Everyone keeps telling you that the side effects from AstraZeneca and Jansen vaccines are rare and you should get the vaccine. I totally 100% agree with this, but trust is only part of the equation. So here’s what I know about #VITT or vaccine induced thrombotic thrombocytopenia.
Let’s start with the name, because it tells us a bit about the problem. Thrombocytopenia means a low platelet count, which can happen for many reasons, and thrombotic refers to the generation of blood clots. When you understand that platelets are what start most clots ....
You really are a leaky meat bag. No offence. Platelets are constantly plugging tiny holes in blood vessels and maintaining vascular health. They are kind of like clotting grenades. Super effective at what they do, but you don’t want them going off in the wrong place.
For a platelet to go off it needs to be activated. There are plenty of safe guards to “pulling the pin” but it’s a fine balance. Not sensitive enough, and you bleed to death, too much and everything clots and drops off. These mechanisms are highly refined.
Coronavirus targets blood vessels. That’s why COVID infections have such high rates of clots associated with them. These adenovirus derived vaccines deliver the gene for your body to make corona virus spike protein but no corona virus.
Because your immune system is seeing both the adenovirus and also the spike protein that is made after infection more than one antibody is being made, as opposed to mRNA vaccines which only present one thing for the immune system to chew on.
Some where in this immunologic dance, there’s a misstep. Trust me, Tic Toc has proven this to me. It doesn’t happen often but when it does an antibody is made that interacts with a receptor on platelets and activates them. These activated platelets now have a hair trigger.
They can form clots in funny places, like the spleen, or the lungs or even the brain. We have a really good model of this process with heparin, a drug that is supposed to prevent clots, and so we have a highly and effective way to manage #VITT
Why is this process so rare? Like I have said, there are many nature safeguards to prevent clots from happening. Also, everyone’s immune system is a bit different, so getting all the stars to line up before this happens.
Is it lethal? Rarely, but yes, and now that we know about it and are getting the word out, it can be treated, and very effectively. It has tell tale symptoms. Progressive headaches, chest pain, shortness of breath, leg swelling, unexplained abdo pain.
Is it worth the risk. Hey, I’m an ICU doc. I see the worst case scenarios, so of course I think so, but my partner got it, and she’s a Pediatrician. I recommend it to my kids. Life is full of risks, but this one is worthwhile.
We have funny approaches to risk. Really retrospective. I see sins of omission and sins of commission in medicine all the time. They are the same black marks, but we blame actions harder than neglect.
Any way ... gotta get back to work. Hope this helps.
As #COVID19 escalates, & predictably hospital and ICU admissions follow, I am being asked to do more interviews. Please, let me be clear, physicians are not saying, “I told you so”. We have been here before, and this is all so predictable. It’s hard not to sound frustrated.
We want the best for our patients. We’ve advocated for plans that would have avoided this situation. We’ve seen other provinces do this the right way. We are left pleading with people to do the right things at great personal cost, but they are fatiguing from this harassment.
Most of us will make it through this alive, but we all will have scars from it. Physical, mental, social, financial, we will all be marked by these half hearted measures. Death is only one marker of this pandemic, but right now it’s the one I’m most focused on.
First a caveat. Until we have good data most of this thread is theoretical, but to keep you out of suspense, I believe that our current vaccines will protect us from evolving strains of coronavirus.
The reason for this is that the target chosen for these vaccines was its virulence factor, the thing that makes this normally annoying old virus deadly. The capsid spike protein that interacts with our bodies ACE2 receptor.
Viruses need a way to get into cells to infect them. Previous generations had spike proteins that opened doors on tissues of the throat and nose. The ensuing infection and inflammation is the stuffiness that we associate with a cold. You can survive a sore throat.
A short tread on community.
You might know that I am a champion of @coffee_outside. It was a simple idea that brought people together every Friday morning in a local park. Most arrived by bicycles and some even drank tea but that wasn’t it was all about.
It was really about being connected with people who were once strangers. It helped that we were like minded souls, but given time and commitment it flourished just as those relationships did.
Like other things in this crazy time, it has dwindled. Despite being outside by nature our group has gotten smaller. Like a seed that drys.
This is not where we are now, but given the ICU admission rates and EXPONENTIAL growth rate of cases, coupled with our inability to contact trace in a timely matter, this is where we are heading. Unless something is done.
If you are reading this thread, you are probably mostly in agreement with the problem. The challenge is to depoliticize this issue. We were all together on this in March, and as a result the first wave was brought under control. Our eastern provinces still have control.
Some uncomfortable truths about ageism and #COVIDー19. The average life expectancy of someone who lives to 80 is 9 years, they however are most likely to die if infected, and should they get sick enough to need ICU support their mortality pushes 80%
Consequently, they rarely are admitted to ICU. This means: 1. ICU occupancy lags hospital admission rates significantly and is an insensitive metric for healthcare capacity and strain. 2. These are preventable deaths that take significant number of quality years with them.
The bad news is that it is a statistical game. As hospital numbers increase, so will the proportion of people with favourable ICU outcomes who need our care. That’s when we start filling our beds. When those people get sick they take weeks of treatment.
I apologize to everyone I could not individually reply to. So a brief thread about ICU capacity, as it pertains to Edmonton in the time of #COVID19.
Edmonton’s General ICU beds are spread out amongst all of its hospitals. We have two major trauma centres situated at the University Hospital and Royal Alexandra Hospital. The Sturgeon, Grey Nuns and Misericordia handle both surgical and medical disease.
The university also has the Mazinkowski which manages heart surgery and ECMO, and a neurosurgical ICU. The RAH has multiple step down units, both surgical and medical that can act provide high level care.