The Week - USA (2021-03-05)

(Antfer) #1

Health & Science NEWS 23^


Kids are half as susceptible...
People under age 20 may be almost half as
susceptible to coronavirus as their elders—
and less likely to transmit the disease to
others. That’s the conclusion of a new
Israeli study, which fitted statistical mod-
els of transmission to a data set of Covid
testing results from 637 households. The
researchers calculated that under-20s were
43 percent as susceptible as those over 20,
and 63 percent as likely to spread the virus
to others. They also found that children
were more likely to receive a negative PCR
test result despite being infected, suggest-
ing they have a lower viral load. Lead
researcher Itai Dattner, from the University
of Haifa, tells ScienceDaily.com that under-
standing children’s role in transmission is a
“top priority” for efforts around the world
to reopen or keep open schools. Why
children aren’t as affected remains unclear.
But another study has quashed the theory
that it is because they are more likely than
adults to have antibodies to common-cold
coronaviruses. On analyzing those anti-
bodies, University of Pennsylvania research-
ers found that they neither disarmed the
virus nor mitigated its symptoms.


...But MIS-C cases are rising
Doctors across the country have been see-
ing a significant increase in the number of
chil dren sickened with a dangerous syn-


drome linked to the coro na virus, The New
York Times reports. The syndrome, called
multi system inflam ma tory syn drome in
children, or MIS-C, remains rare: The Cen-
ters for Disease Con trol has recorded 2,060
cases in 48 states, Puer to Rico, and the
District of Colum bia, including 30 deaths.
The median age of those affected was 9.
But the data show cases climbing since mid-
October, and doctors say more of MIS-C
patients require treatment in the intensive-
care unit. “A higher percentage of them
are really critically ill,” said Dr. Roberta
DeBiasi, chief of infectious diseases at Chil-
dren’s Na tional Hos pi tal in Wash ing ton,
D.C. Symptoms—which seem to be con-
nected to coro na virus infections—start with
fever, rash, red eyes, and gastrointestinal
problems, and can progress to heart dys-
func tion. Most of the affected kids survive,
but doctors do not know if they will suf-
fer lingering health problems in coming
months or years. It’s unclear why MIS-C
cases are rising, but it may correspond to
the overall surge in coro na virus cases after
the holidays.

A drug to fight obesity
In what scientists say is a “game changer”
for obesity, an appetite- suppressing drug
has helped people lose up to 20 percent of
their body weight. The treatment, semaglu-
tide, is already used for type 2 diabetes. It
is a synthetic version of GLP-1, a naturally
occurring hormone released by the body
after a filling meal. In a new trial involv-
ing 2,000 people in 16 countries, scientists
administered a much higher dose of sema-
glutide to people wanting to lose weight.
Over 15 months, the participants who
received the drug lost an average of almost
15 percent of their body weight compared
with only 2.4 percent for those who got a
placebo. Almost a third of recipients lost
20 percent of their weight. Those who lost
weight also saw substantial reductions in
risk factors for heart disease and diabetes,
such as high blood-pressure and blood-
sugar levels. Lead author Robert Kushner,
from Northwestern University, tells The
New York Times the findings mark “the
start of a new era of effective treatments
for obesity.”

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The virus is less likely to infect them.

After a nearly seven-month, 293-million-
mile journey—with a heart- stopping final
descent—NASA’s Perseverance rover
safely landed on Mars last week to begin
a new search for signs of past Martian life.
The $2.7 billion, car-size explorer is fitted
with an array of sophisticated equipment—
including cameras, lasers, and ground-
penetrating radar—that scientists hope will
find chemical evidence of fossilized micro-
bial life. Project scientist Ken Farley tells
The Wash ing ton Post that the mission—the
most ambitious yet of NASA’s 20 trips
to the Red Planet—will “really make the
first step in answering the question of

whether life exists elsewhere.” If there is
proof that microbes arose on Mars billions
of years ago, when it was warmer and
wetter, it will strongly suggest we are not
alone in the universe. The vehicle carrying
Perseverance entered the Martian atmo-
sphere at 12,000 mph and decelerated
using a 70-foot-diameter parachute and
rocket thrusters. Then a “sky crane” low-
ered the rover into the Jezero crater—the
site of an ancient Martian lake. Because
of the 11- minute signal delay between
Earth and Mars, the whole process was
autonomous. After some equipment tests,
Perseverance will attempt a first: launching

a tiny solar- powered helicopter, Ingenuity,
into the thin Martian atmosphere. The
rover will then trundle over to the old
lake’s delta to begin its search in earnest.

Perseverance begins its search for life


Actual image of the rover being lowered to Mars

Scientists broadly agree
that a large extraterres-
trial object slammed into
Earth 66 million years
ago, wiping out the dino-
saurs. But a new study
proposes that instead of
an asteroid, the planet
was bombarded by
high-speed chunks of an
icy comet that broke apart when it flew
too close to the sun. The researchers,
from Harvard, argue that Jupiter’s grav-
ity pulled a comet into the solar system
and then slung it toward the sun. They
say that when this unfortunate comet
was then torn asunder by solar forces, it

could have produced enough
shards—of the right size, rate,
and trajectory—to cause
the cataclysm that wiped
out the dinosaurs. They
note that the impactor
was composed of car-
bonaceous chondrites, a
rocklike material found
in only 10 percent of
asteroids. Many scientists
aren’t buying it. They say
the study overestimates how often com-
ets are pulled apart by the sun, and that
the shards wouldn’t do enough damage.
But co- author Amir Siraj insists that what
type of space rock created the Chicxulub
crater in the Yucatan Peninsula in Mexico
remains “an open question.”

A very bad day for the dinosaurs

Was the dinosaur-destroyer a comet?

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