Miami Herald (Sunday)

COVID-19 can leave long-term symptoms, complicati­ons

- Mayo Clinic News Network

Acute symptoms of COVID-19, such as cough, fever and shortness of breath, are now widely known. What is not known, however, is what symptoms and complicati­ons may linger long after an initial COVID-19 infection.

Early research shows the disease attacks more than just the respirator­y system, affecting multiple organs with blood clots and inflammati­on.

“This is a disease that has a number of mysteries involved, compared to the usual respirator­y virus,” says Dr. Gregory Poland, a COVID-19 expert at Mayo Clinic. “On the one hand, we see very severe but variable manifestat­ions. On the other hand, (we see) infection without symptoms. We also see a diminution of immunity over time with this coronaviru­s.”

What’s just starting to emerge, Poland says, is this idea of COVID-19 “longhauler­s,” which is a term used to describe people who develop long-term and ongoing complicati­ons.

“We’re really seeing a number of reports of people who report long-term fatigue, headaches, vertigo (and), interestin­gly enough, difficulti­es with cognition, hair loss, cardiac issues, and diminished cardioresp­iratory fitness. And I think what we’re going to find out is that a large portion – not all, but a large portion of that – is likely to relate to the significan­t cellular-level damage that this virus can cause,” says Poland.

Some of the possible longterm effects can affect even patients who are asymptomat­ic or have mild cases of COVID-19.

“I think it’s an argument for why we take this disease so seriously,” says Poland. “People who are thinking, especially young people:

‘(It’s a) mild disease, you know. I might not even have any symptoms, and I’m over it.’ Whoa. The data is suggesting otherwise. There’s evidence of myocardial damage, cardiomyop­athy, arrhythmia­s, decreased ejection fractions, pulmonary scarring and strokes.

“So this can be a really wicked virus in some people,” Poland says.

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