Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Lingering illness after COVID

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While stressing the importance of getting vaccinated to prevent severe disease and death, four Consultant Respirator­y Physicians of the Sri Lanka College of Pulmonolog­ists look at Post-COVID where illness lingers long after the acute phase is over and also the things those who have got COVID-19 should heed.

The eminent doctors who have a strong pulse on what is happening with regard to COVID-19 at ground level were college President Dr. Geethal Perera of the Sri Jayewarden­epura Hospital; Dr. Eshanth Perera of the National Hospital for Respirator­y Diseases, Welisara; Dr. Wathsala Gunasinghe of the Hambantota District General Hospital; and Dr. Neranjan Dissanayak­e of the Ratnapura Teaching Hospital.

They point out that the need is to keep the curve of COVID-19 down as otherwise beds in hospitals will fill up.

They also caution that if there is a “lot” of the virus circulatin­g in the community, the chances would be high of a mutant raising its head and riding the next wave to higher heights.

Post-COVID

Dr. Geethal Perera talks of the “unknown quantity” that is Post- COVID, explaining that after the Delta wave, “we had a wave of Post-COVID lung disease and Post-COVID sequelae such as thrombosis

( formation of blood clots), heart attacks, strokes and psychologi­cal complicati­ons.

We don't know what will happen after Omicron”.

Pointing out that currently we don’t know the number infected at a given time as many don’t take tests, he said:

“If 1% of these people get

Post-COVID issues, that's going to be a huge hit on the healthcare system in the next five to six months. So it's important that we get ready for it now, rather than when things go wrong. You have to have the healthcare system ready to manage such a situation.”

Dr. Geethal Perera has already seen “a lot of wheezing” as have the other Respirator­y Physicians. “They are not responding to treatment,” says Dr. Wathsala Gunasinghe, as Dr. Geethal Perera creates in the mind’s eye of the Sunday Times how every morning he listens to such complaints during his ward round of 36 beds. “Of them, we have to start inhalers for at least eight patients because they do not respond otherwise.”

There is also “lots of rhinitis” after Omicron. Rhinitis involves nasal obstructio­n or congestion, a runny nose or post-nasal drip, itchy nose and/or bouts of sneezing and in people who have had no family history of such illness before, it is learnt.

Dr. Neranjan Dissanayak­e says that there could also be breathless­ness and interstiti­al pneumonia caused by Post-COVID organizing pneumonia, leading to scarring of the lungs. This would make the lungs stiffer and reduce oxygen diffusion from the lungs to the blood. This needs to be diagnosed and treated promptly.

The Specialist­s also caution against the false belief among people that those who got “bad” disease during the Delta wave last August will not get infected again. They “are” getting infected and they “are” getting “symptomati­c” (having symptoms) illness.

Dr. Eshanth Perera echoes these views and says that people get a false sense of security that if they have got COVID-19, they will not get re-infected. They think Omicron is mild and since they have got worse disease, they will not get this mild disease again.

Adding his concerns from what he has heard from his patients, Dr. Neranjan Dissanayak­e says that another strongly held thought is that just because someone has taken a jab or two but is not fully vaccinated (all three doses), they will get only mild disease.

What they forget is that if not topped up fully by the three doses, the vaccine effect starts waning and they are very vulnerable to COVID-19, he says, pointing out that those who got their second doses in August are now into the fifth and sixth months and are at risk of catching the virus.

“It is very important for people to get the vaccine and not just one or two jabs but all three doses,” says Dr. Neranjan Dissanayak­e, urging the people to talk to those around them, like he does with those attending his clinics on the importance of the vaccines in reducing severe disease and death. “I usually make it a point to ask my patients whether they have got vaccinated and whether they have got the booster. Of about 10, sometimes 5 (half) have not got it.”

He added that any symptoms associated with the flu can be those of COVID-19, until proven otherwise. It is important for people, if they have a mild fever with body-aches, a runny or stuffy nose and throat pain, to think it is COVID-19.

“If a person has significan­t comorbidit­ies even if there is the slightest suspicion that you are infected with COVID-19, seek medical interventi­on at the earliest stage,” he urges.

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