Informative post from Facebook.

AnonymousUser

Redshirt
Jun 5, 2018
25
0
0
Exactly. I expect you can go back to April and find some positive posts from me about it. Since then some real scientifically obtained data has come in. The truth is nothing works real well, and that drug at BEST does nothing.

To say the drug "at best does nothing" is a false statement and simply not true. See my previous post further up the page.
 

57stratdawg

Heisman
Dec 1, 2004
148,434
24,213
113
You can fight the "I dont care about the CDC's recommendations, I ain't wearing a mask till I see the data" war if you want.

I simply pointed out that Fauci really pissed in the "hydroxy-bros" Cheerios last week.
 

SheltonChoked

Redshirt
Feb 27, 2008
1,786
0
0
It's been so widely used that you have doctors who now publicly swear by it, including the guy in this thread who does indeed appear to be who he says he is. You literally have posters on this very board who have been treated with it, they claim successfully.

From my personal perspective, all the original US studies supposedly debunking it were poorly aimed, particularly that VA one, which has been widely cited.
Nearly from day one, the best window touted for this treatment was early, but every one of the studies that were thrown up by the media during the early months ignored that, and they all loved to harp on the cardiac risks, which have been known and identified for literally decades.
Combine that with a lack of a full-fledged, organized US study to point to, and it looks really fishy. Really, really fishy.

It may not be a cure, or even really helping compared to other drugs, but to the objective observer the case is absolutely not open and shut.

Look up Placebo Effect.

That's why you have to have double blind study. I can give you water to drink and it I tell you it will cure you, it will work up to 50% of the time. https://www.health.harvard.edu/ment...ers discovered that the,act of taking a pill.
 

SheltonChoked

Redshirt
Feb 27, 2008
1,786
0
0
So there is no double standard, please produce the double blind study that wearing a mask outside a hospital setting significantly decreases the spread of a respiratory virus. You can't, because there isn't one. That's why is some Docs say it helps, and some say it doesn't.

Hard to make a mask study double blind since you can feel a mask and the researcher can see it on you, but there are plenty of studies that show mask wearing helps reduce the transmission rate for aerosol diseases

Like this one.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2662657/
 

jethreauxdawg

Heisman
Dec 20, 2010
10,857
14,346
113
Oh, you are cool all right. I've had a friend die from it. I've had many people I knew die from it. There are some warming up in the bullpen right now. What you really are is just a common jerk.

In the thread last week you said you were from a small town and knew at least 10 people who have died from it. That was almost more than everyone else in the thread combined. Maybe you are the root cause. Or maybe, you continue to be full of crap. Or both.
 

jethreauxdawg

Heisman
Dec 20, 2010
10,857
14,346
113
So you are saying that believing you will improve actually helps? What a novel idea, but by all means, let’s keep preaching this thing is going to end western civilization (directed and media and doom and gloomers, not your comment).
 

thatsbaseball

All-American
May 29, 2007
17,885
6,598
113
And what if he said his personal experiences with the drug (which nearly all doctors have by now one way or the other) have been good ....thus his recommendation ?
 
Last edited:

AROB44

Junior
Mar 20, 2008
1,398
241
63
Didn't know anything "informative" came off Facebook....or any other social media for that matter
 

Ddawg69

Redshirt
Dec 27, 2019
36
34
18
I cannot completely disprove his experience, but there is a lot wrong here. He says he plans to publish this data, but it doesn't seem to me that he has randomized any patients or done the many other things you need to do to solidify scientific evidence. Its not surprising to me that most of the patient's he is treating as an outpatient are not ending up hospitalized because most people that do poorly are usually going to be diagnosed in the ER upon admission to the hospital.

Additionally, he has some random diagram of the microscopic pathology of the disease. I'm not sure how he got to that conclusion. Is he doing lab bench work as well to validate his "stage" diagram? That looks like complete hypothesis to me, not to mention this virus affects a lot more than just the lung tissue.

