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Mysterious heart damage, not just lung troubles, befalling COVID-19 patients

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Mysterious heart damage, not just lung troubles, befalling COVID-19 patients
By Markian Hawryluk | Kaiser Health News
Apr 6, 2020
Apr 6, 2020 Updated 6 hrs ago


While the focus of the COVID-19 pandemic has been on respiratory problems and securing enough ventilators, doctors on the front lines are grappling with a new medical mystery.

In addition to lung damage, many COVID-19 patients are also developing heart problems — and dying of cardiac arrest.

As more data comes in from China and Italy, as well as Washington state and New York, more cardiac experts are coming to believe the COVID-19 virus can infect the heart muscle. An initial study found cardiac damage in as many as 1 in 5 patients, leading to heart failure and death even among those who show no signs of respiratory distress.

That could change the way doctors and hospitals need to think about patients, particularly in the early stages of illness. It also could open up a second front in the battle against the COVID-19 pandemic, with a need for new precautions in people with preexisting heart problems, new demands for equipment and, ultimately, new treatment plans for damaged hearts among those who survive.

“It’s extremely important to answer the question: Is their heart being affected by the virus and can we do something about it?” said Dr. Ulrich Jorde, the head of heart failure, cardiac transplantation and mechanical circulatory support for the Montefiore Health System in New York City. “This may save many lives in the end.”

The question of whether the emerging heart problems are caused by the virus itself or are a byproduct of the body’s reaction to it has become one of the critical unknowns facing doctors as they race to understand the novel illness. Determining how the virus affects the heart is difficult, in part, because severe illness alone can influence heart health.

“Someone who’s dying from a bad pneumonia will ultimately die because the heart stops,” said Dr. Robert Bonow, a professor of cardiology at the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine and editor of the medical journal JAMA Cardiology. “You can’t get enough oxygen into your system and things go haywire.”

But Bonow and many other cardiac specialists believe a COVID-19 infection could lead to damage to the heart in four or five ways. Some patients, they say, might be affected by more than one of those pathways at once.

Doctors have long known that any serious medical event, even something as straightforward as hip surgery, can create enough stress to damage the heart. Moreover, a condition like pneumonia can cause widespread inflammation in the body. That, in turn, can lead to plaque in arteries becoming unstable, causing heart attacks. Inflammation can also cause a condition known as myocarditis, which can lead to the weakening of the heart muscle and, ultimately, heart failure.

But Bonow said the damage observed in COVID-19 patients could be from the virus directly infecting the heart muscle. Initial research suggests the coronavirus attaches to certain receptors in the lungs, and those same receptors are found in heart muscle as well.

In March, doctors from China published two studies that gave the first glimpse at how prevalent cardiac problems were among patients with COVID-19 illness. The larger of the two studies looked at 416 hospitalized patients. The researchers found that 19% showed signs of heart damage. And those who did were significantly more likely to die: 51% of those with heart damage died versus 4.5% who did not have it.

Patients who had heart disease before their coronavirus infections were much more likely to show heart damage afterward. But some patients with no previous heart disease also showed signs of cardiac damage. In fact, patients with no preexisting heart conditions who incurred heart damage during their infection were more likely to die than patients with previous heart disease but no COVID-19-induced cardiac damage.

It’s unclear why some patients experience more cardiac effects than others. Bonow said that could be due to a genetic predisposition or it could be because they’re exposed to higher viral loads.

Those uncertainties underscore the need for closer monitoring of cardiac markers in COVID-19 patients, Jorde said. If doctors in New York, Washington state and other hot spots can start to tease out how the virus is affecting the heart, they may be able to provide a risk score or other guidance to help clinicians manage COVID-19 patients in other parts of the country.

“We have to assume, maybe, that the virus affects the heart directly,” Jorde said. “But it’s essential to find out.”

Gathering the data to do so amid the crisis, however, can be difficult. Ideally, doctors would take biopsies of the heart to determine whether the heart muscle is infected with the virus.

But COVID-19 patients are often so sick it’s difficult for them to undergo invasive procedures. And more testing could expose additional health care workers to the virus. Many hospitals aren’t using electrocardiograms on patients in isolation to avoid bringing additional staff into the room and using up limited masks or other protective equipment.

