Serious complications appear after a year in patients recovering from corona

A recent American study, conducted at the University of Washington, revealed serious complications that can occur in the heart and blood vessels in patients recovering from Covid-19 who have been exposed to severe infection.

An analysis of health data from about 150,000 cases of Covid-19, which were compared with cases without infection, revealed that those who recovered had a significantly increased risk of cardiovascular complications in the following year.

The results, published in the journal Medicine Nature, show that those who recovered were 72% more likely to develop coronary artery disease, compared to those who did not catch the infection, and 52% more likely to have a stroke and 63% more likely to have a heart attack.

On average, the researchers found that those who recovered were 55 percent more likely to develop cardiovascular problems in the following year.

The chief author of the new study from the University of Washington, Ziad Al-Ali, said in a tweet, that the most important complications are cerebral vascular disorders, heart rhythm disturbances, ischemic heart disease (ischemic heart disease) and non-ischemic heart disease, pericarditis (inflammation of the tissue surrounding the heart), and inflammation of the heart. Myocardial infarction, heart failure, and others.

He said, according to "New Atlas", that the disease could lead to "serious cardiovascular complications and death. The heart does not regenerate or recover easily after damage. These are diseases that will affect people for life."

Follow our latest local and sports news and the latest political and economic developments via Google news