You get a lot of rope to practice medicine in a place like Greenville where the medical care is sparse, hence an oncologist taking on first call for COVID-19 cases. I'm not discounting his commitment and drive to help the community, but this is not solid evidence yet. I hope he is able to publish some useful data out of this experience, but until then his conviction has some degree of sensationalism.
 

codeDawg

Redshirt
Nov 13, 2007
2,102
0
36
I shared it because it hit close to home and because it is one of the better explanations I've read about how it can be effective, as well as how it cannot be effective. It also blows my mind how Facebook is blatantly censoring potentially helpful information.

Well, it sounds science-y, but it isn't informative. There are no references to data for his patients, no citations of the studies he is referencing, only someone saying "hey I'm a doctor, trust what I'm saying despite mounting evidence to the contrary." Finishing medical school and practicing medicine doesn't make you right about everything.

We have medicine that is somewhat effective. Why are people so hung up on this one?
 

SheltonChoked

Redshirt
Feb 27, 2008
1,786
0
0
So you are saying that believing you will improve actually helps? What a novel idea, but by all means, let’s keep preaching this thing is going to end western civilization (directed and media and doom and gloomers, not your comment).

By that rational, we should pass it out to everyone,and by it I mean placebo pills.
 

Len2003

Redshirt
May 13, 2018
1,103
0
36
The Facebook doctor has no idea if HCQ stops corona in Stages 1 and 2 (what even are stages 1 and 2?). Anyone that is saying they know that any of these drugs for sure work, is not telling the truth. HCQ works in the lab, but it's failed before to work in humans.
 

SheltonChoked

Redshirt
Feb 27, 2008
1,786
0
0
And what if he said his personal experiences with the drug (which nearly all doctors have by now one way or the other) have been good ....thus his recommendation ?

If it was today, I'd find another doctor.

3 weeks ago, I would have thought differently.

I want a doctor to trust the research and not his "personal experience". See no one person can get enough "personal experience" to cover everything. He has to learn form what others have done. I'm sure the Doctor doesn't have his own names for things.

If your doctor told you in his personal experience, bloodletting and leeches cured your headache, would you do that?
 

AnonymousUser

Redshirt
Jun 5, 2018
25
0
0
Anyone that is saying they know that any of these drugs for sure work, is not telling the truth. HCQ works in the lab, but it's failed before to work in humans.

You sure about that?
Hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin plus zinc vs hydroxychloroquine andazithromycin alone: outcomes in hospitalized COVID-19 patients (May 2020)
https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1...036v1.full.pdf

"The main finding of this study is that after adjusting for the timing of zinc therapy, wefound that the addition of zinc sulfate to hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin wasfound to associate with a decrease in mortality or transition to hospice among patientswho did not require ICU level of care, but this association was not significant in patientswho were treated in the ICU... As such, zinc may have a role inpreventing the virus from progressing to severe disease, but once the aberrantproduction of systemic immune mediators is initiated, known as the cytokine storm, theaddition of zinc may no longer be effective [17]. Our findings suggest a potentialtherapeutic synergistic mechanism of zinc sulfate with hydroxychloroquine, if used earlyon in presentation with COVID-19. However, our findings do not suggest a prophylacticbenefit of zinc sulfate in the absence of a zinc ionophore, despite interest in this therapyfor prevention."
 
Last edited:

L4Dawg

All-American
Oct 27, 2016
10,375
7,221
113
And what if he said his personal experiences with the drug (which nearly all doctors have by now one way or the other) have been good ....thus his recommendation ?
That's not really relevant anymore. Two months ago it was because that was all we had to go on. Since then we have gold standard science on it. The science says it's useless for COVID, at best.
 

L4Dawg

All-American
Oct 27, 2016
10,375
7,221
113
You sure about that?
Hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin plus zinc vs hydroxychloroquine andazithromycin alone: outcomes in hospitalized COVID-19 patients (May 2020)
https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1...036v1.full.pdf
That's a study done using medical records from back in may. Better live studies (random placebo double blind studies) have shown it it of no use with this disease. Some have shown it actually results in worse outcomes than a placebo.
 
