Norovirus

Hello. Our area is being hit hard on college campuses and in the community w/Norovirus. Has there been any studies or research done using any anti-virals at the onset to diminish severity or duration that anyone is aware of? Thanks!

I would think that Ivermectin is as effective with that virus as it is with others.

Noroviruses constitute a major genus in the family Caliciviridae, which contains icosahedral viruses with positive-sense single-stranded RNA genome. From what I could find, it does not appear similar to coronaviruses - so using ivermectin may not work.

When it comes to treatments for norovirus, the need may not be as urgent, since most people recover from the symptoms in 48 to 72 hours—so antiviral development isn’t as robust.

Doctors advise people to drink plenty of liquids, since vomiting and diarrhea and lead to dehydration. In some cases, they may recommend anti-nausea medications to ease symptoms.

One year, Norovirus hit our town of 5000 people. Someone brought it home from a cruise ship. It spread so fast, I couldn’t see an antiviral having time to work. As someone else stated, dehydration is the biggest concern.

Dear Mr. Liu Xeuwu; I had a friend help me with a chlorine dioxide injection, and oh yes, they are painful. I am not sure my syringe had the necessary concentration, but what I had was felt. I seem to recall seeing Howard Alliger’s patent of 2019 where he injects chlorine dioxide in mice. Fact is because of our US medical cartel, no human trials have been done, so you may well have been the first to use on humans in China I don’t know. Maybe you’d like to patent a way to make those injections pain-free.