SIGN UP FOR UPDATES!
Sign up for Englemed updates from TwitterSign up for Englemed updates from Facebook
ENGLEMED
Contact Englemed
Our contact email address.
We can provide a specialist, tailored health and medical news service for your site.
Click here for more information
RSS graphic XML Graphic Add to Google
About Englemed news services - services and policies.
Englemed News Blog - Ten years and counting.
Diary of a reluctant allergy sufferer - How the British National Health Service deals with allergy.
BOOKS AND GIFTS THIS WAY!
BookshopFor books on women's health, healthy eating ideas, mental health issues, diabetes, etc click here
SEARCH THIS SITE
Google

WWW Englemed
Copyright Notice. All reports, text and layout copyright Englemed Ltd, 52 Perry Avenue, Birmingham UK B42 2NE. Co Registered in England No 7053778 Some photos copyright Englemed Ltd, others may be used with permission of copyright owners.
Disclaimer: Englemed is a news service and does not provide health advice. Advice should be taken from a medical professional or appropriate health professional about any course of treatment or therapy.
FreeDigitalPhotos
www.freedigitalphotos.net
FreeWebPhotos
www.freewebphoto.com
FROM OUR NEWS FEEDS
Elite football players 'more likely to develop dementia'
Fri March 17th - Elite male footballers are more likely to develop dementia than the general population, according to a Swedish study published today. More
RECENT COMMENTS
On 09/10/2020 William Haworth wrote:
How long is recovery time after proceedure... on Ablation cuts atrial fibrillat...
On 08/02/2018 David Kelly wrote:
Would you like to write a piece about this to be i... on Researchers unveil new pain re...
On 23/10/2017 Cristina Pereira wrote:
https://epidemicj17.imascientist.org.uk/2017/06/21... on HIV breakthrough - MRC...
On 12/09/2017 Aparna srikantam wrote:
Brilliant finding! indeed a break through in under... on Leprosy research breakthrough...
On 01/07/2017 Annetta wrote:
I have been diagnosed with COPD for over 12 years.... on Seaweed plan for antimicrobial...
OUR CLIENTS
THIS WEEK'S STORIES
ENGLEMED HEALTH NEWS

Common cold boosts COVID-19 immunity in children

Thursday March 16th 2023

One of the coronaviruses that cause the common cold helps to boost children’s immunity against COVID-19, according to a new Swedish study.

Researchers at Karolinska Institutet say having identified OC43 as boosting the immune response to COVID-19 could help with the development of more tailored vaccine programmes for both children and adults.

The discovery came about after medical doctors and researchers noticed that children and adolescents infected with COVID-19 became less ill than adults.

One possible explanation was that children already had a prior level of immunity to COVID-19 provided by memory T cells generated by common colds.

The research team from the Karolinska Institutet studied blood samples from children taken before the pandemic and identified memory T cells that react to cells infected with SARS-CoV-2.

These findings, published in PNAS, show how T cells previously activated by the OC43 virus can cross-react against SARS-CoV-2.

Corresponding author Annika Karlsson, research group leader at the Department of Laboratory Medicine, Karolinska Institutet, said: “These reactions are especially strong early in life and grow much weaker as we get older.

“Our findings show how the T-cell response develops and changes over time and can guide the future monitoring and development of vaccines.”

The results show that the memory T-cell response to coronaviruses develops as early as two years.

The study, which involved researchers from the universities of Bern, in Switzerland, Oslo, in Norway, and Linköping, in Sweden, was based on 48 blood samples from two- and six-year-olds, and 94 samples from adults between the ages of 26 and 83. The analysis also included blood samples from 58 people who had recently recovered from COVID-19.

The team wants to continue its research by undertaking analogous studies of younger and older children, teenagers and young adults to better track how the immune response to coronaviruses develops from childhood to adulthood.

Humbert M, Olofsson A, Wullimann D et al. Functional SARS-CoV-2 cross-reactive CD4+ T cells established in early childhood decline with age. PNAS 13 March 2023; doi: 10.1073/pnas.2220320120.

Tags: Child Health | Europe | Flu & Viruses

Printer friendly page Printer friendly page

CATEGORIES