Some COVID-19 infection become COVID Long-Haul
Doctors Begin to Crack Covid’s Mysterious Long-Term Effects
Wall Street Journal Nov1, {FONT(size="18")}đź“„ PDF {FONT}
“Other viral outbreaks, including the original SARS, MERS, Ebola, H1N1 and the Spanish flu, have been associated with long-term symptoms. Scientists reported that some patients experienced fatigue, sleep problems and joint and muscle pain long after their bodies cleared a virus, according to a recent review chronicling the long-term effects of viral infections.
“Some of the most compelling evidence for the inflammation theory comes from Covid-19 patients with signs of heart inflammation and injury months after illness. One study looking at 100 Covid-19 patients two months after getting sick found that 78 had abnormal findings on cardiac magnetic resonance imaging, while 60 had cardiac MRIs indicating heart-muscle inflammation. The study included hospitalized, nonhospitalized and asymptomatic patients.”
“Another possibility is that the virus causes some people’s immune systems to attack and damage their own organs and tissues, researchers said. A June study found roughly half of 29 hospitalized ICU patients with Covid-19 had one or more types of autoantibodies—antibodies that mistakenly target and attack a patient’s own tissues or organs.”
Of the Long haul COVID-19 patients…” About 90% of such patients report having symptoms of exercise intolerance, fatigue and elevated heartbeats. About 40% to 50% also report symptoms such as gastrointestinal issues, headaches and shortness of breath."
“. A 2009 study of 233 SARS survivors found 27% met criteria for chronic fatigue syndrome four years after getting sick.”
COVID-19 cardiac injury: Implications for long-term surveillance and outcomes in survivors - Nov 2020
"Up to 20%–30% of patients hospitalized with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) have evidence of myocardial involvement. "
Three-month outcomes in hospitalized COVID-19 patients - Oct 17 preprint
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Long-term COVID-19 symptoms in a large unselected population - Oct 10 preprint
"Our results show that 43.4% of COVID-19+ cases have symptoms lasting longer than 30 days, and 24.1% still have at least one symptom after 90 days. "
"These numbers are higher for COVID-19+ cases who were initially more ill, 59.4% at 30 days and 40.6% at 90 days, "
"but even for very mild and initially asymptomatic cases, 14.3% have complications persist for 30 days or longer."
Long-Haul COVID - Editorial Sept 29, 2020
Long-haul fatigue, etc. common after viral infections (SARS1,2, MERS, Swine, 1918,...)
COVID-19 treated by Vitamin D - studies, reports, videos
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