SAN DIEGO- When people are suffering from COVID-19 symptoms, they are suffering from respiratory infection. But the symptoms can actually be generalized, and a new study being conducted at the Faculty of Medicine at UC San Diego is demonstrating.
“What we learned during the year, from the time of the COVID-19, although the objective location of the infection are the pulmonary, for the consequences that we see in the people are related to the heart, the brain and many other things ”, Verklaring Tariq Rana, Professor and Chief of the Division of Genetics at the Department of Pediatrics at the Faculty of Medicine of UC San Diego and the Moores Cancer Center.
These are the words of the investigators in question: Is the virus infecting all the organs of the body in the same way? And what are the problems that we get with the virus in the form in which our body is reacting to the infection?
UCSD investigators are using cell cells to create structures similar to those in 3D that represent pulses and cerebrum, to analyze.
The representation of the virus in the cerebrum as in the pulmonary fue is significantly more frequent in the pulmonary.

UC San Diego
“When a virus infects cells, it has molecules in the surface, like pomegranates, and it results in 10 more pimples on the pulses that are in the brain. “I feel that there is more infection in the pulses that are in the brain,” Rana explained.
This, in turn, affects the form in which the virus is treated when it attacks various organs.
Investigators are also analyzing how the virus affects individuals of different racial and ethnic backgrounds so that, with certainty, they can offer more specific treatment options.
UC San Diego investigators are also focusing their efforts on creating new vacancies at this time to, with certainty, try and possibly help in the fight against mortality.
Click here to see the complete study.