Houston Chronicle Sunday

Studies suggest COVID-19 is able to spread from corpses

- By Apoorva Mandavilli

Like a zombie in a horror film, the coronaviru­s can persist in the bodies of infected patients well after death, even spreading to others, according to two startling studies.

The risk of contagion is mainly to those who handle cadavers, like pathologis­ts, medical examiners and health care workers, and in settings like hospitals and nursing homes, where many deaths may occur.

While transmissi­on from corpses is not likely to be a major factor in the pandemic, bereaved family members should exercise caution, experts said.

“In some countries, people who have died of COVID-19 are being left unattended or taken back to their homes,” said Hisako Saitoh, a researcher at Chiba University in Japan who published two recent studies on the phenomenon.

“Therefore, I think that it is a knowledge that the general public should be aware of,” he wrote in an email.

Several studies have found traces of infectious virus in corpses for as long as 17 days after death. Saitoh and his colleagues went further, showing that dead bodies may carry significan­t amounts of infectious virus, and that dead hamsters can transmit it to live cage mates.

The research has not yet been vetted for publicatio­n in a scientific journal, but outside experts said that the studies were welldone and the results compelling.

The risk of a live patient spreading the coronaviru­s is far greater than the potential transmissi­on from corpses, Saitoh and other scientists emphasized.

If infection from corpses accounted for a large number of cases, “we would have noticed, right?” said Vincent Munster, a virus expert at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

Still, “if there is an infectious virus, there is always a risk for transmissi­on,” he continued. “I don’t think it’s something which is often addressed.”

In the United States, bodies usually are embalmed soon after death or cremated. But in the Netherland­s, where Munster grew up, as in many parts of the world, family members may wash and dress the bodies.

In July 2020, the Japanese government urged bereaved family members to keep their distance from dead bodies and refrain from touching them — or even viewing them. Officials also recommende­d sealing corpses in impermeabl­e bags and cremating them within 24 hours.

The guidelines were revised in May 2022 to allow family members to see loved ones who died of COVID, but “in an appropriat­ely infection-controlled hospital room.”

Those guidelines in part prompted Saitoh to explore what happens to the virus in the body after death.

He and his colleagues looked at samples from the noses and the lungs of 11 people who had died of COVID. The researcher­s found that high amounts of virus persisted in six of the 11 corpses, even 13 days after death.

“It was surprising that infectious titers were preserved at the same high levels as in the clinical patients,” Saitoh wrote. “What was most surprising, however, were the results of the animal experiment­s.”

In those experiment­s, he and his colleagues found that hamsters that died within a few days of becoming infected with the coronaviru­s could transmit it to other animals. In people, too, contagion is most likely when a patient dies soon after infection, when the levels of virus in the body are very high, the researcher­s said.

The team found more virus in the lungs of human corpses than in the upper respirator­y tract. That suggests that those who perform autopsies should be particular­ly careful when handling the lungs, experts said. Saitoh pointed to a study from Thailand describing a forensic practition­er who appeared to have been infected during work.

Gases that build up after death can be expelled through any orifice in the body, including the mouth, and may carry infectious virus, the researcher­s said. Embalming or practicing so-called “angel care” — a Japanese ritual in which the mouth, nose, ears and anus are plugged with cotton pads — prevented transmissi­on, they found.

Angela Rasmussen, a research scientist at the Vaccine and Infectious Disease Organizati­on at the University of Saskatchew­an in Canada, was initially skeptical that the coronaviru­s could spread from dead bodies but found the new studies convincing.

“Most people probably still need to worry a lot more about getting COVID from their living neighbors than their recently deceased ones,” she said.

But they “should be very cautious about physical contact with their loved ones’ remains,” she added.

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