Medical Discovery News
Science permeates everyday life. Yet the understanding of advances in biomedical science is limited at best. Few people make the connection that biomedical science is medicine and that biomedical scientists are working today for the medicine of tomorrow. Our weekly five-hundred-word newspaper column (http://www.illuminascicom.com/) and two-minute radio show provide insights into a broad range of biomedical science topics. Medical Discovery News is dedicated to explaining discoveries in biomedical research and their promise for the future of medicine. Each release is designed to stimulate listeners to think, question and appreciate how science affects their health as well as that of the rest of the world. We also delve into significant biomedical discoveries and portray how science (or the lack of it) has impacted health throughout history.
Medical Discovery News
Even More on Long COVID
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918 Even More on Long COVID
Welcome to Medical Discovery News. I’m Dr. Norbert Herzog.
And I’m Dr. David Niesel
Even though COVID is no longer a national emergency, people continue to get Long COVID and many stay sick.
A study using MRI imaging has shown that six months after infection, about sixty percent of people who were hospitalized had abnormal findings in their lungs, brains and other organs.
Another study showed that these organs and the liver and heart in unhospitalized patients had abnormalities three times higher. We don’t know the long-term health impacts.
Data tells us that long COVID impacts Hispanics more and women are hit harder than men as well as girls than boys.
Despite beliefs that antiviral treatment with Paxlovid reduced the chances Long COVID, research shows the incidence of adults with or without Paxlovid treatment were both at about fifteen percent. And a little over a quarter of patients on Paxlovid reported rebound infections.
A big study of the VA medical database and more than ten million records show Long COVID causes persistent GI issues in the year after infection. And recovering COVID patients had higher levels of diarrhea, constipation, vomiting and bloating.
They were also more than one-third more likely to develop reflux disease and more than half were predisposed to irritable bowel syndrome.
We’ll need to expand our understanding of how Long COVID causes these problems and how to prevent or treat them. For now, the best thing to do is keep yourself from getting COVID and get your vaccine.
We are Drs. David Niesel and Norbert Herzog, at UTMB and Quinnipiac University, where biomedical discoveries shape the future of medicine. For much more and our disclaimer go to medicaldiscoverynews.com or subscribe to our podcast. Sign up for expanded print episodes at www.illuminascicom.com