喀什华康医院妇科咨询-【喀什华康医院】,喀什华康医院,喀什修复处女膜医院哪家好,喀什咨询 男科,河北喀什专业的早泄医院,喀什哪个医院泌尿科好,喀什切包皮要住院么,喀什治继发性阳痿价钱

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - What's better than the sights, sounds, and smells around a Cinco de Mayo celebration? Deals!A number of restaurants are celebrating May 5 with deals and discounts on drinks and eats.In addition to national deals, many local restaurants are getting into the spirit with their own drink and food specials.RELATED: Cinco de Mayo events around San Diego CountyHere's a look at some delicious Cinco de Mayo deals around town this year:National deals:Applebee’s: Dollaritas ( margaritas) are back through May 5 and Dos Equis will be available through the month of May.Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf: May 4 through May 6 (2 p.m. to close) customers can grab a Horchata Latte or Matcha Horchata Latte for just .Joe’s Crab Shack: All day May 5, Joe's is offering buckets of Modelo Especial, and tacos and Patron margaritas.On the Border: Get Cinco ’Ritas on May 5, some locations will also be throwing parties.Local deals:AleSmith Brewing: AleSmith Brewing will host a Mexican Speedway Stout release party, featuring a special cask of their brew, cupcake + beer specials, and a Mexican tin art workshop class.Barleymash: Barleymash's Cinco de Derby celebration will combining suits, sombreros, and Mint Juleps in a dual Kentucky Derby and Cinco de Mayo party. Prizes will be awarded for best dressed and best hat.Coasterra?Restaurant: Enjoy tequila tastings, a margarita contest, and food stations (including seafood paella, quesadillas, and street tacos) during Coasterra's Cinco celebration.D.Z. Akin's: Enjoy some delicious grub with specials on taco salad, chicken enchiladas, and Corona's all day.Oggi's?(In Liberty Station): Celebrate Saturday with Taco Tuesday specials and deals on Pacifico and Corona. PB Cantina: Enjoy a night across Pacific Beach in a bar crawl, featuring four bars, Cinco de Mayo-themed drink specials, and a free shot.True North: Celebrate Cinco de Mayo at True North in North Park, with shot specials, al pastor tacos, and cocktails. 2064
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - U.S. Customs and Border Protection started Tuesday construction on its second border wall project along the U.S-Mexico border. The 14-mile long project consists of crews replacing existing barriers with new 30-foot tall steel bollards. The contract was awarded to Texas-based construction company SLSCO Ltd. The secondary wall project runs just north of the primary fence replacement project which started last summer. 446

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- We’ve known for a while that COVID-19 hits people over 65 especially hard, but a study published Wednesday from researchers in San Diego offers new insight into why that happens.The numbers are staggering: if you’re 65 or older, your risk of winding up in the hospital from COVID-19 is five to 11 times higher than someone under 30. Your risk of death is at least 90 times higher, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.Researchers at the La Jolla Institute for Immunology say the reason why older people fare so much worse appears to be from a lack of T-cells, a type of white blood cell that can decline with age.“Some viruses get controlled by one part of the immune system. Some viruses get controlled by another. In this case it seems that T-cells really do a lot of the work,” said Dr. Shane Crotty, one of the authors of the study published Wednesday in the journal Cell.Dr. Crotty and his colleagues looked at 50 people infected with the virus, and they measured the three elements of the adaptive immune system in detail: antibodies, helper T-cells and killer T-cells.Then they compared the measurements to how people fared against the virus. Some patients in the study group had severe cases, others had mild infections.The researchers found that people with all three branches of the adaptive immune system tended to fully recover. People with severe cases of the virus often lacked one or more of the immune branches, and it was particularly evident in older people.“Our data indicated that of the older individuals, it was particularly the ones that had fewer T-cells to start that look like they really struggled to control this virus,” Dr. Crotty said.As we age, we have fewer T-cells to send after invading pathogens. “That collection of T-cells gets smaller. So it’s harder to recognize a new virus,” Crotty said.Among the 748 deaths in San Diego County reported as of Wednesday, 87% were people aged 60 and older.The findings from LJI may have implications in the search for a vaccine against COVID-19. The data suggests that vaccine-makers may want to target a drug that elicits all three branches of the immune response, Dr. Crotty said. Some vaccine approaches, such as inactivated virus vaccines, only elicit two of three branches, not killer T-cells. However, Crotty said it was too soon to rule any candidates. Two strong branches produced by a vaccine could potentially cover for the lack of a third, he said.Crotty said the findings could help vaccine-makers interpret results from the clinical trials and find the right dosing.“Is a given vaccine a good vaccine, and you just need a booster immunization?” he said. “Does it work well in one population but it doesn’t help in the elderly because it doesn’t generate a T-cell response, for example? Those are the scenarios when this type of knowledge will come into play.” 2906
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — Two weeks ago, the county warned San Diegans to continue practicing social distancing, washing of hands, and wearing facial coverings over the Labor Day weekend to thwart the spread of COVID-19.County public health officials had been clear that they did not want to see the same case spikes that followed July 4th and Memorial Day.Now that Labor Day has passed, local doctors say they have yet to see the same spike in coronavirus cases seen after holidays earlier this summer."We have not seen a sustained rate of 30, 40, 60 positives like we did around July 4. We're not seeing it yet," said Dr. David Pride, an infectious disease specialist at UC San Diego.Pride says the difference may be due to residents being more educated about the virus and how to best slow the spread. For the other two holidays, schools were also still closed.According to the county, 10 days after July 4 the region's positivity rate was 6.3%. Currently, the county's positivity rate is 4.4%."We're 10 days out, no big jump so far, our positivity rates suggest that something is different this time and hopefully that will continue for a week or two," Pride said.While San Diego County's positivity rate is low, it's the region's case rate (cases per 100,000 residents) that continues to be an issue. And now, it's the county's case rate that threatens to push the region's into a stricter reopening tier."This time around they're not sitting home, they're not socially distancing, so we're gonna see spikes that are largely unrelated to the Labor Day weekend," says Pride.And with more fall holidays approaching, Pride says residents will need to continue their vigilance through the holidays as spikes in cases are more likely. 1735
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - Wondering what's next for San Diego's challenging housing market?San Diego State University housing lecturer Mark Goldman answered questions with 10News reporter Jon Horn for Making It in San Diego. 225
来源:资阳报