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    Home»Health»Good News: Most Long COVID Effects Resolve Within a Year After a Mild Infection
    Health

    Good News: Most Long COVID Effects Resolve Within a Year After a Mild Infection

    By BMJFebruary 12, 2023No Comments5 Mins Read
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    Coronavirus COVID Rendering
    Long COVID refers to the phenomenon of people continuing to experience symptoms of the disease long after the initial infection has cleared. This can include symptoms such as fatigue, brain fog, and shortness of breath, among others. While the exact cause of Long COVID is still not fully understood, researchers believe it may be related to lingering inflammation in the body or ongoing damage to certain organs.

    Researchers found that most infected individuals do not experience significant long-term illness as a result of a mild case of the disease.

    According to a large study from Israel published in The BMJ, most symptoms or conditions that arise following a mild case of COVID-19 tend to persist for several months, but typically return to normal within a year.

    Vaccination Linked to Reduced Risk of Breathing Difficulties

    Specifically, the study found that individuals who have been vaccinated are at a reduced risk of developing breathing difficulties, the most prevalent effect to occur following a mild case of COVID-19, compared to those who have not been vaccinated.

    These findings suggest that, although the long covid phenomenon has been feared and discussed since the beginning of the pandemic, the vast majority of mild disease cases do not suffer serious or chronic long-term illness, say the researchers.

    Long covid is defined as symptoms persisting or new symptoms appearing more than four weeks after initial infection. In March 2022, an estimated 1.5 million people in the UK (2.4% of the population) reported long covid symptoms, mainly fatigue, shortness of breath, loss of smell, loss of taste, and difficulty concentrating.

    But the clinical effects of long covid one year after mild infection and their association with age, sex, covid-19 variants, and vaccination status are still unclear.

    To address this, researchers compared the health of uninfected individuals with those who had recovered from mild covid-19 for a year after infection.

    They used electronic records of a large public healthcare organization in Israel, in which almost 2 million members were tested for covid-19 between 1 March 2020 and 1 October 2021. Over 70 long covid conditions were analyzed in a group of infected and matched uninfected members (average age 25 years; 51% female).

    They compared conditions in unvaccinated people, with and without covid-19 infection, controlling for age, sex, and covid-19 variants, during early (30-180 days) and late (180-360 days) time periods after infection. Conditions in vaccinated versus unvaccinated people with covid-19 were also compared over the same time periods.

    To ensure only mild disease was assessed, they excluded patients admitted to hospitals with more serious illnesses. Other potentially influential factors, such as alcohol intake, smoking status, socioeconomic level, and a range of pre-existing chronic conditions were also taken into account.

    Key Findings on Symptom Risks and Recovery

    Covid-19 infection was significantly associated with increased risks of several conditions including loss of smell and taste, concentration and memory impairment, breathing difficulties, weakness, palpitations, streptococcal tonsillitis, and dizziness in both early and late time periods, while hair loss, chest pain, cough, muscle aches and pains and respiratory disorders resolved in the late period.

    For example, compared with non-infected people, mild covid-19 infection was associated with a 4.5-fold higher risk of smell and taste loss (an additional 20 people per 10,000) in the early period and an almost 3-fold higher risk (11 per 10,000 people) in the late period.

    The overall burden of conditions after infection across the 12-month study period was highest for weakness (an additional 136 people per 10,000) and breathing difficulties (107 per 10,000).

    When conditions were assessed by age, breathing difficulties were the most common, appearing in five of the six age groups but remaining persistent throughout the first year post-infection in the 19-40, 41-60, and over 60 years age groups.

    Weakness appeared in four of the six age groups and remained persistent in the late phase only in the 19-40 and 41-60 age groups.

    Male and female patients showed minor differences, and children had fewer outcomes than adults during the early phase of covid-19, which mostly resolved in the late period. Findings were similar across the wild-type, Alpha, and Delta covid-19 variants.

    Key Findings on Symptom Risks and Recovery

    Vaccinated people who became infected had a lower risk of breathing difficulties and similar risk for other conditions compared with unvaccinated infected patients.

    The researchers point to some limitations, such as incomplete measurement within medical records, so data might not fully reflect diagnoses and outcomes reported. And they can’t rule out the possibility that covid-19 patients may use healthcare services more frequently, resulting in higher reporting and increased screening for potential covid-related outcomes in these patients.

    Nevertheless, this was a large detailed analysis of health records across a diverse population, representing one of the longest follow-up studies in patients with mild covid-19 to date. And findings should apply to similar western populations worldwide.

    “Our study suggests that mild covid-19 patients are at risk for a small number of health outcomes and most of them are resolved within a year from diagnosis,” say the researchers.

    “Importantly, the risk for lingering dyspnoea was reduced in vaccinated patients with breakthrough infection compared with unvaccinated people, while risks of all other outcomes were comparable,” they add.

    Reference: “Long covid outcomes at one year after mild SARS-CoV-2 infection: nationwide cohort study” by Barak Mizrahi, Tamar Sudry, Natalie Flaks-Manov, Yoav Yehezkelli, Nir Kalkstein, Pinchas Akiva, Anat Ekka-Zohar,  Shirley Shapiro Ben David, Uri Lerner, Maytal Bivas-Benita and Shira Greenfeld, 11 January 2023, The BMJ.
    DOI: 10.1136/bmj-2022-072529

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