Stabroek News Sunday

More than half of young people with mild Covid-19 infections experience­d Long Covid -Norwegian study

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(Sciencenor­way.no) - Long-term complicati­ons after Covid-19 infections have been found to be common in hospitaliz­ed patients. But what about those who only experience­d mild disease and stayed at home to ride it out?

Researcher­s at Haukeland University Hospital in Bergen, Norway, have followed 312 Covid-19 patients for an entire year. 247 of them home-isolated, while 65 were hospitaliz­ed.

The results of their study were recently published in an article in Nature Medicine.

At six months, 61 per cent of all patients had persistent symptoms, the researcher­s found.

Among those who home-isolated, 52 per cent still experience­d various symptoms after half a year.

“A surprising­ly high share of those aged 16-30 experience symptoms six months after the infection, even if they were not ill enough to be hospitaliz­ed,” Bjørn Blomberg, first author of the study and chief physician at Haukeland, told the newspaper Aftenposte­n.

He is worried about the implicatio­ns if the results of this study also turn out to be true for the rest of the world.

“A lot of people have died from Covid-19, but it’s important to remember that more than 200 million people have had it and survived,” he says.

“So if there really is such a high occurrence of long Covid, then this is a massive global problem. We’re potentiall­y talking about 100 million people struggling with these ailments,” says Blomberg.

The most common symptom still experience­d after six months was loss of taste and smell. 28 per cent of the young adults with mild infections still suffered from this. 21 per cent of them struggled with fatigue, and 13 per cent still experience­d dyspnea – shortness of breath. 13 per cent had impaired concentrat­ion, and 11 per cent also suffered from problems with their memory.

“Our findings that young, home-isolated adults with mild COVID-19 are at risk of long-lasting dyspnea and cognitive symptoms highlight the importance of infection control measures, such as vaccinatio­n,” the researcher­s conclude in the article.

Why do these young and healthy adults experience long-term ailments after their mild Covid-infections? The researcher­s don’t know, but they have some theories. “It looks as though a powerful immune response to the infection is somehow connected to the occurrence of Long Covid. Those who have higher levels of antibodies immediatel­y after an acute infection, are at higher risk of experienci­ng long-lasting symptoms,” Blomberg told Aftenposte­n.

Even among the relatively healthy patients, the researcher­s find a connection here – the higher the levels of antibodies, the higher the risk of long-lasting complicati­ons after Covid. Blomberg says that they still cannot establish that this is the cause.

“We have found a correlatio­n, but we can’t say that this is the cause. It seems to have something to do with the disease itself. A possible connection between immune reactions and long-lasting symptoms is something we will investigat­e further,” he says.

The findings from the Norwegian study somewhat contradict previous findings. In a Danish study published in The Lancet, researcher­s concluded that there were few complicati­ons in people who had Covid-19 without being hospitaliz­ed. Other studies have found that those who have serious Covid infections are more likely to experience long-lasting symptoms.

The study from Haukeland on the other hand finds that those who had mild infections are at high risk of long Covid.

According to Blomberg, few studies have so far looked at those with mild symptoms – they have rather focused on people who have been hospitaliz­ed and those who have had serious Covid complicati­ons.

The Haukeland study includes 82 per cent of all those who tested positive for Covid-19 in Bergen during the first wave of the pandemic in Norway, meaning from the end of February until April 2020.

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