the vaccine, scientists say, BBC reports, translate Periscopi in Albanian.
Globally, there are more than 160 thousand cases confirmed by Corleone and about 6 thousand and 500 deaths.
This is important because it is the first time our immune system fights the new coronavirus,”, the coauthor of the study, Professor Catherine Kedzierska, has said.
Many other experts have appreciated the study as amazing.
Many people have been written by Coddy-19, meaning that our immune system can successfully fight the virus.
But for the first time, researchers have identified four types of immune cells that appeared in the war against Coronavirus.
They were observed as they followed a patient with minor symptoms of coronary and without other diseases.
A 47-year-old woman from Wuhan, China, was admitted to the hospital in Australia and healed within 14 days.
Professor Kedzierska told the BBC that her team had examined “the degree of immune response” in the case of this patient.
Three days before the woman began to improve, specific cells were observed in the circulation of her blood. In cases of seasonal flu patients, the same cells appeared before recovery, Professor Kedzierska said.

We were amazed at our results and the fact that we could capture these immune cells in infected patients even before the clinical recovery began, he added.
Over a dozen scientists had worked for four weeks to produce these results.
But what's that use?
Identification that when immune cells operate could help in “predict the virus course,” said Professor Bruce Thompson, dean of health sciences at Swinburn University for Technology.
When you know which responses are coming from your body you can predict when the cure from the virus will occur,” told Prof. Thompson's BBC.
Professor Kedzierska said the next step for scientists was to determine why the immune response was weaker in the worst cases.
It's important that now we understand what happened to patients who died or what happens to those with the most serious diseases in order to learn how to protect them,” she said. /Periscope












