This Isn’t COVID’s Final Act

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— We must keep the virus, and long COVID, center stage

By Stuart Katz, MD, Alice Perlowski, MD, MA, and Brittany Taylor, MPH 

This year marks the third year of the COVID-19 pandemic. Over time, as the virus morphed and continued to disrupt our daily lives, people around the world grew tired of COVID restrictions. As a result, we saw mask mandates lift, social distancing practices fade, and vaccination rates decline as more shots became available. Understandably, people were — and still are — longing for pre-pandemic normalcy. Nonetheless, a looming reality remains: With hundreds of deaths and thousands of hospitalizations each week in the U.S. alone, the pandemic is neither over nor behind us. Read more in MedPage Today.

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This Isn’t COVID’s Final Act

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— We must keep the virus, and long COVID, center stage

by Stuart Katz, MD, Alice Perlowski, MD, MA, and Brittany Taylor, MPH 

This year marks the third year of the COVID-19 pandemic. Over time, as the virus morphed and continued to disrupt our daily lives, people around the world grew tired of COVID restrictions. As a result, we saw mask mandates lift, social distancing practices fade, and vaccination rates decline as more shots became available. Understandably, people were — and still are — longing for pre-pandemic normalcy.
Read the full article in MedPage Today.

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Heart, other organs show mitochondrial damage after COVID-19 despite recovery of lungs

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By Scott Buzby

Following SARS-CoV-2 infection, mitochondrial function remained impaired in the heart, liver and kidneys, despite observed recovery in the lungs, according to a human autopsy and animal tissue study.

Upon SARS-CoV-2 infection of host cells, the viral copy number increases unchecked until the innate immune system is engaged, after which the viral copies progressively decline until the virus is eliminated,” Joseph Guarnieri, PhD, postdoctoral research fellow at the Center for Mitochondrial and Epigenomic Medicine at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, and colleagues wrote. Read the full article in Healio.

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‘We have our work cut out for us’: Raising awareness of pediatric long COVID

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By Rose Weldon
The medical world has to overcome the perception that children are not susceptible to long COVID, physicians said during a U.S. News and World Report webinar on the topic.

Approximately one in eight patients with COVID-19 experiences long COVID, according to data published last year. Among pediatric patients, adolescents are overrepresented.
Read more from Healio News.

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A Scoping Review of the Impact of COVID-19 on Kidney Transplant Patients in the United States

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Monica Karas • Isabel Bernal • Oscar Diaz • Ola Alshammari • David Baggett • Thomas Bronk • Siam Chawdhury • Adi Eylon • Evelyn Garcia • Kyiana Haughton • Breanne Kothe • Andrew M. Joseph • Robin J. Jacobs

Abstract

SARS-CoV-2, responsible for the COVID-19 pandemic, is a highly infectious virus that quickly became and continues to be a public health emergency, given the severe international implications. Immunocompromised patients, such as those undergoing kidney transplantation, are at an increased risk for severe illness from COVID-19 and require hospitalization for more aggressive treatment to ensure survival. COVID-19 has been infecting kidney transplant recipients (KTRs), affecting their treatment protocols, and threatening their survival.
Read the complete abstract on Cureus.com.

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Neurological effects of long COVID: It is ‘not only a respiratory disease’

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As the world continues to grapple with effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, individuals around the globe are still dealing with symptoms of SARS-CoV-2 infection for months, even years, after their initial infection.

Post-acute sequelae of COVID-19, more commonly referred to as long COVID, are defined by the CDC as a wide range of new, returning or ongoing health issues that people experience after being infected with SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19.
Read more from Healio.

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‘Excellent’ Outcome With Lung Transplant From COVID-19 Patient

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Report on 1st transplant in scleroderma patient predicts future success

The case of a person with scleroderma who successfully received a lung transplant from a donor who had tested positive for COVID-19 may predict positive outcomes for other patients, according to a recent report.

“To our knowledge this represents the first successful case of lung transplantation of donor lungs positive for COVID-19,” the researchers wrote. Read more in Scleroderma News.

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