
Article By: Anjali Thakur
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Young adults who survived Covid-19, even with mild infections, are at increased risk of a serious post-Covid or "long haul" problem -chronic fatigue syndrome, say researchers.
Young COVID-19 patients with mild infections are at higher risk of long haul COVID symptom or post-COVID problem- Chronic fatigue syndrome after recuperating from the disease, according to researchers. A recent review of three case studies by Johns Hopkins University researchers provides the first evidence that one serious post-Covid problem may be myalgic encephalomyelitis/ chronic fatigue syndrome ME/CFS- the complex, multisystem disorder previously known as chronic fatigue syndrome. Also Read - How Cricketer Priya Punia's Father Gave Example of Virat Kohli to Motivate Daughter After Mother's Death
“In the three patients studied — all of whom had confirmed or highly probable Covid-19 infections early in the pandemic — we observed ME/CFS-like symptoms within the first two weeks of illness,†said Peter Rowe, director at Johns Hopkins Children’s Center and Professor of Paediatrics at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.†Also Read - Gujarat Extends Night Curfew In All 36 Districts Till May 28 | Check Full List Of Restrictions
At six months following their illness, all three still met the criteria for being diagnosed with ME/CFS,†Rowe added. The three patients evaluated in the recent study, published in the journal Frontiers in Medicine, were a 19-year-old man and two women, ages 22 and 30, whose Covid-19 symptoms began between April and June 2020. Also Read - Uddhav Government Issues Stern SOPs Against Sexual Harassment in Covid Wards
Symptoms of orthostatic intolerance – a group of clinical conditions that includes fatigue, lightheadedness, and difficulty concentrating, and are linked with greater than 90 percent of the people with ME/CFS — were prominent in all three from the outset of their Covid-19 illness.
A six-month post-Covid symptom onset examination, including evaluations of movement, neurological function, and continued orthostatic intolerance, was conducted on each of the patients to determine if ME/CFS could be diagnosed. All three easily met the criteria. Interestingly, all three patients had relatively mild Covid-19 respiratory symptoms and none required hospitalisation, yet it appears to have translated into the more serious secondary problem of ME/CFS for them all, Rowe said.
Further research is needed to define the biological mechanism by which ME/CFS arises from Covid-19, and then use that insight to develop treatment strategies that can return patients with post-Covid ME/CFS back to their previous quality of life, the team said.