1 of 4 people who had Covid have this in common, a new study says
New research has discovered this link between the months of COVIDS survivors after being infected.
Coronavirus is aCrazy unpredictable disease, which can make an infected infection a fairly frightening situation. He can stand without symptoms or put you in the hospital. But even if you emerge from your infections unfortunately, for many COVID survivors, the virus persists disturbingly. Known in the middle of "cap, "The condition known as a post-acute SARS-COV-2 infection (PASC) has been severely discussed over the past year, as some of these afflicted people appear to undergo long-term coronavirus symptoms that Do not go away. Now, new research has found that a large amount of COVID survivors discovers a long-term symptom in particular. Read to find out what people in four who have had Covid have in common.
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About one in four people experience a sleep disturbance after Covid.
In a new meta-analysis, published in a pre-printed version on 4 May on Medrxiv, a team of international researchers analyzed the data of 51 studies published between 2020 January and February 2021 where the averageLong tracking of Covid was 77 days after the infection. Nearly 19,000 people were included collectively in analyzed research. What researchers have seen is that the most common long-term neuropsychiatric symptom was sleep disturbance, with 27.4% (about one in four COVID survivors) that depends on the months after infection from the virus.
Covid infection often gives other similar long-term symptoms, such as brain fog and anxiety.
Researchers have also found other predominant neuropsychiatric symptoms in Long Covid people. According to their conclusions, the second most common neuropsychiatric symptom according to sleep disturbance was fatigue, with 24.4% of patients who report it. The data also shown that 20.2% experienced cognitive deficiency (brain fog), 19.1% experienced anxiety and 15.7% underwent post-traumatic stress as long-term COVID symptoms .
Other neurological symptoms such as loss of taste, headache, sensorimotor disruption and vertigo / dizziness were less common but always "present in non-negligible quantities", according to researchers.
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You can experience neuropsychiatric symptoms, even if your COVID case was mild.
Your probability of having one of these long-term neuropsychiatric symptoms does not seem to be based on the severity of your COVID infection. In fact, researchers found no difference in neuropsychiatric symptoms reported by hospitalized patients compared to non-hospitalized - with the exception of anxiety, which has been reported more frequently by non-hospitalized patients.
They also found that there was no difference in the prevalence of neuropsychiatric symptoms for hospitalized patients who needed the ICU compared to those who did not do so. "The prevalence of these symptoms seems to be relatively stable over different points in the first six months, between hospital and community samples, and among hospitalized patients regardless of the gravity of COVID-19," determined researchers.
You should talk to your doctor if you feel one of these new or aggravated symptoms.
Researchers are not yet why some patients know neuropsychiatric symptoms that even be a mild case of Covid. However,Wilfred van Gorp, PHD, former president of the American Academy of Clinical Neuropsychology and a Psychologist practicing in New York and Chicago, told health health that believes some of the cases he has been observed withNeuropsychiatric long-term covidation symptoms Could be the result of direct cerebral lesions or damage caused by inflammation caused by the new coronavirus.
If you feel one of these new or aggravated symptoms after a COVID infection, talk to your doctor; Van Gorp says there are treatment options that can help relieve your symptoms.
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