Still, Dr. Sahil Parikh, an interventional cardiologist at Columbia University Irving Medical Center in New York City, said hospitals are making a concerted effort to order the tests needed and to enter findings in medical records so they can sort out what’s going on with the heart.

“We all recognize that because we’re at the leading edge, for better or for worse, we need to try to compile information and use it to help advance the field,” he said.

Indeed, despite the surge in patients, doctors continue to gather data, compile trends and publish their findings in near real time. Parikh and several colleagues recently penned a compilation of what’s known about cardiac complications of COVID-19, making the article available online immediately and adding new findings before the article comes out in print.

Cardiologists in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut are sharing the latest COVID-19 information through a WhatsApp group that has at least 150 members. And even as New York hospitals are operating under crisis conditions, doctors are testing new drugs and treatments in clinical trials to ensure that what they have learned about the coronavirus can be shared elsewhere with scientific validity.

That work has already resulted in changes in the way hospitals deal with the cardiac implications of COVID-19. Doctors have found that the infection can mimic a heart attack. They have taken patients to the cardiac catheterization lab to clear a suspected blockage, only to find the patient wasn’t really experiencing a heart attack but had COVID-19.

For years, hospitals have rushed suspected heart attack patients directly to the catheterization lab, bypassing the emergency room, in an effort to shorten the time from when the patient enters the door to when doctors can clear the blockage with a balloon. Door-to-balloon time had become an important measure of how well hospitals treat heart attacks.

“We’re taking a step back from that now and thinking about having patients brought to the emergency department so they can get evaluated briefly, so that we could determine: Is this somebody who’s really at high risk for COVID-19?” Parikh said. “And is this manifestation that we’re calling a heart attack really a heart attack?”

New protocols now include bringing in a cardiologist and getting an EKG or an ultrasound to confirm a blockage.

“We’re doing that in large measure to protect the patient from what would be an otherwise unnecessary procedure,” Parikh said, “But also to help us decide which sort of level of personal protective equipment we would employ in the cath lab.”

Sorting out how the virus affects the heart should help doctors determine which therapies to pursue to keep patients alive.

Jorde said that after COVID-19 patients recover, they could have long-term effects from such heart damage. But, he said, treatments exist for various forms of heart damage that should be effective once the viral infection has cleared.

Still, that could require another wave of widespread health care demands after the pandemic has calmed.

Kaiser Health News is a national health policy news service. It is an editorially independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation which is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.
 

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Does this explain why there are so many sinkies suddenly collapsing on the streets? Been seeing quite a bit of social media posts of sinKies suddenly collapsing at Mrt, kopishop. The virus attacks the heart in addition to the lungs?
 

nightsafari

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Does this explain why there are so many sinkies suddenly collapsing on the streets? Been seeing quite a bit of social media posts of sinKies suddenly collapsing at Mrt, kopishop. The virus attacks the heart in addition to the lungs?
with asphyxiation, o2 shortage requires that the heart works extra hard to supply the body with oxygen. The greater the shortage, the greater the heart tries to pump. if the heart is weak or compromised in the 1st place... welll y'know...
 

nightsafari

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KNN just been pat pat by @nightsafari now kena frightened by you again KNN
depends on severity of infection. if you on ventilator then that lifespan reduction is probably right. If you got mild cough, you will recover.

In any case this is true every single time you get sick anyway. Every single illness shortens your lifespan. In your case, it's probably smoking that reduces it the most.... :eek::eek:
 

SBFNews

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depends on severity of infection. if you on ventilator then that lifespan reduction is probably right. If you got mild cough, you will recover.

In any case this is true every single time you get sick anyway. Every single illness shortens your lifespan. In your case, it's probably smoking that reduces it the most.... :eek::eek:
Stay safe ah, don't play play, better treat circuit breaker seriously! Day 1 of circuit breaker begins!
 

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Why didn't the whole world panic when this article first appeared?

https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/flu-virus-can-cause-heart-attacks-n840731

Jan. 25, 2018, 11:00 AM NZDT / Updated Jan. 26, 2018, 2:04 AM NZDT
By Maggie Fox

A bout of flu can raise people’s risk of a heart attack even days later, researchers reported Wednesday.

The Canadian study confirms what doctors have long suspected: the influenza virus kills both directly and indirectly, and it has serious effects on the heart.

People who caught flu in Canada between 2009 and 2014 had a six-fold higher risk of suffering a heart attack in the seven days after they were diagnosed, the team at the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences (ICES) and Public Health Ontario reported.

