Evidence suggests COVID-19 has longer-term effect on survivors hearts – WTOP

Posted: Published on September 19th, 2020

This post was added by Alex Diaz-Granados

Doctors learning about COVID-19s effects on the body are seeing signs of lasting damage in the heart that does not appear to be impacting overall wellness.

Doctors learning about COVID-19s effects on the body are seeing signs of lasting damage in the heart that does not appear to be impacting overall wellness.

A study published in JAMA Cardiology found inflammation on the hearts of coronavirus survivors detectable many weeks after apparent full recoveries.

After a COVID infectionMRIs of the heart found small areas that lit up, said Dr. Ameya Kulkarni, an interventional cardiologist with Kaiser Permanente in Virginia. Swelling on the heart muscle later maybe 10, 12 weeks or even beyond.

Though he wasnt involved with the research, Kulkarni is familiar with the findings.

Thankfully, at least for the moment, the suggestion is that clinically, it doesnt mean much, he said. There are no clinical consequences. So, patients are not having symptoms.

Still, Kulkarni believes doctors and former patients should be on the lookout for potential symptoms that might include swelling in the legs, shortness of breath doing previously-easy activities, using more pillows to sleep at night or waking in the night with shortness of breath.

What it means for us is vigilant caution, he said.

Former coronavirus patients experiencing anything out of the ordinary should consult their doctors.

My mantra for my patients is that you never worry alone, he said.

Big picture, Kulkarni notes that one of the challenges of watching a pandemic unfold in real time is that data revealed in fits and spurts may seem correct initially but need to be put into context.

This study, like every other study thats come out about COVID in the past six months we should view in that lens, Kulkarni said.

While we should have vigilant caution about symptoms that dont make sense, we should also think about it as a potential way forward or a blind alley. I think both are important to think about.

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Evidence suggests COVID-19 has longer-term effect on survivors hearts - WTOP

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