interesting and relevant article in the NYT recently that summarizes the damage that coronavirus can cause in the lungs,
Opinion | The Infection That’s Silently Killing Coronavirus Patients
the tldr is (@ the mods, if I'm breaching copyright by quoting this much I apologize and will happily remove it)
"The coronavirus attacks lung cells that make surfactant. This substance helps the air sacs in the lungs stay open between breaths and is critical to normal lung function. As the inflammation from Covid pneumonia starts, it causes the air sacs to collapse, and oxygen levels fall. Yet the lungs initially remain “compliant,” not yet stiff or heavy with fluid. This means patients can still expel carbon dioxide — and without a buildup of carbon dioxide, patients do not feel short of breath.
Patients compensate for the low oxygen in their blood by breathing faster and deeper — and this happens without their realizing it. This silent hypoxia, and the patient’s physiological response to it, causes even more inflammation and more air sacs to collapse, and the pneumonia worsens until oxygen levels plummet. In effect, patients are injuring their own lungs by breathing harder and harder. Twenty percent of Covid pneumonia patients then go on to a second and deadlier phase of lung injury. Fluid builds up and the lungs become stiff, carbon dioxide rises, and patients develop acute respiratory failure."
Hi @UTscuba ,
You've encased it in quotes and you provide a reference so there shouldn't be a copyright issue. The reference in the "Twenty percent" link is an interesting read.
Best regards,
DDM