Deccan Chronicle

Post recovery effects haunt virus survivors

Patients return to hospital with scars in lungs, heart

- DC CORRESPOND­ENT HYDERABAD, JUNE 15

Covid-19 pandemic that shook the world is in no mood to leave mankind to its normal fate even after two years of its spiteful journey, if studies by experts are of any indication.

Covid recovered patients are coming back to hospitals with scars in lungs and heart, damage to the central nervous system and alteration­s to gut microbes, says an evaluation of the disease done by the Telangana State Medical Council titled ‘Covid

19: Lessons Learnt and Future Strategies’.

Long Covid effects are noted 12 weeks after recovery wherein there is fatigue, persistent cough and those who suffered from severe disease are seeing alteration­s in their organs.

Fatigue was reported in

45.7 per cent of the 50,000 patients whose data was collated by private hospitals, 28 per cent suffered from multiorgan damage and 65 percent suffered from lung, heart, and problems of the gut microbes.

There were also issues noted with patients in the central nervous system but its data is only emerging. There are also mental health issues which have emerged like post-traumatic stress, depression and anxiety after recovery. Many patients who were in oxygen and intensive care unit wards suffered from severe stress after recovery, as they recalled their days in the hospital.

Dr D. Nageshwar Reddy, chairman, AIG Hospitals, said, “We have noted both in the first and second wave that there are patients coming back to hospital with complaints of breathless­ness, chest pain, joint pains, diarrhoea, stomach aches, fever and rashes in the body. Post-recovery follow-up with patients of Covid-19 is important. It is a worldwide phenomenon where an Italian study has shown 83 per cent while Swiss study has shown that 33 per cent have come back to hospitals with diseases.”

Long Covid impact is severe on those patients who were critical and had a longer stay in the intensive care unit. In these patients, there are complicati­ons of blood clots, sudden heart attack, and also compromise­d lung functionin­g causing

WE HAVE noted both in the first and second wave that there are patients coming back to hospital with complaints of breathless­ness, chest pain, joint pains, diarrhoea, stomach aches, fever and rashes in the body. Post-recovery follow-up with patients of Covid-19 is important. It is a worldwide phenomenon where an Italian study has shown 83 per cent while Swiss study has shown that 33 per cent have come back to hospitals with diseases. — DR D. NAGESHWAR

REDDY Chairman of AIG Hospitals

challenges. Dr Rajeev Menon, senior interventi­onal cardiologi­st, says, “There were very rare events in patients who came back after recovery. There was a patient who came back with brugada syndrome which is irregular heart rhythms and is a rare disease. It has also been noted that the time for interventi­on in the recovered patients is less as they are not aware that there are postCovid 19 complicati­ons. For this reason, following up with them is important.”

It was also noted by experts that many people are given supplement­s and vitamin tables and patients are given them more importance than their hypertensi­on medicines. Educating patients to continue taking their disease condition tablets is important, opined experts.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India