The early papers from China showed distinct patterns of lung damage on CT scans which helped to make the diagnosis, but this was not the main question I had.
Soon the autopsy papers showed that clotting in the lungs was occurring in the capillaries (the smallest blood vessels). This means that we would not be able to detect clotting in the lungs using standard imaging techniques.
(Remember, this is 2020 data which could have been published in early 2021)
13/25
I am posting this story now so that we (humans) can learn some lessons.
When we encounter a new disease, we should all stop and ask ....
What are we dealing with?
Not ...
How is this similar to other diseases we know about?
14/25
Not ...
What old language can we use to describe this disease?
But ...
What is different?
What is new?
What don't we understand?
And ...
How can we collaborate to build a multidisciplinary understanding of diseases processes?
15/25
At the outset of the pandemic, ‘experts’ were called on to advise on population level planning.
This is fine (if you like graphs), but we also need a multidisciplinary approach to attempt to understand the biological mechanisms of the disease we are dealing with.
16/25
You might think that medical organizations asked – what are we dealing with?
They didn’t!
They assumed it was just like influenza and kept calling the disease ‘pneumonia’.
This was a fatal error.
17/25
The pattern of lung disease we saw on medical imaging in people with #COVID-19 tells us that the disease is NOT pneumonia, it is a vasculopathy (disease of blood vessels).
This raises another question …
How does this happen?
18/25
This question led to hypothesizing that the virus is getting to the lungs from the upper respiratory tract (nose and mouth) via the bloodstream.
And this explains why gum disease is a major risk factor for death from COVID-19.
The concept of pathogens escaping the mouth and travelling to the rest of the body is now my major area of interest (writing a book).
20/25
What have I learned from COVID-19? …
That our lack of understanding of the biology of the mouth and the importance of #OralHealth is the biggest missing link in the whole of medicine.
21/25
In summary, gum disease bacteria escape the mouth all the time and are directly implicated in biological mechanisms of numerous common diseases of the body including cardiovascular disease, diabetes,
22/25
My frustration with the world of medicine (my world) is that we are pathologically unable/unwilling to shift ideas or to see the body holistically.
Our blinkered and siloed approach kills people!
Oral health is the most siloed of all areas of medicine.
23/25
I'm now working with likeminded radiologists on an invited review of #COVID imaging for a major radiology journal.
We propose formation of a system by which all medical/scientific specialties collaborate to build understanding when we encounter a new disease ...
24/25
… to ensure correct language is used to describe a disease (not old and potentially misleading language)
And …
To facilitate challenges to incorrect concepts, to stop them propagating and becoming fixed dogma in the medical literature.
25/25
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Some thoughts on gum disease, oral dysbiosis, specific gum disease bacteria, escape from the mouth, vascular translocation, infection of human organs, chronic inflammation, disease causation and death.
Let's start with #diabetes ...
Long thread 🧵
NHS Commissioning Standards for Dental Care in people with #diabetes state...
'people with periodontitis* are at greater risk of developing type 2 diabetes and experiencing diabetes complications'
*Periodontitis= severe gum disease (one of the most common human diseases)
1/19
2/19
The same NHS document states ...
'effective treatment of periodontitis in people with type 2 diabetes can improve glycaemic control to an extent that can reduce the need for an additional prescribed medication ...
The mouth is an immune organ (not just a cakehole). If the physical and microbial barrier of the mouth fails, the immune function of the mouth fails. The mouth becomes an open wound - an open wound which persists for the days, weeks, months, years and decades of your whole life.
And from the open wound of your mouth, your gum disease bacteria (which created the dysbiotic wound in your gums by evading and subverting your immune response), then travel all over your body, via the gut, airways of the lungs, and directly into your bloodstream.
Translocated gum disease bacteria then lead to inflammatory processes throughout the body via biological mechanisms which are now described in detail.
Atherosclerosis
Insulin resistance
Autoimmunity
Neuroinflammation
Vascular inflammation
Gut/lung epithelial inflammation
Gum bacteria also contribute to
#LungDiseases (#Asthma #Bronchitis/COPD #LungCancer)
#ChronicKidneyDisease
#Obesity
#MetabolicSyndrome
#FattyLiverDisease
And please don’t reply by saying correlation does not equal causation …
Because I am not talking about a graph. I am talking about biological mechanisms
The pathogens of gum disease are truly extraordinary survivors. They have evolved mechanisms to evade the human immune system and flip the switch on chronic inflammation in the mouth …
Here's a reminder of my take on #COVID-19 (the disease not the pandemic).
It's not what you think it is ...
A thread 👇
1/23
The acute phase of #COVID was and is misunderstood by the majority of doctors.
The lung disease (the thing that many died of) was not a pneumonia.
Yes, it was a lung disease caused by a virus, but this is where the similarity with other viruses which cause pneumonias ends.
2/23
Influenza causes inflammation in the lung airways. #COVID did not do this.
The lung disease we saw in the acute phase of COVID was a vascular disease. It caused inflammation, clotting, and congestion in the smallest blood vessels of the lungs.
3/23
I wrote this letter with colleagues - Dr Rob Alcock & Professor Matthijs Oudkerk - in response to a review of the medical imaging appearances of the lung disease of #COVID. It was a good review but like most journal articles it did not accurately describe the lung disease.
2/18
The lung disease of acute #COVID-19 has been incorrectly described as a 'pneumonia' by almost all researchers and doctors since the beginning of the pandemic.
Oral bacteria frequently pass across our gum tissue and enters our bloodstream. This occurs to a greater extent in people with #gumdisease which makes the gums more leaky.
2/19
The actions of immune cells (neutrophils) in the mouth alter the protein structures of oral bacteria by a process called citrullination.
Oral bacteria with altered proteins (citrullinated proteins) are detected by cells of the immune system.
3/19