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Medicine and Health Sciences Commons

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Life Sciences

COVID-19

2020

Department of Biological & Biomedical Sciences

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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Knowledge, Attitudes, And Practices Against The Growing Threat Of Covid-19 Among Medical Students Of Pakistan, Khola Noreen, Zil-E Rubab, Muhammad Umar, Rehana Rehman, Mukhtiar Baig, Fizzah Baig Dec 2020

Knowledge, Attitudes, And Practices Against The Growing Threat Of Covid-19 Among Medical Students Of Pakistan, Khola Noreen, Zil-E Rubab, Muhammad Umar, Rehana Rehman, Mukhtiar Baig, Fizzah Baig

Department of Biological & Biomedical Sciences

Background: On account of the COVID-19 pandemic, many changes have been implicated in university medical students. We are cognizant that pandemic can be controlled with dedicated contributions from all involved in the healthcare profession. Therefore, it is important to know the pandemic and application of knowledge by the medical students to formulate a further line of management in Pakistan.
Objective: We aimed toinvestigate the knowledge, attitudes, and practices (KAP) regarding COVID-19 and its impact on medical students of Pakistan.
Methods: A cross-sectional survey was conducted in June 2020 by a validated self-administered questionnaire. The survey instrument was tailored from a …


Evidence Of The Covid-19 Virus Targeting The Cns: Tissue Distribution, Host-Virus Interaction, And Proposed Neurotropic Mechanisms, Abdul Mannan Baig, Areeba Khaleeq, Usman Ali, Hira Syeda Apr 2020

Evidence Of The Covid-19 Virus Targeting The Cns: Tissue Distribution, Host-Virus Interaction, And Proposed Neurotropic Mechanisms, Abdul Mannan Baig, Areeba Khaleeq, Usman Ali, Hira Syeda

Department of Biological & Biomedical Sciences

The recent outbreak of coronavirus infectious disease 2019 (COVID-19) has gripped the world with apprehension and has evoked a scare of epic proportion regarding its potential to spread and infect humans worldwide. As we are in the midst of an ongoing pandemic of COVID-19, scientists are struggling to understand how it resembles and differs from the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV) at the genomic and transcriptomic level. In a short time following the outbreak, it has been shown that, similar to SARS-CoV, COVID-19 virus exploits the angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) receptor to gain entry inside the cells. This finding …