Health

Volume 14, Issue 6 (June 2022)

ISSN Print: 1949-4998   ISSN Online: 1949-5005

Google-based Impact Factor: 0.81  Citations  

Antibiotic Therapy and Offstage about Covid-19 Vaccination

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DOI: 10.4236/health.2022.146049    118 Downloads   653 Views  

ABSTRACT

In this overview, we discuss the impact of antibiotic therapy on the COVID infection, the complications after vaccination, possible causes of adverse events, and ways to protect against pandemic infection, as well as try to dispel myths about COVID. Antibiotics are necessary only in case of secondary infection, but overlapping with bacterial infection mainly occurs after hospitalization, and the vast majority of infections were caused by the Acinetobacter baumannii strain. Commonly used antimicrobial disinfectants are chlorhexidine derivatives; due to their frequent use, microorganisms have become resistant to them, and in addition, chloroquine has no clinical benefit in the treatment of COVID-19. Virus escapes from the immune response due to multiple mutations in the receptor-binding domain, or the N-terminal end, which are the sites responsible for antibody binding and virus neutralization. The COVID infection itself is characterized by a rather powerful suppression of immunity. For this reason, the use of antibiotics in the absence of a secondary infection layer leads to greater suppression of the immune system and an aggravation of the process, which often ends up fatally. Immune dysregulation predisposes to the development of severe COVID-19. A decrease in the number of leukocytes gives an unfavorable prognosis for the severity of the COVID infection course. The main reason for the death cases after vaccination seems to be an increase in blood clotting, which is observed not only among the population over 60 years old, but also amid young people.

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Amirova, M., Huseynova, L., Azim, S., Nagiyeva, S., Lovely, M., Dashdamirova, G., Almudarris, B. and Saed, F. (2022) Antibiotic Therapy and Offstage about Covid-19 Vaccination. Health, 14, 675-683. doi: 10.4236/health.2022.146049.

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