Difference between revisions of "Talk:SARS-COV-2 has never been isolated"
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Many question these postulates and they were NOT developed for viruses yet often apply in the context of isolation, other criteria may be even weaker (i.e PCR). | Many question these postulates and they were NOT developed for viruses yet often apply in the context of isolation, other criteria may be even weaker (i.e PCR). | ||
Also, how can electron microscopy 100% determine a SARS-COV-2 virus particle if that particle's particular genome is not sequenced? | |||
Source: https://fullfact.org/health/Covid-isolated-virus/ | Source: https://fullfact.org/health/Covid-isolated-virus/ | ||
[[User:PapiChulo|PapiChulo]] ([[User talk:PapiChulo|talk]]) 22 January 2022 | [[User:PapiChulo|PapiChulo]] ([[User talk:PapiChulo|talk]]) 22 January 2022 |
Revision as of 01:04, 23 January 2022
But in virology, isolation does not mean literal isolation. This should be addressed. Do these studies satisfy Koch's postulates?
Koch’s postulates were a set of rules outlined by scientist Robert Koch in 1890 to decide whether a bacteria causes a disease. The original four criteria are:
“1. The microorganism must be found in the diseased animal, and not found in healthy animals.
“2. The microorganism must be extracted and isolated from the diseased animal and subsequently grown in culture.
“3. The microorganism must cause disease when introduced to a healthy experimental animal.
“4. The microorganism must be extracted from the diseased experimental animal and demonstrated to be the same microorganism that was originally isolated from the first diseased animal.”
Many question these postulates and they were NOT developed for viruses yet often apply in the context of isolation, other criteria may be even weaker (i.e PCR).
Also, how can electron microscopy 100% determine a SARS-COV-2 virus particle if that particle's particular genome is not sequenced?
Source: https://fullfact.org/health/Covid-isolated-virus/ PapiChulo (talk) 22 January 2022