"Our findings are important because an association between influenza and acute myocardial infarction reinforces the importance of vaccination," Dr. Jeff Kwong, who led the study team, said in a statement.

Other respiratory viruses also raised the heart attack risk, but none as much as flu did.

Related: Here's how flu kills some people so fast

“No increased incidence was observed after day seven,” they wrote in their report, published in the New England Journal of Medicine.

The influenza season has been especially intense across the U.S. this year. Flu has peaked at the same time across the continent and has killed at least 30 children so far.

Image:This study confirms the importance of flu vaccinations for people at risk of heart disease.

This study confirms the importance of flu vaccinations for people at risk of heart disease.ICES/PHO

Most of those who die from flu are over 65, and this study confirms one of the reasons.

The researchers looked at 332 patients who were hospitalized for a heart attack in Ontario after a flu diagnosis.

Related: Flu season intensifies across U.S.

“We found a significant association between respiratory infections, especially influenza, and acute myocardial infarction (heart attack),” they wrote.

"People at risk of heart disease should take precautions to prevent respiratory infections, and especially influenza, through measures including vaccinations and handwashing," Kwong said.

The risk was equally high in people who had never had a heart attack as in those who had.

Some of the people who had flu and who had heart attacks had been vaccinated, but Kwong’s team said this does not mean the vaccine doesn’t prevent severe flu or heart attacks.

What it shows is that if people get vaccinated and still get sick enough to go to the doctor, they have as much risk as having a heart attack as unvaccinated patients do. The study had no way of showing how many heart attacks may have been prevented by vaccination, because people with mild flu don’t get tested for influenza.

“Since most patients with milder symptoms do not undergo testing for respiratory viruses, these findings may not be generalizable to milder infections,” the team wrote.
Influenza is a big killer. Every year, depending on the severity of the strains, flu kills between 12,000 and 50,000 people in the U.S. alone, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says.

Doctors who study the body’s immune response say there are three main reasons flu becomes deadly: co-infection with another germ, usually bacteria such as strep; aggravation of existing conditions such as heart disease and asthma; and a so-called cytokine storm, marked by an overwhelming immune system response to infection.
Any of these can lead to heart attack.
 

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Here's how the flu virus kills some people so quickly



Jan. 23, 2018, 9:20 AM NZDT / Updated Jan. 25, 2018, 1:05 PM NZDT
By Maggie Fox
A 10-year-old Connecticut boy died of flu. So did a 21-year-old bodybuilder, and 4-year-old Jonah Reiben of Dayton, Ohio.
These are not the usual sick and elderly people who die from influenza. But every year, flu carries away perfectly healthy young adults and children, and tens of thousands of people over 65.
Influenza virus
Influenza virusCDC
How does flu kill, and why does it sometimes kill so quickly?

Doctors who study the body’s immune response say there are three main reasons: co-infection with another germ, usually bacteria such as strep; aggravation of existing conditions such as heart disease and asthma; and a so-called cytokine storm, marked by an overwhelming immune system response to infection.
Related: Flu doesn't spare vulnerable kids
Sometimes this can happen very fast. During the 1918 “Spanish flu” pandemic that killed up to 50 million people a century ago, many people were reported to have died within hours of showing their first symptoms.
Researchers who have gone back and re-examined tissue samples, and read reports from the time, believe most deaths were caused by co-infection with another germ. But many of the healthy young men and women who died quickly of flu that year more likely succumbed to cytokine storms.




Why the flu can kill a healthy person so quickly
Jan. 23, 201801:35

The human immune system has a load of weapons to throw out against infections, including cytokines produced by a variety of immune system cells.

“Those substances work to stop the virus from spreading,” said Dr. Amesh Adalja, an infectious disease specialist and senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins University Center for Health Security.

Related: Tsunami of flu activity covers entire continental U.S.

They cause the typical “flu-like symptoms” that bring misery from flu and other infections.

“The muscle aches, the fever — all of that is the result of the immune system responding to the virus,” Adalja said. That’s why so many diseases cause similar symptoms: it’s the body’s response, not the particular invader, that’s to blame.

But different people have differently composed immune systems.

“In certain individuals there can be a very pronounced immune response that can result in a lot of damage to the cells in your body including the cells in the respiratory tract," Adalja said.

