Long COVID: a consequence of chronic post-infectious inflammation!

Publication date: Dec 03, 2024

Long COVID defines persistence of symptoms in patients that recovered from acute COVID-19 infections. This manuscript is a brief update on current thinking on long COVID and potential causes and consequences. The extent of long COVID varies between patients with some 200 symptoms described and of different severities. Persistent inflammatory or persistent viral infections or both may be the cause of long COVID but sorting this out will take years. Long COVID is an unfortunate consequence of COVID-19 infection and it remains uncertain why some people are afflicted and others not and as with other infectious diseases, it may be both a function of the virus strain, the host or both. Direct organ damage during acute infection versus inflammatory mediated damage over time are important questions to address. The disease outcome and chronic sequelae are likely related to the strains of infectious agent and/or host immunity and genetic predisposition.

Concepts Keywords
Covid Antiviral
Genetic COVID-19
Organ Inflammation
Recovered long COVID
Virus Vaccination

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH Long COVID
disease MESH inflammation
disease MESH COVID-19
disease MESH infections
disease MESH causes
disease MESH viral infections
disease IDO infection
disease MESH infectious diseases
disease IDO host
disease IDO acute infection
disease MESH sequelae
disease IDO infectious agent

Original Article

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