Last edited:

L4Dawg

All-American
Oct 27, 2016
10,375
7,221
113
To say the drug "at best does nothing" is a false statement and simply not true. See my previous post further up the page.
It's 100% true. Here is another truth, if Trump had never mentioned it it would have already gone away and we would be a little bit closer to finding something that actually works. I'm neither pro nor anti-Trump but he just needs to shut up about science and medicine. He has done a lot of damage.
 

SheltonChoked

Redshirt
Feb 27, 2008
1,786
0
0
To say the drug "at best does nothing" is a false statement and simply not true. See my previous post further up the page.

It does nothing: https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2019014

Among patients hospitalized with mild-to-moderate Covid-19, the use of hydroxychloroquine, alone or with azithromycin, did not improve clinical status at 15 days as compared with standard care.

You are right it does worse than nothing.

It causes earlier and longer Ventilator use.



It does nothing to prevent infection:https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2016638
After high-risk or moderate-risk exposure to Covid-19, hydroxychloroquine did not prevent illness compatible with Covid-19 or confirmed infection when used as postexposure prophylaxis within 4 days after exposure.
 

SheltonChoked

Redshirt
Feb 27, 2008
1,786
0
0
You sure about that?
Hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin plus zinc vs hydroxychloroquine andazithromycin alone: outcomes in hospitalized COVID-19 patients (May 2020)
https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1...036v1.full.pdf

"The main finding of this study is that after adjusting for the timing of zinc therapy, wefound that the addition of zinc sulfate to hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin wasfound to associate with a decrease in mortality or transition to hospice among patientswho did not require ICU level of care, but this association was not significant in patientswho were treated in the ICU... As such, zinc may have a role inpreventing the virus from progressing to severe disease, but once the aberrantproduction of systemic immune mediators is initiated, known as the cytokine storm, theaddition of zinc may no longer be effective [17]. Our findings suggest a potentialtherapeutic synergistic mechanism of zinc sulfate with hydroxychloroquine, if used earlyon in presentation with COVID-19. However, our findings do not suggest a prophylacticbenefit of zinc sulfate in the absence of a zinc ionophore, despite interest in this therapyfor prevention."

And since May 2020, Double blind studies and research on using it in people found that it did not work.
 

AnonymousUser

Redshirt
Jun 5, 2018
25
0
0
That's a study done using medical records from back in may. Better live studies (random placebo double blind studies) have shown it it of no use with this disease. Some have shown it actually results in worse outcomes than a placebo.

There are double blind control trials underway right now testing this like the one below. This one is scheduled to run until September.
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04370782

I have seen studies that looked at HCQ or HCQ + Azo at varying degrees of patient severity and had mixed results.

However, I have not seen any clinical trials about Zinc+HCQ given early in the disease course and showing negative outcomes. If you have more information I would like to see it. This is one big open experiment running in real time. I'm willing to take any good information out there. Right now, this appears to be a legitimate treatment option for early disease course. Studies not accounting for zinc levels are not comparable.
 

HailStout

Heisman
Jan 4, 2020
5,414
15,236
113
And what if he said his personal experiences with the drug (which nearly all doctors have by now one way or the other) have been good ....thus his recommendation ?

I have a ton of personal experience. It does not work. But I suspect those who want to find someone to give it to them would just ignore my personal experience and the scientific proof that exists.

At no point should I allow what I want to be true to over rule what science has shown to be true while practicing medicine. Doing so is dangerous. If you find a doctor who wants to ignore the most recent data and give you Plaquenil, just be careful moving forward. Chances are it won’t hurt you, but the people who tell you there are no risks are just straight out wrong.
 

AnonymousUser

Redshirt
Jun 5, 2018
25
0
0
And since May 2020, Double blind studies and research on using it in people found that it did not work.