When a virus is new, like the 1918 strain of H1N1 and the 2009 H1N1 “swine flu”, it usually kills far more people. One theory is that the immune system can become overwhelmed by the never-before-seen invader and sends so many troops to fight it that perfectly healthy tissue in the lungs and other organs gets killed, too.

People who die from “bird flu” viruses, such as H5N1 or H7N9, also seem to die via an over-the-top immune response.

Related: Here's why you need a flu shot every year

And these newer viruses also tend to kill younger people, perhaps because the older population may have been exposed to a distant relative of the virus in the past. The H1N1 flu virus killed 282 U.S. children in 2009-2010, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says. It may have infected 61 million people.

Now it’s just part of the annual flu mix and while it is circulating and killing some people this year, it’s the H3N2 strain that is suspected of causing most problems this time around.

One experiment showed that certain “new” genes in these never-before-seen viruses help them thrive deep in the lungs, which can cause pneumonia and might provoke an overwhelming immune response.

While a few people seem to die within hours or days, flu can cause lingering sickness in others. Then they become susceptible to other infections, such as streptococcal or staphylococcal bacterial infections.

These secondary infections can damage organs, cause pneumonia or get into the bloodstream, causing another kind of immune system overreaction called sepsis.

So far this season, flu has killed 30 children, according to the latest CDC data. Last season, 110 children died from influenza in the U.S.

The CDC doesn’t precisely count adult flu deaths, in no small part because it just kills so many. Every year, flu kills 12,000 to 56,000 people and sends as many as 700,000 to the hospital.

Related: H1N1 swine flu hit Americas especially hard in 2009


CDC estimates flu deaths by looking at how many more people than usual died of flu and pneumonia, but even those calculations miss people who may have died from flu complications, such as a heart attack set off by a bout of flu.

For patients with asthma or other lung conditions, flu is just one more problem for the lungs to cope with.

“They are already having breathing difficulties. It can put them into a spiral very quickly where their breathing gets compromised,” Adalja said.

Patients with diabetes already have a damaged immune response, so they also are more susceptible to flu.

Related: Death of teen athlete is a reminder that flu can kill anyone

And pregnant women have a double risk. “Pregnant women are in a state of immunosuppression because the immune system is trying not to reject the fetus,” said Adalja. So the virus can get further, faster in their bodies.

Plus their lungs are compressed by the fetus, so they have less breathing capacity. Humans need a certain level of oxygen and if blood oxygen levels fall too far, they enter a state called hypoxia. Hypoxia can cause organ damage within minutes.

That’s why bluish skin or difficulty breathing is an emergency that requires immediate medical care.

The best defense against flu, the CDC, FDA, pediatricians and other health experts agree, is a flu vaccine. Just about everyone over the age of 6 months should get one and it's still not to late to do it.

And flu is spread by droplets that can linger on surfaces such as countertops, which is why hand-washing is so important. It also spreads via sneezing and coughing and, perhaps, may float in the air on tiny droplets emitted by simple breathing.
 

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Death of Teen Athlete a Reminder That Flu Can Kill Anyone



Feb. 9, 2017, 6:58 AM NZDT / Updated Feb. 9, 2017, 6:58 AM NZDT
By Lauren Dunn and Maggie Fox
Kayla Linton was a healthy, all-around athlete, but being fit did not protect her from the flu.
Linton, who died last week in Baltimore, is among the dozens of often perfectly healthy children who die from influenza every year in the U.S.






Flu Deaths Spiking Among Children, CDC Report Shows
Feb. 8, 201701:37

It’s shaping up to be an average flu season so far in the U.S. last year, but even an average flu season is deadly, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says.


CDC says 15 children under 18 have died in the 2016-2017 flu season. It’s probably more than that — it takes a few weeks for CDC to gather the information, and not all states report flu deaths quickly or in the same way. In the last flu season, 89 children died.

Related: Flu Can Kill in a Flash

Linton, 17, was only sick for a few days.

“It's completely shocking,” her older brother, William Linton, told NBC News.

“She's a perfect, healthy little girl. She played sports. She was involved with everything. It's just shocking that the flu could kill her like that.”

Related: One Boy's Death Reminds How Dangerous Flu Can Be

Kayla did not have any especially troubling symptoms at first, William says, although their mother took her to a retail clinic and then to the hospital emergency room for a flu diagnosis.

