Once a Covid hotspot, Italian village now intrigues researchers with 'super-immune' cases

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Covid "super-immune" people seem to be in a high concentration in Vo'. Researchers want to know why.

LONDON — Paola Bezzon thought her sniffles in December were just a seasonal cold until a serology test months later found coronavirus antibodies in her blood.

And not just normal levels of antibodies. Researchers say she is "super-immune" — a person whose body seems to make more antibodies than normal.


"I don't know why I have all these antibodies, but they are such a lifeline for me," she said. "They make me feel safe even though I haven't had the vaccine yet."

Bezzon, 68, lives in Vo', a town of about 3,300 people west of Venice, which became one of the first cities outside China to experience a Covid-19 outbreak — and the site of the first Covid-19 death in Europe. Researchers, hoping to understand the virus and the human immune response to it, arrived shortly after.

What they've found sparked interest in why some people seem to be able to ward off the virus long after initial exposure. According to a coming study by researchers from the University of Padua in collaboration with Imperial College London, of the 129 people who still had antibodies nine months on from the initial outbreak, 16 showed more than double the levels they had in May. Among the possible causes of the rise in antibodies is re-exposure to the virus. The study is undergoing peer review.

Vo's mayor, Giuliano Martini, said virus fighting is woven into the history of the town.
In the 14th century, ships arriving in Venice from areas believed to be plague-infested had to wait 40 days – "quaranta"in Italian — before landing. That's how the concept of "quarantine" was born.

Two centuries later, the ever-expanding commerce and military forces of Venice reclaimed marshy and unproductive land 40 miles to its west. Vo' was born, but it remained largely unknown — more a place to travel through to and from Venetian ports and the Italian inland.

The relative anonymity ended Feb. 21, 2020, when Vo' registered Europe's first official Covid-19-related death. The town was swiftly put in lockdown.
Soon after, Enrico Lavezzo, a professor in the department of molecular medicine at the University of Padua, 20 miles northeast of Vo', and his team asked whether the townspeople would agree to additional testing.

Lavezzo, a microbiologist, has since mass-tested the people of Vo' three times.
"We discovered the presence of antibodies still in late November, nine to 10 months from the initial infection, the longest span of time of antibody presence that had ever been detected during the pandemic so far," he said.

A man from Vo' who died at the hospital in Schiavonia was the first European COVID-19 death registered on Feb. 12, 2020. Roberto Silvino / NurPhoto via Getty Images file
While so-called super-immunes have been found in other parts of the world, it's rare for people's antibodies to increase instead of dissipate.

Understanding how to trigger such a response could be critical in defeating Covid-19.
"A vaccine is an artificial exposure to a pathogen," Lavezzo said. "It's like promoting the immune memory of those who get vaccinated, so next time they get in contact with the virus, their response can be faster and stronger."

The discovery of super-immunes isn't the first study from Vo' to offer insight into the coronavirus.

https://www.nbcnews.com/science/sci...w-intrigues-researchers-super-immune-n1265833

 

Know of someone who had anti body test about 9 months after they got the virus and and their count was good/high. They had ivermectin, hq cocktail.

My guess the same thing that makes the virus so deadly also leads to the high antibody count. What ever the virus targets or favors in the body seems to be immune system related.

I do wonder if someone is exposed a 2nd or 3rd time for a few days their count will spike upward.
 
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