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Iowa specialists identify long-term effects of COVID-19

Iowa specialists identify long-term effects of COVID-19 © UIHC uihc University of Iowa doctors are seeing a growing need surrounding COVID-19 patients. They re treating people months out from having the disease. Doctors anticipated survivors seeing long-term consequences of COVID-19 in their lungs, but they ve identified problems far beyond that.Sign up for our Newsletters Last July, the University of Iowa established their post COVID-19 clinic, seeing patients of all types 30 days out from diagnosis. The team soon found they re dealing with a multi-system situation. Evidence shows Iowans facing neurocognitive obstacles, pulmonary scarring and inflammation in the blood. Consequently, they re noticing long-term outcomes are often independent from the severity of the disease.

Months after COVID-19, some patients still feeling the effects

The pandemic s ripple effects bring sicker patients to hospital Neil and Jeanne Bennett, a couple from Iowa City, are photographed during their trip to Egypt from Feb. 19 to March 2, 2020. The couple tested positive for COVID-19 when they returned to Iowa, along with several other members of their travel party, making them one of the first confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus in the state. (Photo courtesy of Gwen Bennett). Neil and Jeanne Bennett are seen Sept. 2, 2020, at their home in Iowa City. Neil contracted COVID-19 after a trip to Egypt and became the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics’ first COVID-19 critical care case. Neil spent five months in hospitals and rehabilitation facilities and, one year later, still is recovering. (Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette)

Patients, clinicians seek answers to the mystery of Long COVID

Jobalou / iStock Throughout the coronavirus pandemic, public attention has mainly focused on the number of people who become severely ill and die from COVID-19. But what s become clear in recent months is the large and growing group of people who continue to deal with prolonged symptoms long after their original illness. In a recent study posted on the preprint server medRxiv , analysis of an international survey of more than 3,700 respondents with COVID-19 found that over two-thirds were still experiencing numerous symptoms at 6 months, with significant impacts on patients lives and livelihoods. Respondents with symptoms for more than 6 months said they are experiencing an average of nearly 14 symptoms across multiple organ systems.

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