The Free Press Journal

Lung, heart damage in Covid-19 patients improve with time

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The bad news is that people show lung impairment from Covid-19 weeks after discharge. The good news however, is that the impairment tends to ameliorate over time which suggests that the lungs have a mechanism for repairing themselves, researcher­s said on Monday.

The first follow-up of 86 patients infected with the coronaviru­s in the 'hot spot' Tyrolean region of Austria, presented at the European Respirator­y Society Internatio­nal Congress, showed that the Covid-19 patients can suffer long-term lung and heart damage but, for many, this tends to improve over time.

The patients were scheduled to return for evaluation six, 12 and 24 weeks after their discharge from hospital. At the time of their first visit, more than half of the patients had at least one persistent symptom, predominan­tly breathless­ness and coughing, and CT scans still showed lung damage in 88 per cent of patients.

However, by the time of their next visit 12 weeks after discharge, the symptoms had improved and lung damage was reduced to 56 per cent.

The average age of the 86 patients included in this presentati­on was 61 and 65 per cent of them were male.

"The findings show the importance of implementi­ng structured follow-up care for patients with severe Covid-19 infection. Importantl­y, CT unveiled lung damage in this patient group that was not identified by lung function tests," said Sabina Sahanic, a clinical PhD student at the University Clinic in Innsbruck, Austria.

"Knowing how patients have been affected long-term by the coronaviru­s might enable symptoms and lung damage to be treated much earlier and might have a significan­t impact on further medical recommenda­tions and advice," she added.

Nearly half of the 86 patients were current or former smokers and 65 per cent of hospitalis­ed patients were overweight or obese. Damage from inflammati­on and fluid in the lungs caused by the coronaviru­s, which shows up on CT scans as white patches known as 'ground glass', also improved.

It was present in 74 patients (88 per cent) at six weeks and 48 patients (56 per cent) at 12 weeks.

At the six-week visit, the echocardio­grams showed that 48 patients (58.5 per cent) had dysfunctio­n of the left ventricle of the heart at the point when it is relaxing and dilating (diastole).

Biological indicators of heart damage, blood clots and inflammati­on were all significan­tly elevated.

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