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From HepatitisC.net

Understanding Your Test Results: Complete Blood Count

If you have been diagnosed with hepatitis C, or another medical condition, your doctor may want to perform regular blood tests to monitor your health. A common blood test is a complete blood count, also known as a “CBC”.

A complete blood count is a blood test that measures the levels of red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets in your blood. A CBC can also help your healthcare provider to evaluate your overall health.

If your doctor has ordered a complete blood count, you may be wondering what the results mean, or if your results are “normal”. In addition to talking to your doctor, check-out our guide to understanding your complete blood count below. This guide covers the different parts of a CBC test, typical (“normal”) results, and some questions to ask your doctor.

They laughed at me when I saved my receipts, look who’s laughing now.

Pretty complete, logical, shareable, and pretty much correct from another Mastie. For us Vulnerable.

Today’s stats. Hopefully latest cooling off of public exposure and travel will slow things down and stretch it out so we won’t have ICU setups in the halls, tents, parking lots like in Italy now. US case numbers are probably 10X low as are Italy due to lack of test kits.

Good article, serum ferritin levels indicator, common autoimmune triggers.

“In terms of its pathologic origins, secondary HLH/MAS develops as part of a ‘cytokine storm,’” Randy Q. Cron, MD, PhD, of the Children’s Hospital of Alabama and the University of Alabama at Birmingham, and colleagues wrote.”

“The proinflammatory cytokines that have been associated with secondary HLH/MAS include interferon, interleukin1 (IL1), IL6, IL12, IL18, and tumor necrosis factor. Anakinra is a recombinant human IL1 receptor antagonist that blocks IL1 function.”

IL-6 inhibitor👍

Set Phasers to STUN! And don’t wear a red shirt when you.are out hunting TP.:mask::rofl::sunglasses:

I’m sad they are experiency what we’ve felt for years

Don’t Get Mad, Get Proactive: A Covid-19 Weapon for YOU

2d

Yes, we have a public health crisis. But if you’re like us, you are very tired of the hype, the political posturing and the social media frenzy. More than that, though, we are MAD.

We are all here at Ben’s Friends because we have a rare disease, and many of us are part of that ominous “at risk” population.

Being marginalized as a rare disease patient is nothing new to us. But this time is different. There are 7000 rare diseases that affect 30 million Americans alone. Washing our hands, buying toilet paper and hand sanitizer just doesn’t cut it. Well-intended statements from health and government officials, meant to allay fears in the general population, can increase anxiety in ours. Are we feeling the stress? You bet.

We are all preparing in our own way. It’s important to be proactive:

Be prepared: considering the future today is the best way of avoiding chaos tomorrow

Have your solution ready before the problem happens

Use innovations

Be flexible

Strive to understand why things are happening as they are

Roadmap the future

Over the next short while you will be receiving some messages from your Ben’s Friends Team on how to use innovation to help you be proactive and be prepared in the event of exposure and/or symptoms.

Now is a good time to reconnect with your community even if you have been away for awhile.

Doing well? Give some support and encouragement to others! Need support? Your Ben’s Friends community is the place to be. Either way, we can help each other. When nobody else gets it, we together do.

Getting back to innovation and being prepared, here’s one that you will be able to start using right away. Be ready with the solution before the problem happens. Here’s what your Ben’s Friends Team has done for you:

We’ve partnered with Backpack Health so that you can consolidate your health information and records in one safe, secure, password-protected online location. You choose the health information that you feel is essential, and you place it in that protected location.

You will be able to share your information with whomever you choose: health care providers, hospital staff, test centres, triage personnel. They can, with your permission, download it, and use it to provide you with the health care services that you need and deserve. Your Ben’s Friends team has also pre-loaded an “emergency share card” which explains that, as a rare disease patient, you require special care.

Have your solution ready: as our care systems are becoming strained, the person you end up seeing may have no knowledge of you or your disease. On the spot, whether you are feeling up to it or not, you will be able to tell them what they need to know, so that you get the special care that you need and deserve.

The join up site has gone live:

Backpack Health

More instructions will be posted in your community’s “News” section. (Home page, left hand side.) You will get notifications and more information in a few days.
We urge all of you to be proactive and take advantage of this opportunity. Maybe you won’t need it. Meanwhile, being prepared and proactive and having your solution ready before the problem happens will give you some peace of mind. And goodness knows we all need that.
Your Ben’s Friends Team

Digging Deeper Beyond Itch

Scientists identify an immune cell receptor that maybe at the root of some drug allergies.

Key mechanisms governing resolution of lung inflammation

C. T. Robb, K. H. Regan, A. G. Rossi, et.al.

“Moreover, in ALI/ARDS, extensive damage to the endothelial/epithelial cell barriers causes leakage of edema fluid and inflammatory cells into the alveolar spaces resulting in hypoxemia and respiratory failure.”

"Mast cells (via degranulation) can release potent inflammatory mediators including histamines, proteases, chemotactic factors, cytokines and arachidonic acid metabolites that impact upon the vasculature, smooth muscle, connective tissue, mucous glands and other inflammatory cells [50].

Like eosinophils and basophils, mast cells are implicated in allergic airway inflammation, with mast cell numbers elevated in pulmonary alveoli and airways, as well as in asthmatic lungs or in bronchial alveolar lavage (BAL) fluid from patients with IPF and sarcoidosis [51]. "

From Friend Donna Beales. Only solid reference in viral and NSAID interaction so far.

https://academic.oup.com/cid/article/49/9/1405/301441

https://www.uptodate.com/contents/anaphylaxis-symptoms-and-diagnosis-beyond-the-basics

Beyond IgE—When Do IgE-Crosslinking and Effector Cell Activation Lead to Clinical Anaphylaxis?

Lars K. Poulsen, Bettina M. Jensen, Vanesa Esteban and Lene Heise Garvey

https://www.jacionline.org/article/S0091-6749(02)91322-9/abstract

https://www.jacionline.org/article/S0091-6749(02)91322-9/pdf

When all that TP people are buying (and must be eating) finally catches up…