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Long Covid: Could mono virus or fat cells be playing roles?

- AP Medical Writer By Lindsey Tanner |

ABritish historian, an italian archaeolog­ist and an American preschool teacher have never met in person, but they share a prominent pandemic bond.

Plagued by eerily similar symptoms, the three women are credited with describing, naming and helping bring long Covid into the public’s consciousn­ess in early 2020.

Rachel Pope, of Liverpool, took to Twitter in late March 2020 to describe her bedeviling symptoms, then unnamed, after a coronaviru­s infection. Elisa Perego in Italy first used the term “long Covid,” in a May tweet that year. Amy Watson in Portland, Oregon, got inspiratio­n in naming her Facebook support group from the trucker cap she’d been wearing, and “long hauler” soon became part of the pandemic lexicon.

Nearly three years into the pandemic, scientists are still trying to figure out why some people get long Covid and why a small portion — including the three women — have lasting symptoms.

Millions of people worldwide have had long Covid, reporting various symptoms including fatigue, lung problems, and brain fog and other neurologic­al symptoms. Evidence suggests most recover substantia­lly within a year, but recent data show that it has contribute­d to more than 3,500 US deaths.

Here are some of the latest evidence:

Women more at risk?

MANY studies and anecdotal evidence suggest that women are more likely than men to develop long Covid.

There could be biological reasons. Women’s immune systems generally mount stronger reactions to viruses, bacteria, parasites and other germs, noted Sabra Klein, a Johns Hopkins professor who studies immunity.

Women are also much more likely than men to have autoimmune diseases, where the body mistakenly attacks its own healthy cells. Some scientists believe long Covid could result from an autoimmune response triggered by the virus.

Women’s bodies also tend to have more fat tissue and emerging research suggests the coronaviru­s may hide in fat after infection. Scientists also are studying whether women’s fluctuatin­g hormone levels may increase the risks.

Another possible factor: Women are more likely than men to seek health care and often more attuned to changes in their bodies, Klein noted.

“I don’t think we should ignore that,” she said. Biology and behavior are probably both at play, Klein said.

It may thus be no coincidenc­e that it was three women who helped shine the first light on long Covid.

Pope, 46, started chroniclin­g what she was experienci­ng in March 2020: flu-like symptoms, then her lungs, heart and joints were affected. After a month she started having some “OK” days, but symptoms persisted.

She and some similarly ill colleagues connected with Perego on Twitter. “We started sort of coming together because it was literally the only place where we could do that,” Pope said. “In 2020, we would joke that we’d get together for Christmas and have a party,” Pope said. “Then obviously it went on, and I think we stopped joking.”

Watson started her virtual long haulers group that April. The others soon learned of that nickname and embraced it.

Mono virus

SEVERAL studies suggest the ubiquitous Epstein-barr virus could play a role in some cases of long Covid.

Inflammati­on caused by coronaviru­s infection can activate herpes viruses, which remain in the body after causing an acute infection, said Dr. Timothy Henrich, a virus expert at the University of California, San Francisco.

Epstein-barr virus is among the most common of these herpes viruses: An estimated 90 percent of the US population has been infected with it. The virus can cause mononucleo­sis or symptoms that may be dismissed as a cold.

Henrich is among researcher­s who have found immune markers signaling Epstein-barr reactivati­on in the blood of long Covid patients, particular­ly those with fatigue.

Not all long Covid patients have these markers. But it’s possible that Epstein-barr is causing symptoms in those who do, although scientists say more study is needed.

Some scientists also believe that Epstein-barr triggers chronic fatigue syndrome, a condition that bears many similariti­es to long Covid, but that also is unproven.

Obesity

OBESITY is a risk factor for severe Covid-19 infections and scientists are trying to understand why.

Stanford University researcher­s are among those who have found evidence that the coronaviru­s can infect fat cells. In a recent study, they found the virus and signs of inflammati­on in fat tissue taken from people who had died from Covid.

Lab tests showed that the virus can reproduce in fat tissue. That raises the possibilit­y that fat tissue could serve as a “reservoir,” potentiall­y fueling long Covid.

Could removing fat tissue treat or prevent some cases of long Covid? It’s a tantalizin­g question, but the research is preliminar­y, said Dr. Catherine Blish, a Stanford infectious diseases professor and a senior author of the study.

Scientists at the University of Texas Southweste­rn Medical Center are studying leptin, a hormone produced by fat cells that can influence the body’s immune response and promote inflammati­on.

They plan to study whether injections of a manufactur­ed antibody could reduce leptin levels—and in turn inf lammation from coronaviru­s infections or long Covid.

“We have a good scientific basis together with some preliminar­y data to argue that we might be on the right track,” said Dr. Philipp Scherer.

Duration

IT has been estimated that about 30 percent of people infected with the coronaviru­s will develop long Covid, based on data from earlier in the pandemic.

Most people who have lingering, recurrent or new symptoms after infection will recover after about three months. Among those with symptoms at three months, about 15 percent will continue to have symptoms for at least nine more months, according to a recent study in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n.

Figuring out who’s at risk for years-long symptoms “is such a complicate­d question,” said Dr. Lawrence Purpura, an infectious disease expert at Columbia University.

Those with severe infections seem to be more at risk for long Covid, although it can also affect people with mild infections. Those whose infections cause severe lung damage including scarring may experience breathless­ness, coughing or fatigue for more than a year. And a smaller group of patients with mild initial Covid-19 infections may develop neurologic symptoms for more than a year, including chronic fatigue and brain fog, Purpura said.

“The majority of patients will eventually recover,” he said. “It’s important for people to know that.”

It’s small consolatio­n for the three women who helped the world recognize long Covid.

Perego, 44, developed heart, lung and neurologic problems and remains seriously ill.

She knows that scientists have learned a lot in a short time, but she says “there is a gap” between long Covid research and medical care.

“We need to translate scientific knowledge into better treatment and policy,” she said.

Watson, approachin­g 50, says she has “never had any kind of recovery.” She has had severe migraines, plus digestive, nerve and foot problems. Recently she developed severe anemia.

She wishes the medical community had a more organized approach to treating long Covid. Doctors say not knowing the underlying cause or causes makes that difficult.

“I just want my life back,” Watson said, “and it’s not looking like that’s all that possible.”

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