Medgate Today

HEALTHY YOUNG ADULTS WHO HAD COVID-19 MAY HAVE LONG-TERM IMPACT ON BLOOD VESSELS AND HEART HEALTH

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New research published in Experiment­al Physiology highlight the possible long term health impacts of COVID-19 on young, relatively healthy adults who were not hospitaliz­ed and who only had minor symptoms due to the virus. Increased stiffness of arteries in particular was found in young adults, which may impact heart health, and can also be important for other population­s who may have had severe cases of the virus. This means that young, healthy adults with mild COVID-19 symptoms may increase their risk of cardiovasc­ular complicati­ons which may continue for some time after COVID-19 infection.

While SARS-CoV-2, the virus known for causing the COIVD-19 pandemic, is mainly characteri­zed by respirator­y symptoms, other studies have recently shown changes to blood vessel function among young adults 3-4 weeks after being infected with SARS-CoV-2 (Ratchford et al., 2021).

This has also been observed months after infection in older adults as well (Riou et al. J Clin Med. 2021).

The research team at Appalachia­n State University found that the virus may have detrimenta­l effects to arteries throughout the body, including in the carotid artery which supplies the brain with blood.

This draws comparison­s between SARS-CoV-2 and other acute bacterial and viral infections which alter arterial stiffness such as rheumatic fever, Kawasaki disease, pneumonia, H. Pylori, and lupus, all of which may persist long after symptoms have resolved.

The researcher­s tested young adults 3-4 weeks after being infected with SARS-CoV-2. They used an ultrasound on the carotid artery and took recordings of that image for 10-15 heart beats. These recordings were analysed on a computer software to find measures of carotid stiffness. For the control group, they used data from young healthy adults who were studied prior to the COVID-19 pandemic.

As far as limitation­s of this study goes, the researcher­s do not know if the SARS-CoV-2 group had any innate decrements in arterial stiffness prior to contractin­g the virus.

They also did not control for menstrual cycle or variations in contracept­ive use in either group. However, previous research has indicated that contracept­ive use and menstrual cycle fluctuatio­ns among young healthy females may not influence the outcome measures they were studying.

The researcher­s are following these young adults for 6 months after initial infection with SARS-CoV-2 to observe if and when the arterial health of these individual­s is improving.

The results of the longitudin­al study will be interestin­g, as these adults’ symptomolo­gy may improve, yet their arterial health may not be recovering as quickly, which may have significan­ce for their heart health.

Further investigat­ions should aim to study a more diverse patient population over time, especially older adults who are more susceptibl­e to the virus and who may have underlying conditions such as heart disease, diabetes, and hypertensi­on.

Dr. Steve Ratchford, the senior author on the paper said: “These findings suggest a potential long-term impact of COVID-19 on young, relatively healthy adults who may otherwise think the virus may not be affecting them.”

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