What are the potential long-term effects of having COVID-19?
Subscribe to Outbreak, a daily roundup of stories on the coronavirus pandemic and its impact on global business, delivered free to your inbox.
It’s hard to say exactly, because the coronavirus is still so new that scientists don’t know much about long-term effects. The best evidence comes from patients themselves, and some experience a variety of symptoms long after their infections have cleared.
Most people recover within a few weeks. For people who experience longer-term effects, the most common issues are bouts of exhaustion, headaches, anxiety and muscle aches that can last for at least several more weeks.
Patients who required intensive care, including those put on ventilators or kidney dialysis, can experience more serious issues.
Lung scarring can occur in people who developed pneumonia. Heart inflammation, irregular heartbeats, and worsening kidney and liver function have been reported as well. However, it’s too soon to know if those could be permanent problems.
Survivors who had long intensive-care stays sometimes need oxygen therapy or dialysis at home. Some also develop a condition called post-intensive care syndrome, which can include persistent muscle weakness and memory problems. That can happen after any critical illness and may be related to sedation and prolonged bed confinement during hospitalization.
Blood clots can also develop during and after COVID-19 infections, occasionally causing strokes. Even in less serious cases, blood thinners are prescribed and can require lifestyle changes to reduce risks of bleeding.
Most symptoms appear to eventually go away, said Dr. Thomas McGinn of the Feinstein Institutes for Medical Research in New York, who was involved in one of the largest U.S. studies of COVID-19 patients.
“It’s just a matter of when. For some patients it may take longer than others,” McGinn said.
More coronavirus coverage from Fortune:
- Square’s head of lending thinks the PPP still needs more changes to help the smallest businesses
- 5 pieces of economic data investors are watching this week
- George Floyd protests, coronavirus face masks pose challenges for facial recognition
- Zoom’s stock is now up nearly 250{ce8ce7cc98bffdc4302011057a79600ea02c464c5536f1477c12acdb8bd79c00} this year. It has Goldman Sachs in its sights next
- A new coating could protect ATMs from spreading diseases like COVID-19. But will it work?
- How Beijing’s second coronavirus wave triggered a salmon boycott
- PODCAST: General Motors CEO Mary Barra is choosing actions over words in the fight for a more inclusive business
- WATCH: Baxter International CEO on reopening and leadership during social unrest