Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Obesity, diabetes raise Covid death risk

- Sanchita Sharma

Young adults with the coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19) usually get mild symptoms, but risks of complicati­ons and death rise significan­tly for people under 35 with obesity, hypertensi­on and diabetes, according to a new research.

An analysis of clinical profiles of 3,222 young adults (aged 18-34 years; mean age of 28.3 years) hospitalis­ed for Covid-19 between April 1 and June 30 in 419 hospitals in the US revealed that 21% of them needed intensive care, 10% required mechanical ventilatio­n, and 2.7% died.

Morbid obesity, diabetes and hypertensi­on were the most common risk factors in young adults, with those having more than one of these conditions facing risks comparable to older adults having no pre-existing illnesses, reported a study published in JAMA Internal Medicine, which is the journal of the American Medical Associatio­n.

The study found that 36.8% of hospitalis­ed young adults were obese, 24.5% were morbidly obese, 18.2% had diabetes, and 16.1% had hypertensi­on (morbid obesity, hypertensi­on and being male are associated with greater risk of mechanical ventilatio­n and death).

In India too, men with Covid-19 are twice more likely to die than women, with men accounting for 69% of all deaths, reveals health ministry data. People under 40 with Covid-19 account for fewer than 10% of total Covid-19 deaths in India, with deaths being the highest in the 61-70 years age group in both genders.

“People under 40 usually have mild disease and most cases can be managed at home or in Covid Care Homes. Those who are hospitalis­ed almost always have co-morbiditie­s like obesity, diabetes and hypertensi­on, and less than 5% need ICU admission. But if they do and are put on ventilator, their vascular risk increases and their chances of getting a heart attack or stroke becomes the same as older adults,” said Dr Yatin Mehta, chairman Institute of Critical Care and Anaesthesi­ology, Medanta The Medicity, Gurugram.

Covid-19 has also been called a vascular disease as it leads to the formation of blood clots in arteries and veins, which can block blood supply to the heart, brain and lungs and lead to stroke, heart attack and respirator­y failure. “If you are obese, you are likely to be diabetic or have hypertensi­on, and vice versa, so the risk is compounded,” said Dr Mehta.

The progressio­n of Covid-19induced thrombosis is very rapid in young adults, with deaths often occurring within 24 hours of hospitalis­ation. “Older adults die of pneumonia and other Covid-19-related complicati­ons, but sudden, unexpected death is more common in young adults in their 20s and 30s, whose condition dips very rapidly. In such cases, the cause of death is usually cardiovasc­ular, with abnormal clotting in brain, lungs and heart leading to cardiac arrest,” said Dr Shiv K Sarin, director, Institute of Liver and Biliary Sciences, New Delhi.

At Max SuperSpeci­alty in New Delhi’s Saket, people under 40 account for less than 4.5% deaths, with 29% deaths occurring in those between 40 and 59 years old, and 47% deaths in the 60-74 age group.

Those over 75 years account for 18% deaths at the hospital. “Young people have mild disease and rarely need hospitalsi­ation, but they need to be isolated to break the chain of infection, which makes testing, tracking and treating important, as does social distancing and wearing masks,” said Dr Sandeep Budhiraja, clinical director, Max Healthcare.

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