“Later out through the week she wasn't getting any better. Then early Saturday morning she asked for help to go to the bathroom and when she got up she was having trouble breathing,” William Linton said.

“Then, a few minutes later that's when she stopped breathing, and they couldn't do anything to bring her back when the ambulance picked her up.”

Flu usually hits the very young and the very old the hardest. Depending on the season, it kills anywhere between 4,000 and 50,000 people a year in the United States. Because each flu case is not counted, public health experts have to estimate flu's toll.

Related: Flu Season Getting Worse, CDC Says

But every pediatric death is counted.

CDC says a child does not have to be frail or to have any underlying condition to become very ill from flu or to die.

“She was never sick. She played sports, three sports all year,” William Linton said.

While the influenza vaccine is not always very effective, the CDC says it’s the best protection against infection and against having a serious bout of flu. Doctors say it’s still not too late to get one but urge people to get vaccinated in the fall if they can.

Right now influenza is spreading in all 50 states, and some communities are closing schools for a few days to control its spread. Rhea County schools in Tennessee just reopened after being closed Friday and Monday because so many students and teachers were out sick.
 

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Flu Season is Getting Worse, CDC Says
Image: Weekly Influenza Surveillance Report

Weekly Influenza Surveillance ReportCDC


Jan. 7, 2017, 10:10 AM NZDT / Updated Jan. 7, 2017, 10:10 AM NZDT
By Maggie Fox
Flu season is off and running, right on time, federal health officials said Friday.
Every state is reporting influenza outbreaks, and it looks a little worse than last year’s relatively mild season looked at this point, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Image: Weekly Influenza Surveillance Report

Weekly Influenza Surveillance ReportCDC
Flu is most widespread in the northwest — California, Washington, Oregon and Idaho — and in parts of the northeast and mid-Atlantic, the CDC reported in its weekly look at the virus.

Some hospitals in Washington state have been hit hard, with people suffering from flu and other winter infections.

“It's been very busy. The hospital's been at capacity,” said Malloree Fontanilla, a registered nurse who runs the emergency center at Providence St. Peter Hospital in Olympia, Washington.

“We have had a very full emergency center," Fontanilla told KING television.

That’s not unusual for flu, and there are other viruses and bacterial infections in the winter, also — from norovirus to the bacteria that cause strep throat.
Related: No FluMist This Year

Flu usually hits the very young and the very old the hardest. Depending on the season, it kills anywhere between 4,000 and 50,000 people a year in the United States. Because each flu case is not counted, public health experts have to estimate flu’s toll, and don’t get a good picture until the end of the season.

“So far in the 2016-2017 influenza season, Influenza A (H3N2) viruses have been identified most frequently in the U.S.,” the CDC says.




Flu Season Has Arrived And Only 40% of Americans Immunized
Dec. 19, 201601:44

This particular strain seems to make people sicker.

“If H3N2 viruses continue to circulate widely, older adults and young children may be more severely impacted,” the CDC said.

Related: One Boy's Death Reminds How Dangerous Flu Can Be

It’s still not too late to get a flu vaccine, the CDC says. The flu vaccines on the market deliver a cocktail to protect against three or four strains of flu.

“The activity now is not at all unusual,” said Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease specialist at Vanderbilt University who speaks on behalf of the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases. Flu season usually takes off strong in January in the U.S. and peaks in January and February.

Influenza can be diagnosed with a test but symptoms are usually clear. They include:

  • Fever
  • Chills
  • Cough
  • Sore throat
  • Runny or stuffy nose
  • Muscle or body aches
  • Headaches
  • Fatigue
  • Sometimes, usually in children,vomiting or diarrhea
Flu is rarely an emergency but doctors say to get kids to an emergency room fast if they have these symptoms:

  • fast breathing or trouble breathing
  • bluish skin
  • if they don’t drink fluids or cannot be awakened.
Adults need immediate medical help if they have:

  • difficulty breathing or shortness of breath
  • pain or pressure in the chest or abdomen
  • sudden dizziness or confusion
  • severe vomiting
Especially dangerous is if people have flu-like symptoms, seem to get better, and then symptoms return. That could indicate a second infection and needs quick treatment.
 