I understand what you're trying to say, but again, that study you linked did not examine the addition of zinc sulfate to the drug course so it doesn't prove anything. The addition of Zinc is the important part current trails are examining.
 

codeDawg

Redshirt
Nov 13, 2007
2,102
0
36
It's just bizarre. If you aren't a physician, pharmacist, or pharmacologist (and a small set of others) and you've found yourself fired up about this drug one way or the other, you might want to question why. Are you searching for truth or validation right now? As I mentioned earlier in the thread, there other other cheap drugs (decadron for one) that are showing modest effectiveness that nobody talks about. There's a reason for that and it has zero to do with science (or conspiracy - pharma would love to be able to make positive claims about their production as it relates to drugs - I don't care if the winning drugs are cheap - there's profit to be made).

I've tried to read some studies with varying conclusions and you can pick at a lot of it. The reason for that isn't conspiracy - it's just all new - the science is going to settle itself out over time. It just so happens we have two very unique circumstances going on: 1) we all REALLY want a solid treatment ASAP and 2) the president jumped the gun and tried to sell it rather than making responsible unbiased statements about the research going on with HCQ and others. It was just strange to hear a president put so many eggs in that basket and now everyone is all ginned up and digging in.

Very good post. I mean, I would love for this drug to work, and it probably does in certain scenarios we haven't completely sorted out yet, but the only thing that you see talked about here or in the conservative echo chamber is random doctors declaring it works and there is some conspiracy. There are people going on Facebook reposting things about this one single treatment in a universe of treatments. Why do people act like this?
 

dog12

Senior
Sep 15, 2016
1,944
580
113
https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2019014

Not from Facebook, so I’m not sure it’s reliable.

I really cannot understand the obsession with this. We used plaquenil on everybody we saw when this first broke. It did not work. There are now peer reviewed studies that say it did not work.

Also, I’m not for censorship. I wish they would just leave this trash up. Deleting it just makes people believe the cigarette smoking man is trying to snuff out fox mulder. And yes, that’s the level of lunacy these conspiracies have reached:


The study you cite involves virus patients receiving 4 liters of supplemental oxygen per minute.

Wouldn't a patient receiving that much supplemental oxygen have "significant" oxygen requirements?

If so, then that patient would at late-Stage III or Stage IV, right?

The doctor's discussion in the original post expressly states that hydroxy, or any other anti-viral would be ineffective at that point: "Late stage III and stage IV is when oxygen requirements are significant. By then, the virus has been cleared thanks to the immune system, but capillary clotting and inflammation of the green barrier (shown above) are still rampant. As the virus has been cleared, you can see clearly why, at this stage, Hydroxy (or any other antiviral) will miserably fail at making an impact. This is the stage where all the negative studies of Hydroxychloroquine that you hear about have been publicized."
 

thekimmer

All-Conference
Aug 30, 2012
8,265
2,259
113
Yes and no....

I’m not a disease expert but isn’t the common cold also a coronavirus? I’ve read where it also isn’t what makes you sick but it’s the actual immune response itself as opposed to the virus that makes you feel so lousy.

The common cold is caused by many different types of viruses. The ones most often associated with common cold by far are the rhinoviruses. There are also several coronaviruses that circulate in the general population and cause common cold but then not all coronaviruses are created equally. None of the cold coronaviruses are associated with SARS.

And yes, many of the symptoms of infectious diseases are related to immune response and the vigor of that response in rare instances can be lethal such as was the case with the 1918 Spanish Flu.
 

dog12

Senior
Sep 15, 2016
1,944
580
113
If it was today, I'd find another doctor.

3 weeks ago, I would have thought differently.

I want a doctor to trust the research and not his "personal experience". See no one person can get enough "personal experience" to cover everything. He has to learn form what others have done. I'm sure the Doctor doesn't have his own names for things.

If your doctor told you in his personal experience, bloodletting and leeches cured your headache, would you do that?


