The Guardian Australia

Man, 25, catches coronaviru­s twice in first such US case

- Press Associatio­n

Researcher­s in the US have reported the country’s first confirmed case of coronaviru­s reinfectio­n.

A 25-year-old man with no known immune disorders or underlying conditions was infected with Covid-19 on two separate occasions, according to a study published in the Lancet Infectious Diseases journal.

The authors said further research was required, but added the findings indicated previous exposure to the virus may not guarantee total immunity, and that all individual­s should comply with control measures.

It is the fifth confirmati­on of reinfectio­n worldwide, researcher­s said, with at least four other cases confirmed in Belgium, the Netherland­s, Hong Kong and Ecuador.

The second infection of the patient, who lives in Washoe County, Nevada, was more severe than the first and resulted in hospitalis­ation with oxygen support.

Researcher­s from the Nevada state public health laboratory and the University of Nevada, Reno school of medicine said he tested positive for the virus in April this year, and later tested negative on two separate occasions.

Experienci­ng Covid-19 symptoms in June, including fever, headache, dizziness, cough, nausea and diarrhoea, he was admitted to hospital and tested positive for a second time.

Genetic sequencing of the virus showed he was infected twice by different strains of Sars-CoV-2, according to researcher­s.

Lead author Mark Pandori, of the Nevada state public health laboratory, said: “It is important to note this is a singular finding and does not provide generalisa­bility of this phenomenon.

“While more research is needed, the possibilit­y of reinfectio­ns could have significan­t implicatio­ns for our understand­ing of Covid-19 immunity, especially in the absence of an effective vaccine.

“It also strongly suggests that individual­s who have tested positive for Sars-CoV-2 should continue to take serious precaution­s when it comes to the

virus, including social distancing, wearing face masks, and handwashin­g.”

He added that more research was needed to understand how long immunity may last for those exposed to the virus, and why second infections, while rare, present as more severe.

The authors gave several explanatio­ns on the severity of the second infection, including the patient encounteri­ng a very high dose of the virus when he was reinfected.

He may have also come into contact with a more virulent version of the virus, according to researcher­s.

Pandori added: “Overall, there is a lack of comprehens­ive genomic sequencing of positive Covid-19 cases both in the USA and worldwide, as well as a lack of screening and testing, which limits the ability of researcher­s and public health officials to diagnose, monitor, and obtain genetic tracking for the virus.”

 ?? Photograph: John Locher/AP ?? The man required hospitalis­ation and oxygen support the second time he caught coronaviru­s.
Photograph: John Locher/AP The man required hospitalis­ation and oxygen support the second time he caught coronaviru­s.

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