A family of four in the U.S. lost their sense of smell when they were infected with the CCP virus, and were unable to smell the smoke when their home caught fire in the early morning.
The after-effects of the CCP virus go far beyond the loss of sense of smell, with many recovered patients still experiencing acute symptoms of shortness of breath, headaches and even blood clots months later.
The latest lung x-rays show that some of the newly crowned recovered patients have severe lung damage, a blur full of scars, worse than the old smokers…
Chinese Communist virus patients lost their sense of smell home on fire do not know the U.S. West time January 16, 2021, according to ABC7 News reported that a family in Texas after the outbreak of Chinese Communist virus outbreak, many members lost their sense of smell, the result of their own house on fire, they did not smell the smoke, resulting in the entire house was burned down…
Photo: The whole house was burned down (Source: ABC7 News)
This morning, the bungalow in Waco burst into flames with four people inside at the time of the incident. Although the house burned down, luckily, the fourth member of the family, a 17-year-old girl, was able to notify her three family members in time and then escaped to safety with everyone else.
The girl, Bianca Rivera, was living in a home where three people had lost their sense of smell due to a new crown infection. They did not smell the smoke when the fire broke out around 2:00 am. But the girl still had a sense of smell, and she smelled burning. The girl said: “I started smelling burnt plastic, and that’s when I became alert and ran out of the room. I couldn’t even get through the hallway at that point because it was filled with smoke.”
Photo: The burned house (Source: ABC7 News)
Bianca Rivera said: “I just want everyone to be safe and alive, that’s all I want, I just want everyone to be alive. I don’t think I’m a hero, and anyone else would have done the same.” Thanks to the girl’s timely warning, all family members were spared, but the rest of the home’s finances were largely burned to the ground. The Red Cross and other relatives are helping the family slowly recover from the CCP virus and the destroyed home.
Statistics show that up to 80 percent of people with Neocon lose their sense of smell, and researchers at Harvard Medical School said in August 2020 that they believe they have found the cause. Researchers say that the CCP virus infects olfactory cells in the nasal cavity that support the sensory neurons that allow us to smell, and loses function when infected by the virus. This condition, known as olfactory loss, is not believed to be permanent, but can last long after the virus is gone.
The brief loss of the sense of smell is only one side effect of infection with the CCP virus, and many others have recovered and then succumbed to other after-effects. Recently, many patients who have recovered from mild cases of the CCP virus have developed sequelae months later, officially known as Post-acute COVID Syndrome, most of whom are between 40 and 50 years old, according to ABC.
Jeff Engman, 58, is one of those patients. “I’m probably in the best shape of my life, working hard and then hanging out to my heart’s content.” Immediately following his diagnosis of the CCP virus, Engman said, “I was so tired, I was exhausted and couldn’t get out of bed every day.” ?
After Ingerman went to the hospital, he was told to stay home and recover on his own. After a few weeks, Ingerman thought he had fully recovered and that all of his previous symptoms had disappeared. However, a new problem emerged. He says, “The CCP virus caused some abscesses in my lungs.” Almost 10 months have passed since the diagnosis of the mild illness, and Ingerman is still suffering from the after-effects.
Photo: Emergency medicine physician Michael Dano? (Source: ABC7 News)
Michael Daignault, an emergency medicine physician at Providence Saint Joseph Medical Center (Providence), said he has seen many similar symptoms, and that many patients with mild new crowns have developed sequelae, or signs of recurrent illness, after recovery.
“These patients experience memory loss, difficulty concentrating, shortness of breath, weakness in the limbs, headaches, and loss of taste and smell,” Dr. Daignault says this can seriously affect a patient’s work and life. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reports that up to 35 percent of patients have symptoms that last more than three weeks. Dr. Daino explains, “The neo-coronavirus causes micro-thrombosis and micro-clotting in organs, and studies have shown that there are five factors that increase the risk of developing the sequelae of neo-coronavirus.”
Lung damage in New Coronavirus patients is worse than in older smokers According to the Daily Mail, a trauma surgeon said that the lungs of New Coronavirus recovery patients look much worse than those of smokers.
Dr. Brittany Bankhead-Kendall, an assistant professor at Texas Tech University health Sciences Center, has treated thousands of patients since the outbreak began last March. She says x-rays of smokers’ lungs are a bit fuzzy, but the lungs of CCPV patients are almost completely white, indicating severe scarring and a lack of air entering the organ.
Dr. Brittany tweeted on Jan. 4: “Lungs infected with CCP pneumonia look worse than those of any kind of smoker we’ve seen. Newly crowned patients have blood clots and shortness of breath…”
Many health professionals have been focusing on mortality, but have ignored the long-term effects of the CCP virus on patients. Dr. Brittany says everyone is worried about death, but one problem that all survivors, and those diagnosed, will face is that the CCP virus usually leads to complications such as pneumonia, which occurs when the lungs fill with fluid.
When the air sacs are full of fluid, they cannot absorb enough oxygen, which leads to symptoms such as coughing and shortness of breath. The study also found that patients with CCLV had damage to the epithelial cells that connect the airway passages from the nose to the lungs. Dr. Brittany said that every one of her patients who exhibited symptoms of the virus underwent x-rays, and others who had no symptoms were also examined, and the lungs of 70 to 80 percent of those tested, were very badly affected.
Dr. Brittany says: “There are still people who say, ‘I’m fine, I don’t have any problems,’ but when you examine their chest x-rays, they definitely have terrible results.” To show the difference, Dr. Brittany shared three x-rays:one of a smoker, one of a newly crowned person, and the last one of a healthy person.
Figure: Top left is an x-ray of a smoker, top right is an x-ray of a CCPV patient, and below is an x-ray of a normal person (source: Dr. Brittany)
The x-ray of a healthy person shows a lot of black space, which means that the person is able to inhale a lot of air. Meanwhile, the x-ray of a smoker shows white lines and blurring, indicating inflammation and damage to the lung walls or alveoli. Lung turbidity is a white foggy cloud that contrasts with the brightness of the lungs and usually indicates that the lungs are full of fluid, bacteria, or immune system cells, for example. It also means that the patient is unable to inhale enough oxygen as a healthy lung would normally do. In contrast, the lungs of a CCPV patient are a blur, almost entirely covered with white lines.
Dr. Brittany says, “In an X-ray of a patient with CCHV, you will either see a lot of white dense scars or you will see the entire lung with such scars. Maybe the newly crowned recovered person feels that there is nothing physically wrong, but this fact on the chest x-ray is a sure indication that you may have health problems later.”
Some patients end up with permanent lung damage or scarring, but it’s unclear if this is true for all patients. Public health experts say that if you still feel shortness of breath after recovering from a CCA virus infection, contact your primary care physician immediately.
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