AUSTIN (KXAN) — While coronavirus is typically spread through people breathing or ingesting virus particles from their mouth or nose, did you know it can also enter your body through your eyes?
This study shows that SARS-CoV-2 infection and vaccination generate strong, highly specific spike-binding immune responses ...
Public interest has recently turned to the human eye and the Pfizer COVID-19 Vaccine. Two peer-reviewed papers have helped drive the latest debate. One Turkish cohort measured the cornea before and ...
India is witnessing a fresh surge in COVID-19 cases, with over 1,009 active infections reported across the country and states like Kerala, Maharashtra, and Delhi seeing a sharp uptick, including cases ...
"These fundamental public health measures are going to remain important." New research published in Lancet supports what public health officials have been advising since the pandemic began: To reduce ...
A new study has discovered another way to potentially prevent COVID-19. Researchers at Saarland University in Germany headed a clinical trial that found a nasal spray could reduce the risk of ...
The trial, led by Professor Robert Bals, Director of the Department of Internal Medicine V at Saarland University Medical Center and Professor of Internal Medicine at Saarland University, divided the ...
A familiar allergy spray may do more than ease sneezing, researchers find azelastine could help block COVID-19 and other respiratory viruses, pointing to an accessible new line of defense. Study: ...
Doctors and public health officials have repeatedly said COVID-19 risks — including the infection’s potential to cause myocarditis — are greater than COVID-19 vaccines’ risks. U.S. Centers for Disease ...