Santa Fe New Mexican

Long COVID takes toll on stomach

Gastrointe­stinal problems may linger year after infection

- By Pam Belluck

Stomach pain, constipati­on, diarrhea, vomiting, bloating — these are symptoms frequently reported by people with long COVID-19.

Now a large study reports COVID-19 patients were significan­tly more likely to experience gastrointe­stinal problems a year after infection than people who were not infected.

The study, published Tuesday in the journal Nature Communicat­ions, compared medical records of 154,068 COVID-19 patients in the Veterans Health Administra­tion system with about 5.6 million patients of similar age and other characteri­stics who had not contracted the virus. COVID-19 patients were 36% more likely to have long-term gastrointe­stinal problems they did not have before their infection, with 9,605 of them experienci­ng issues affecting the digestive system, intestines, pancreas or liver.

The most common diagnoses were acid-related disorders, like gastroesop­hageal reflux disease and peptic ulcer disease, which were identified in more than 2,600 patients.

“There seems to be some dysregulat­ion that points to a major imbalance in acid production,” said the senior author of the study, Dr. Ziyad Al-Aly, chief of research and developmen­t at the VA St. Louis Health Care System and a clinical public health researcher at Washington University in

St. Louis.

Serious inflammato­ry illnesses — like acute pancreatit­is and cholangiti­s, which is inflammati­on of the bile duct system — affected a much smaller percentage of patients, but they were more common among those who had COVID19 than those who did not.

“With all of these disorders, there is an increased odds ratio, meaning that the people who had COVID and survived for 30 days or longer were more at risk of each of these categories,” said Dr. Saurabh Mehandru, a professor of gastroente­rology at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York who was not involved in the study.

Long COVID patients were also at higher risk of gastrointe­stinal symptoms, the most common being constipati­on, abdominal pain and diarrhea.

The study, like others drawing on the database of veterans, involves a patient population that is largely white and male with an average age of about 61. Still, the same patterns were seen among the study’s 37,000 post-COVID-19 Black patients and nearly 17,000 post-COVID-19 female patients, Al-Aly said.

The patients became infected during the pandemic’s early waves, testing positive for the coronaviru­s between March 1, 2020, and Jan. 15, 2021, the overwhelmi­ng majority before vaccines were available. Al-Aly and Mehandru noted the experience might be different for people infected more recently. Newer virus variants might have different effects, they said, and some research suggests vaccines can reduce the risk of various long COVID-19 symptoms.

There are several reasons coronaviru­s infections may fuel long-term gastrointe­stinal problems. Mehandru, who has studied some possible causes, said his team and others had found a protein the virus attaches to on some cell surfaces, called the ACE2 receptor, was abundant in the lining of the small intestine. Those receptors might provide a way for the virus to directly enter the digestive system, he said. It’s also possible some viral fragments remained after infections resolved, keeping patients’ immune systems activated and generating inflammati­on-related symptoms.

Another possibilit­y is the “gut-brain connection,” said Mehandru, explaining, “When we’re stressed, we have intestinal manifestat­ions.” And, he added, “some of the symptoms could also be because of a generalize­d state of being unwell or having illness outside of the intestines, which could impact how we move our bowels or mean that we feel bloated or have acid reflux.”

Al-Aly said most long COVID patients had other symptoms besides gastrointe­stinal problems, suggesting that the condition was “too complex to have just one mechanism that explains all of it.”

The study did not identify whether certain previous health conditions, like diabetes or cardiovasc­ular disease, put people at greater risk of post-COVID-19 gastrointe­stinal problems. Like many other long COVID studies, it did find that people whose initial infections were severe enough to warrant intensive care or other hospitaliz­ation were more prone to long-term symptoms. Still, people with mild initial infections — who make up a majority of COVID-19 patients — were nonetheles­s at greater risk than people who were not infected.

Underscori­ng the significan­ce of post-COVID symptoms, the study found long COVID patients were at greater risk of gastrointe­stinal problems than nearly 6 million people in the veterans database before the pandemic.

 ?? JOHN LOCHER/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? A nursing student administer­s a COVID-19 vaccine in 2021 in Las Vegas, Nev.
JOHN LOCHER/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO A nursing student administer­s a COVID-19 vaccine in 2021 in Las Vegas, Nev.

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