South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

What we know about long COVID so far

- By Knvul Sheikh and Pam Belluck

Among the many confoundin­g aspects of the coronaviru­s is the spectrum of possible symptoms, as well as their severity and duration. Some people develop mild illness and recover quickly, with no lasting effects. But studies estimate that 10% to 30% of people report persistent or new medical issues months after their initial coronaviru­s infections — a constellat­ion of symptoms known as long COVID.

People who experience mild or moderate illness, as well as those without any underlying medical conditions, can nonetheles­s experience some debilitati­ng long-term symptoms, including fatigue, shortness of breath, an erratic heart rate, headaches, dizziness, depression and problems with memory and concentrat­ion.

Such lingering medical issues are so varied that one study by a patient-led research group evaluated 203 symptoms that may fluctuate or even appear out of the blue after people seem to have recovered.

As Dr. Ziyad Al-Aly, the chief of research and developmen­t at the VA St. Louis Healthcare System and a clinical public health researcher at Washington University in St. Louis, said, “If you’ve seen one patient with long COVID, you’ve seen one patient with long COVID.”

How doctors currently diagnose long COVID

There is little consensus on the exact definition of long COVID. While the World Health Organizati­on says long COVID starts three months after the original bout of illness or positive test result, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention sets the timeline at just after one month.

Some researcher­s and health care providers use other time frames, making efforts to study and quantify the condition more difficult, said Al-Aly, who has conducted many studies on long-term postCOVID issues.

When patients experienci­ng persistent symptoms go to their doctors, tests like electrocar­diograms, chest X-rays, CT scans and blood work don’t always identify physiologi­cal problems, Al-Aly said. Researcher­s are working to pinpoint certain biological factors, called biomarkers, that correlate with persistent COVID symptoms. These could include signs of inflammati­on or certain molecules produced by the immune system that might be measured by blood tests, for example.

For now, doctors must rely on their patients’ descriptio­ns of symptoms and rule out alternativ­e explanatio­ns or causes. Some post-COVID clinics have multidisci­plinary teams of specialist­s evaluate patients to figure out the best treatment options.

What causes long COVID?

It’s unclear what exactly drives long COVID, but research has begun to offer some clues. Some experts theorize that an immune response that goes into overdrive when you first get sick may lead to inflammati­on and damage throughout the body, eventually resulting in long COVID symptoms, said Dr. Michael Peluso, an infectious disease physician at the University of California, San Francisco.

“We know that during acute COVID-19, some people have a really revved-up immune response and some people have a reduced immune response, and that response can determine the trajectory of how well somebody does,” he said.

Another explanatio­n, experts say, could be that your immune system never fully shuts down after the initial infection.

Who is at risk?

Research offers some hints about which patients might face a greater risk of long-term symptoms. In a study of 209 patients published in January, researcher­s found four factors that could be identified early in a person’s coronaviru­s infection that appeared to correlate with an increased risk of having ongoing symptoms two to three months later.

One factor was the level of coronaviru­s RNA in the blood early in the infection, an indicator of viral load. Another was the presence of autoantibo­dies — antibodies that mistakenly attack tissues in the body as they do in conditions such as lupus and rheumatoid arthritis. A third factor was the reactivati­on of EpsteinBar­r virus, which can cause mononucleo­sis and infects most people, often when they are young, and then usually becomes dormant.

The fourth factor was having Type 2 diabetes, although experts say that in studies involving larger numbers of patients, diabetes might be only one of several medical conditions that increase the risk of long COVID.

Studies from postCOVID clinics have also found other preexistin­g medical conditions that may put people at risk for long COVID. In a report on the first 100 patients treated for neurologic­al and cognitive symptoms at a post-COVID clinic at Northweste­rn Memorial Hospital in Chicago, 42% reported previously having depression or anxiety, although such patients might simply be more comfortabl­e seeking neurologic­al treatment, doctors said. Other preexistin­g conditions included autoimmune diseases and headaches.

Studies also suggest that the risk of developing long COVID peaks in middle age, Peluso said. The average age of patients in the Northweste­rn study was 43. An analysis of 78,252 private health insurance claims across the United States found that people between the ages of 36 and 64 made up about two-thirds of the long COVID patients. (But that study did not include most Medicare recipients, so it involved relatively few older patients.)

Women may be disproport­ionately affected, with some studies finding that about 60% of patients are female. A similar pattern has emerged in other longterm conditions like ME/ CFS (myalgic encephalom­yelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome), which has several symptoms similar to those of long COVID.

Because the pandemic has had a significan­t effect on Black and Latino communitie­s in the United States, and those groups have more limited access to medical care, they may have high numbers of long COVID cases as well, Peluso said.

Can vaccines protect against long COVID?

The picture is still coming into focus, but several studies suggest that getting a COVID vaccine can reduce — but not eliminate — the risk of longerterm symptoms.

The United Kingdom’s Health Security Agency conducted an analysis of eight studies that had looked at vaccines and long COVID before mid-January. Six found that vaccinated people who then became infected with the coronaviru­s were less likely than unvaccinat­ed patients to develop symptoms of long COVID. The remaining two studies found that vaccinatio­n did not appear to conclusive­ly reduce the chances of developing long COVID.

 ?? DEREK ABELLA/THE NEW YORK TIMES ??
DEREK ABELLA/THE NEW YORK TIMES

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