chuka_lis: (Default)
[personal profile] chuka_lis
Так же, полезно знать
( а некоторые кто уже переболел и столкнулся, с последствиями этой болезни, может будут знать на что еще обращать внимание врачей).
Вполне хорошо изложено в обзоре на на сайте Британского Научного Мединститута
A dynamic review of the evidence around ongoing Covid19 symptoms (often called Long Covid).
Полезно прочитать все, но вкратце, основные идеи можно просмотреть в канадском журнале (ниже).
Приведу так же выдержки из публицистики

A growing body of evidence indicates that long-term “ongoing” COVID-19 may not be a single syndrome but possibly up to four different syndromes, according to a new review by the National Institute for Health Research, a U.K. government agency.
The virus can affect numerous other organs and systems beyond the lungs and respiratory system; patients experiencing the long-term effects of the virus, often for weeks and months after the initial infection, have reported a wide range of fluctuating symptoms affecting the brain, the cardiovascular system and heart, kidneys, gut, liver and even skin.
The NIHR review, Living with COVID-19, found that in many cases, patients experienced symptoms in one physiological system, saw them ebb, only to appear in another system. All of these symptoms poses a diagnostic challenge for medical professionals..
Drawing on published studies and interviews with long-term COVID patients, one of the key early conclusions in the review is that long-term COVID-19 could be due to multiple syndromes including:
Post-Intensive Care syndrome
Post Viral Fatigue syndrome
Long-Term COVID syndrome
Permanent organ damage
A recent study found that more than half of recovered patients that were examined had reported crippling fatigue-- post-viral fatigue syndrome -- even months after recovery. At least one study found that among 100 adults who recovered from the coronavirus, 60 per cent had ongoing inflammation in the heart.
The NIHR review aims to gather ongoing evidence on long-haulers, which number at least in the tens of thousands, if not significantly more, in order to build a clearer framework for diagnosing patients.
“The changing and multiple symptoms of ongoing COVID-19 are not well served by the way healthcare is currently organized,” author Dr. Elaine Maxwell wrote in the review. “COVID-19 is a multisystem disease and people’s experience echoes the challenges already experienced by people with multiple comorbidities, who experience limited service integration.”
The attention placed on acute respiratory symptoms and the perception that recovery after two weeks is the norm, however, often means patients who were not hospitalized or formally diagnosed may be overlooked or dismissed altogether by skeptical health-care professionals, despite potentially debilitating symptoms, the report found.
Some health professionals have suggested to patients that their symptoms were due to anxiety, despite the patient’s conviction the symptoms were in fact causing the anxiety.
“A number of people said there were occasions when they thought they might not survive the night and there was anger at being labelled ‘mild cases’ simply because they didn’t access respiratory support in hospitals,” Maxwell wrote.
The review also documented the unpredictable nature of the virus through its focus group. For some patients, the first symptoms were not a cough, fever, or a shortness of breath. For others, more serious symptoms appeared only weeks into their illness.

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