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Coronavirus: definition, transmission, symptoms, treatment … The basics of Covid-19


While the measures put in place to fight the spread of Covid-19 paralyze France, Le Parisien takes stock of current knowledge on this disease.

What is Covid-19?

Covid-19 is not a coronavirus, nor is it just a virus. It is a viral, contagious, and emerging disease. Viral, because the infectious agent is a virus, SARS-CoV-2, contagious, because the virus is transmitted from humans to humans, and emerging, because we did not know it until then. The severe form of this disease is pneumonia, because the organs infected with the virus are the pulmonary alveoli, where the exchanges take place between the inhaled air and the blood.

What is SARS-CoV-2?

It is a virus, that is to say an infectious agent which has the distinction of needing a host, a cell, to develop and replicate (unlike a bacteria which needs nothing ). This parasite is 125 nanometers in diameter and replicates very well in humans, since we find several tens of millions of copies in one milliliter of sputum. It is of the coronavirus family, and more precisely of those triggering acute respiratory syndromes, like its “big brother”, responsible for the deadly SARS epidemic in China in the early 2000s.

What is a coronavirus?

Coronaviruses are a family of viruses which have the particularity of having protuberances giving them a crowned appearance, hence their name. Their preferred hosts are often birds or bats, but they can mutate, recombine, and change hosts … Until they contaminate humans. Before the current pandemic, that of MERS in 2012 and that of SARS ten years earlier were already due to mutations in the coronavirus.

What is the origin of SARS-Cov-2

The virus first appeared in December in a market in the Chinese city of Wuhan, where wild animals were intended for human consumption.

According to the most likely thesis, men were contaminated after eating pangolin, a small mammal prized in Asia but also in Africa, itself probably infected with bats.

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