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Promising new clue to the long COVID puzzle

REMEMBERING THE HOLOCAUST VIEW ONLINE
NEW CLUES TO
A PAINFUL PUZZLE
Friday, January 27, 2023
In today’s newsletter, we find a new piece in the long COVID puzzle, uncover mysteriously burned relics, glimpse newly discovered ancient galaxies, explore the history of ice skating … and see if dogs can help us reverse aging.
MICROGRAPH BY ANNE WESTON/EM STP, THE FRANCIS CRICK INSTITUTE, SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY

Millions of people suffer from long COVID—but why?

New data may help solve this mystery. Using a specialized lab technique, researchers are now testing patients with long COVID for microclots in their blood.

“We’re very early,” says David Putrino, a rehabilitation and long COVID scientist. But out of the few dozen samples they’ve tested, 100 percent had microclots.

Read the full story here.

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MICROGRAPH BY CHANTELLE VENTER AND RESIA PRETORIUS

A fluorescent warning: Long COVID microclots are more difficult for the body to disintegrate (above, microclots in healthy blood, left, and a severe microclot in a long COVID patient, right). Although they can’t block arteries or veins (like the clot at top), microclots can block the supply of oxygen to organs and tissue. Read more.
STORIES WE’RE FOLLOWING
PHOTOGRAPH BY CHRISTOPHE PITIT TESSON, POOL/AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Nazis tried to cover up their crimes, but the world refuses to forget—especially on International Holocaust Remembrance Day (A French Holocaust memorial, above)
How Spain’s lust for gold doomed the Inca Empire
See innovations inspired by the art of origami
Clothing from 1600s shipwreck shows how the 1 percent lived
‘The 1619 Project’ comes to Hulu, expanding the story of enslaved Africans
For Black motorists, a never-ending fear of being stopped
These 5 explorers disappeared into thin air. The search for answers continues.
These 3,000-year-old relics were torched and buried—but why?
IN THE SPOTLIGHT
IMAGE BY NASA, ESA, CSA, M. ZAMANI (ESA/WEBB)
Finding ancient galaxies: NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope has only been operational for six months, but it’s been busy. Already it has broken the record for farthest galaxies ever seen. These new galaxies are only 300 to 400 million years old and present new mysteries of the early universe, Nat Geo reports.
READ MORE
PHOTO OF THE DAY
PHOTOGRAPH BY JOHN LAUNOIS, NAT GEO IMAGE COLLECTION
Glide on: Even in ancient times, early civilizations used to ice skate. They strapped animal bones to their feet to cross frozen terrain. Modern ice skating likely started in Holland and then spread across Europe via the royal and elite. Canadians, like the nuns above in Quebec City, can take pride in inventing hockey in the 19th century.
WINTER SPORT
HISTORIES
LAST GLIMPSE
PHOTOGRAPH BY BECKY HALE
Lassie, reverse aging! Scientists are incredibly good at delaying aging in common lab animals. Now they’re turning to canines in hopes that their similarities to humans—from their lifestyles to ailments—will lead to anti-aging breakthroughs for people, Nat Geo reports. (Above, Ace is examined as part of a new gene therapy trial.) Worst case scenario? Fido gets a few more years.

Related: Can aging be cured? Scientists are giving it a try

WHAT A GOOD BOY
This newsletter has been curated and edited by Jen Tse, Sydney Combs, and David Beard. Have feedback? Email david.beard@natgeo.com. Thanks for reading and have a great weekend!
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