London : Nearly 37%, or at least one in three COVID-19 patients, had at least one protracted-COVID symptom diagnosed within a period of three to six months following a coronavirus infection, Wednesday A new UK study reports to.
Research from the University of Oxford and the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Oxford Health Biomedical Research Center (BRC) used data from the US-based TriNetX electronic health to assess the long-term survival of more than 270,000 people who have recovered from COVID-19 infection. Till time- tested Covid. record network.
The most common long-term COVID symptoms were breathing problems, abdominal symptoms, fatigue, pain, and anxiety/depression.
“The results confirm that a significant proportion of people of all ages may be affected by multiple symptoms and difficulties in the six months following a COVID-19 infection,” said NIHR Academic Clinical Fellow Dr. Max Taquet. University of Oxford.
Taquet said, “These data complement the findings of self-report surveys, and show that physicians are diagnosing patients with these symptoms. We need to address the current and future clinical need appropriately.” Requires configured services.”
Higher rates were observed if the entire 1-180 day period following a COVID-19 infection is included.
Infection severity, age, and gender affected the likelihood of long-Covid symptoms: Long-Covid symptoms were higher in those who were hospitalized, and they were slightly more common in women. These factors also influenced which symptoms people were most likely to experience.
For example, older people and men had more difficulty breathing and cognitive problems, while younger people and women had more headaches, abdominal symptoms, and anxiety/depression. Many patients had more than one protracted-Covid symptom, and the symptoms co-existed more as time went on.
Professor Paul Harrison, who led the study from Oxford University’s Department of Psychiatry, said: “There is an urgent need for a variety of research to understand why not everyone recovers rapidly and completely from COVID-19. It happens.”
He said, “We need to identify the underlying mechanisms of the various symptoms that may affect survivors. This information will be essential if the long-term health consequences of COVID-19 are to be prevented or effectively treated.” Go,” he said.
The study looked at the same symptoms in people who had recovered from influenza or the flu. Long-term Covid symptoms appeared after influenza, but were 1.5 times more common after COVID-19.
According to the findings, the nine main long-term COVID symptoms that occur 90–180 days after a diagnosis of COVID-19 include: abnormal breathing (8%); abdominal symptoms (8%); anxiety/depression (15%); chest/throat pain (6%); cognitive problems or so-called brain fog (4%); fatigue (6%); headache (5%); myalgia or muscle pain (1.5%); other pain (7%); and none of the above features (37%).
The study highlights that it does not explain what causes long-term COVID symptoms, nor how severe they are, nor how long they will last. Results do not take into account people who had COVID-19 but were not diagnosed, for example because they were asymptomatic and were not tested, nor COVID-19 survivors with protracted-COVID symptoms were not recorded in their health records.
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