-
What your favorite sleep position reveals about your personality & desiresBody language oftentimes reveals more about what were thinking and feeling than words do. Even your favorite sleep position can say a lot about your personality, what you fear and what you believe in. Buzz60’s Johana Restrepo has more.
Buzz60
-
Elderly man with Alzheimer's finds comfort with robotic catAn 83-year-old man with Alzheimer's was given a robotic cat for his birthday. His wife says it brings him comfort.
USA TODAY
-
Sauna bathing for your heart healthIt's not a replacement for exercise but a sauna session results in some similar cardiovascular benefits. How a relaxing stint in the sauna is good for your heart -- and your mind.
CNN
-
Doctor with local ties thinks he has a way to fight the virus
WHIO Dayton 2:00
-
What your favorite sleep position reveals about your personality & desires
Buzz60 1:02
-
Elderly man with Alzheimer's finds comfort with robotic cat
USA TODAY 0:29
-
Sauna bathing for your heart health
CNN 1:09
-
New eye scan could help detect early signs of autism
Veuer 1:12
-
Robots and drones used to disinfect Coronavirus-infected areas of China
Veuer 0:53
-
Top 5 teeth-cleaning mistakes that make your dentist cringe!
Buzz60 1:11
-
The unique way South Korea is testing for coronavirus
Veuer 0:25
-
This is how much exercise you need to beat seasonal depression
Real Simple 1:02
-
Pandemic vs. epidemic: What sets them apart?
Veuer 1:17
-
Being sleepy at work may make your colleagues not want to talk to you
Veuer 1:12
-
Why your butt looks the same no matter how many squats you do
Shape 0:58
-
Is it really ok to eat a potato-a-day?
Buzz60 1:01
-
Your pressing coronavirus questions, answered
TODAY 4:40
-
People are hanging eucalyptus in their showers for this reason
Better Homes and Gardens 3:06
-
Scientists examine what motivates people to achieve a goal
Martha Stewart Living 9:18:03
A former Wright State Boonshoft School of Medicine student has used his expertise to come up with a method he thinks could fight the coronavirus.
>> NCAA creates panel ahead of First Four, tournaments
"It's really not the virus per se that is killing people. It's the immune response that is killing people," Dr. Tom Pitts told News Center 7's Monica Castro.
Pitts said his expertise in in treating neuro-immunological diseases. He deals with patients who suffer from rare autoimmune disorders.
The director of Neurology at Hudson Medical in Manhattan, N.Y., wants to use a medication called "Soliris," which allows him to manipulate how the immune system works.
"So by dialing down the immune system the hope is that a patient would get the virus, get sick, be quarantined," he said. "Their immune system would be regulated in a way that they could fight off the virus but not hurt or kill them."
>> China virus slowdown offers global hope
Pitts said he has an established clinical trial "and I would have FDA emergency permission on a case-by- case basis."
But he doesn't have any participants, no sponsors or backing from the drug-maker.
Future patients would get a dose of medicine and after beating the virus, he said, part of the treatment would involve drawing blood "in the hopes of finding an anti-body after the fight so that we can research it for a potential vaccine development. "
Pitts wants to see if his technique will help in the fight against the coronavirus.
"I feel like time is of the essence," he said.