Due to his earlier research with colleagues at UF, Ostrov already knew diphenhydramine was potentially effective against the SARS-CoV-2 virus. The latest discovery has its roots in a routine meeting of scientists with the Global Virus Network’s COVID-19 task force. One researcher presented unpublished data on federally approved compounds that inhibit SARS-CoV-2 activity, including lactoferrin.
Like diphenhydramine, lactoferrin is available without a prescription. Ostrov thought about pairing it with diphenhydramine and ran with the idea. In lab tests on human and monkey cells, the combination was particularly potent: Individually, the two compounds each inhibited SARS-CoV-2 virus replication by about 30%. Together, they reduced virus replication by 99%.
99% reduced replication. Your natural immune system can handle the leftovers (If you still have the immune system that God gave you and not the new one that the clot-shot reprograms yours to.)
Let that sink in. 99% Antihistamine + Milk Protein
Link to the scientific paper published in the Journal; Pathogens
I think it's very important to note that this was research done in a laboratory, using cell cultures and computer modeling. It is wonderful that they discovered this combination and looked into the effective and cytotoxic concentrations, but this is not a study that sought to establish how effective these compounds are in humans. The liver does incredible things to a lot of compounds, and not every medication/molecule reaches the cells in equal concentrations. Hopefully they're already working on testing this clinically to determine safety and efficacy- but until that is studied, it's hard to say with any certainty whether this will be effective. Scientists have cured cancer in cell cultures a million times, but it's still hanging around in people.
The Pathogens paper that I linked noted that there were hundreds of thousands of human subjects in trials.
Did I miss something?
What are they saying the dosage of each is? I can't read Dr reports kek. I'll also look to find human trial.
Figures 2,5,6,8, and 9 mention human along with section 3. Again. I can't read Dr....
no doubt. I cant read it either.
I have a biology degree so I can understand a lot of it, but I was never a researcher and I never published.
I was a field biology specialist, in the mud with the bugs, so I know how a publish paper reads, but MUCH of it goes over my head.