LaoTze

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Mysterious heart damage, not just lung troubles, befalling COVID-19 patients
By Markian Hawryluk | Kaiser Health News
Apr 6, 2020
Apr 6, 2020 Updated 6 hrs ago


While the focus of the COVID-19 pandemic has been on respiratory problems and securing enough ventilators, doctors on the front lines are grappling with a new medical mystery.

In addition to lung damage, many COVID-19 patients are also developing heart problems — and dying of cardiac arrest.

As more data comes in from China and Italy, as well as Washington state and New York, more cardiac experts are coming to believe the COVID-19 virus can infect the heart muscle. An initial study found cardiac damage in as many as 1 in 5 patients, leading to heart failure and death even among those who show no signs of respiratory distress.

That could change the way doctors and hospitals need to think about patients, particularly in the early stages of illness. It also could open up a second front in the battle against the COVID-19 pandemic, with a need for new precautions in people with preexisting heart problems, new demands for equipment and, ultimately, new treatment plans for damaged hearts among those who survive.

“It’s extremely important to answer the question: Is their heart being affected by the virus and can we do something about it?” said Dr. Ulrich Jorde, the head of heart failure, cardiac transplantation and mechanical circulatory support for the Montefiore Health System in New York City. “This may save many lives in the end.”

The question of whether the emerging heart problems are caused by the virus itself or are a byproduct of the body’s reaction to it has become one of the critical unknowns facing doctors as they race to understand the novel illness. Determining how the virus affects the heart is difficult, in part, because severe illness alone can influence heart health.

“Someone who’s dying from a bad pneumonia will ultimately die because the heart stops,” said Dr. Robert Bonow, a professor of cardiology at the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine and editor of the medical journal JAMA Cardiology. “You can’t get enough oxygen into your system and things go haywire.”

But Bonow and many other cardiac specialists believe a COVID-19 infection could lead to damage to the heart in four or five ways. Some patients, they say, might be affected by more than one of those pathways at once.

Doctors have long known that any serious medical event, even something as straightforward as hip surgery, can create enough stress to damage the heart. Moreover, a condition like pneumonia can cause widespread inflammation in the body. That, in turn, can lead to plaque in arteries becoming unstable, causing heart attacks. Inflammation can also cause a condition known as myocarditis, which can lead to the weakening of the heart muscle and, ultimately, heart failure.

But Bonow said the damage observed in COVID-19 patients could be from the virus directly infecting the heart muscle. Initial research suggests the coronavirus attaches to certain receptors in the lungs, and those same receptors are found in heart muscle as well.

In March, doctors from China published two studies that gave the first glimpse at how prevalent cardiac problems were among patients with COVID-19 illness. The larger of the two studies looked at 416 hospitalized patients. The researchers found that 19% showed signs of heart damage. And those who did were significantly more likely to die: 51% of those with heart damage died versus 4.5% who did not have it.

Patients who had heart disease before their coronavirus infections were much more likely to show heart damage afterward. But some patients with no previous heart disease also showed signs of cardiac damage. In fact, patients with no preexisting heart conditions who incurred heart damage during their infection were more likely to die than patients with previous heart disease but no COVID-19-induced cardiac damage.

It’s unclear why some patients experience more cardiac effects than others. Bonow said that could be due to a genetic predisposition or it could be because they’re exposed to higher viral loads.

Those uncertainties underscore the need for closer monitoring of cardiac markers in COVID-19 patients, Jorde said. If doctors in New York, Washington state and other hot spots can start to tease out how the virus is affecting the heart, they may be able to provide a risk score or other guidance to help clinicians manage COVID-19 patients in other parts of the country.

“We have to assume, maybe, that the virus affects the heart directly,” Jorde said. “But it’s essential to find out.”

Gathering the data to do so amid the crisis, however, can be difficult. Ideally, doctors would take biopsies of the heart to determine whether the heart muscle is infected with the virus.

But COVID-19 patients are often so sick it’s difficult for them to undergo invasive procedures. And more testing could expose additional health care workers to the virus. Many hospitals aren’t using electrocardiograms on patients in isolation to avoid bringing additional staff into the room and using up limited masks or other protective equipment.

Still, Dr. Sahil Parikh, an interventional cardiologist at Columbia University Irving Medical Center in New York City, said hospitals are making a concerted effort to order the tests needed and to enter findings in medical records so they can sort out what’s going on with the heart.

“We all recognize that because we’re at the leading edge, for better or for worse, we need to try to compile information and use it to help advance the field,” he said.

