Episodes

Tuesday Apr 14, 2020
The Infectious Myth - Stephen Bustin on Challenges with RT-PCR
Tuesday Apr 14, 2020
Tuesday Apr 14, 2020
RT-PCR is the main method for declaring that someone is COVID-19 infected or not, as well as having numerous other uses in molecular biology research and biological testing. Professor Stephen Bustin is a world expert on the technology, and the potential problems with using it to produce accurate and repeatable results. Although the coronavirus test is presented as a binary test, it is actually based on whether the production of DNA is detectable prior to an arbitrary number of PCR cycles. If there is variability in the quantification, then samples will be above or below the limit, when they should not be, resulting in false positives and negatives. David and Stephen walk through the steps, from the extraction of RNA from the original sample, the conversion of the RNA to complementary DNA, and duplication of DNA using PCR, and the optional step of sequencing. While this is dense technical information at times, it is presented logically, and the limitations of this method cannot be understood without taking the cover off the black box. We suggest not listening to this episode when you are trying to do anything else, but sit down in a quiet place so that you can concentrate fully.
Stephen Bustin’s detailed 2017 paper is here: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/eci.12801
More information about his work is here: https://aru.ac.uk/people/stephen-bustin
Version: 20241125
4 years ago
You all should check out Zack Bush’s explanation on why areas like northern Italy, Wuhan, New York City were hit so hard. He claims, with some science to back it up, it’s due to the pollution and viruses’ ability to bind to the particulate matter, such as cyanide, which would then all clump together and enter into a persons body and cause more damage: https://youtu.be/SX71-cxbFB4
5 years ago
I greatly appreciate your efforts
5 years ago
@hequfx There might be several reasons why the mortiality in Northern Italy is higher than in most other countries. I recommend the site https://swprs.org/a-swiss-doctor-on-covid-19/ Search for “Italy“ to find the related articles.
5 years ago
Most of this went way over my head. One question you should start asking guests is hypothetically, if they had the expertise/equipment/funding/staff what kinds of studies would they like to carry out? Greece, Italy and Sweden have very similar population sizes and age ratios. Why is Italy so bad, Greece so mild and Sweden somewhere in the middle? The only variable that seems to fairly consistently correlate with the case/death numbers by country is the number of tests being done. It's almost as if testing is making people sick. How significant do you think is the negative placebo effect of a positive rt-pcr test result? I think the medicalese for that is nacebo. Are you aware of anything published on this?