Isn't research based upon the "personal experience" of the person(s) whom performed the research?

Also, the original post said the doctor has been treating virus patients since February.

Finally, wouldn't the doctor read any available research to properly keep up with the virus treatments being administered across the country?
 

dog12

Senior
Sep 15, 2016
1,944
580
113
I have a ton of personal experience. It does not work. But I suspect those who want to find someone to give it to them would just ignore my personal experience and the scientific proof that exists.

At no point should I allow what I want to be true to over rule what science has shown to be true while practicing medicine. Doing so is dangerous. If you find a doctor who wants to ignore the most recent data and give you Plaquenil, just be careful moving forward. Chances are it won’t hurt you, but the people who tell you there are no risks are just straight out wrong.


Can you describe your personal experience?

Also, based upon your personal experience, what is the best method of treatment for the virus?
 

L4Dawg

All-American
Oct 27, 2016
10,375
7,221
113
Isn't research based upon the "personal experience" of the person(s) whom performed the research?

Also, the original post said the doctor has been treating virus patients since February.

Finally, wouldn't the doctor read any available research to properly keep up with the virus treatments being administered across the country?
NO personal experience does not come into it, not with a double blind study. Neither the patient nor the doctor giving the treatment knows what they are actually getting in a double blind study. That's what those studies are specifically designed to eliminate, personal bias.
 

L4Dawg

All-American
Oct 27, 2016
10,375
7,221
113
Can you describe your personal experience?

Also, based upon your personal experience, what is the best method of treatment for the virus?
He is a physician treating COVID patients i m pretty sure.
 

dog12

Senior
Sep 15, 2016
1,944
580
113
NO personal experience does not come into it, not with a double blind study. Neither the patient nor the doctor giving the treatment knows what they are actually getting in a double blind study. That's what those studies are specifically designed to eliminate, personal bias.


Do you think all research is performed without personal bias? Surely not.

I've seen enough research during my life to know that "bad" data and results are often ignored, minimized or thrown out to support the desired conclusions of the researchers.
 

HailStout

Heisman
Jan 4, 2020
5,414
15,236
113
Can you describe your personal experience?

Also, based upon your personal experience, what is the best method of treatment for the virus?

When COVID first showed up everybody received plaquenil and azithromycin. At no point did it feel like it was helping. Not to say that every patient I saw died. Of course not. Some people got over it, but the ones who got sick responded to nothing we did. I was not shocked when the studies started to come out that showed no benefit. We stopped using it. Out only real treatment at that time was plasma. It was hit or miss if we could get it for each patient and usually was not rapidly available. I noticed no difference in the clinical course of those patients without plaquenil/azithromycon compared to those who had received it.

We now give Remdesivir and Decadron to anyone requiring fio2. Usually plasma as well. We also consider Remdesivir in certain situations. I am in no way saying this is a miracle cure: people are still dying. I do feel for the first time during all this That we have a treatment regimen that is helping some of the patients. We have kept a significantly larger portion out of the ICU and off the ventilator.

The above is my personal experience. If a definitive study came out that showed plaquenil worked, I would give it in a heartbeat regardless of how I feel about it. I welcome any treatment that will help. The science as well as my personal experience says plaquenil does not.
 

SheltonChoked

Redshirt
Feb 27, 2008
1,786
0
0
I understand what you're trying to say, but again, that study you linked did not examine the addition of zinc sulfate to the drug course so it doesn't prove anything. The addition of Zinc is the important part current trails are examining.

And I understand what you are trying to say, but the evidence so far shows HCQ, HCQ+zpack, nor high does of Zinc Sulfate is not an effective treatment.

https://www.covid19treatmentguidelines.nih.gov/adjunctive-therapy/zinc/

There is a non peer reviewed study, that the authors of the study say this cannot be used to guide clinical practice, that supports what you say. Which is why it's in a clinical trial.

High doses of Zinc are harmful as well.