Indeed, despite the surge in patients, doctors continue to gather data, compile trends and publish their findings in near real time. Parikh and several colleagues recently penned a compilation of what’s known about cardiac complications of COVID-19, making the article available online immediately and adding new findings before the article comes out in print.

Cardiologists in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut are sharing the latest COVID-19 information through a WhatsApp group that has at least 150 members. And even as New York hospitals are operating under crisis conditions, doctors are testing new drugs and treatments in clinical trials to ensure that what they have learned about the coronavirus can be shared elsewhere with scientific validity.

That work has already resulted in changes in the way hospitals deal with the cardiac implications of COVID-19. Doctors have found that the infection can mimic a heart attack. They have taken patients to the cardiac catheterization lab to clear a suspected blockage, only to find the patient wasn’t really experiencing a heart attack but had COVID-19.

For years, hospitals have rushed suspected heart attack patients directly to the catheterization lab, bypassing the emergency room, in an effort to shorten the time from when the patient enters the door to when doctors can clear the blockage with a balloon. Door-to-balloon time had become an important measure of how well hospitals treat heart attacks.

“We’re taking a step back from that now and thinking about having patients brought to the emergency department so they can get evaluated briefly, so that we could determine: Is this somebody who’s really at high risk for COVID-19?” Parikh said. “And is this manifestation that we’re calling a heart attack really a heart attack?”

New protocols now include bringing in a cardiologist and getting an EKG or an ultrasound to confirm a blockage.

“We’re doing that in large measure to protect the patient from what would be an otherwise unnecessary procedure,” Parikh said, “But also to help us decide which sort of level of personal protective equipment we would employ in the cath lab.”

Sorting out how the virus affects the heart should help doctors determine which therapies to pursue to keep patients alive.

Jorde said that after COVID-19 patients recover, they could have long-term effects from such heart damage. But, he said, treatments exist for various forms of heart damage that should be effective once the viral infection has cleared.

Still, that could require another wave of widespread health care demands after the pandemic has calmed.

Kaiser Health News is a national health policy news service. It is an editorially independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation which is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.


Chinese found out about hydroxychloroquinine using that in January and wrote about that in Febuary in Internation Medical journals. Chinese knew of it causing complications to heart and used that very sparingly wanting to do more research on that.

USA doctors found that in March and wrote of that end of March.

Dotard jumped at that and demanded immediately that hydroxychloroquinine be used as some fucking miracle cure.

And why???
Only today it was revealed Dotard has big stake in company making hydroxychloroquinine

Trump has a 'small financial interest' in company that makes the anti-malaria drug hydroxychloroquine he is backing as a coronavirus treatment, claims New York Times report
  • Hydroxychloroquine has been touted by Trump as a treatment for coronavirus
  • President has pushed anti-malaria drug at White House virus press briefings
  • New York Times reports that Trump has a financial stake in French drug-maker


https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...-pushes-unproven-drug-virus-doctors-wary.html
 

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Alfrescian
Loyal
I'm sure there is a positive correlation in the lethality of the virus and the state of a person's gut biome.

This virus is taking out those with unhealthy guts. So seemingly "normal and healthy" people are dying from it. Fix your gut today. Live longer.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6164700/

Recent evidence has suggested that the gut microbiome is involved in human health and diseases, such as inflammatory bowel disease, liver cirrhosis, rheumatoid arthritis, and type 2 diabetes. Cardiovascular diseases, which are associated with high morbidity and mortality across the world, are no exception. Increasing evidence has suggested a strong relationship between the gut microbiome and the progression of cardiovascular diseases.
 

SBFNews

Alfrescian
Loyal
The 6th death definitely confirms that covid virus can attack the heart and not the lungs. Ah neh only 32yo, no pneumonia can just die like that. Scary boh? :eek: :eek: :eek:

....

SINGAPORE - Singapore reported a record 142 new cases of Covid-19 on Wednesday (April 8), including a 32-year-old Indian national who was confirmed to have the virus after he died.

The cause of death of the man is being investigated.

The Ministry of Health said that he had been swabbed at the National Centre for Infectious Diseases (NCID) on Tuesday and advised to stay home to wait for the test results. His chest X-ray indicated that he did not have pneumonia. But the man died at home on Wednesday, with his test results coming out positive after his death.
 
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