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Friday, April 11, 2025

Can you get long COVID after an infection with omicron?

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1156 days ago
20220209
Can you get long COVID after an infection with omicron? (AP Illustration/Peter Hamlin)

Can you get long COVID after an infection with omicron? (AP Illustration/Peter Hamlin)

By LAU­RA UN­GAR | AS­SO­CI­AT­ED PRESS

 

(AP) — Can you get long COVID af­ter an in­fec­tion with omi­cron? It’s too ear­ly to know for sure, but many doc­tors be­lieve it’s pos­si­ble to have long-term ef­fects from the omi­cron vari­ant of the virus.

Long COVID is usu­al­ly di­ag­nosed many weeks af­ter a bout with COVID-19. Any long-last­ing ef­fects typ­i­cal­ly ap­pear about 90 days af­ter symp­toms of the ini­tial in­fec­tion go away, Maria Van Kerk­hove of the World Health Or­ga­ni­za­tion said this week.

Over­all, some es­ti­mates sug­gest more than a third of COVID-19 sur­vivors will de­vel­op some symp­toms of long COVID. Symp­toms in­clude fa­tigue, brain fog, short­ness of breath, anx­i­ety and oth­er prob­lems. The lin­ger­ing ill­ness is more like­ly if you’ve been hos­pi­tal­ized with COVID-19, but re­search shows it can hap­pen even af­ter a mild in­fec­tion.

Omi­cron be­gan its race around the world late last year. The vari­ant gen­er­al­ly caus­es milder ill­ness than the delta ver­sion of the coro­n­avirus but has still over­whelmed hos­pi­tals.

Van Kerk­hove said she hasn’t seen any re­search in­di­cat­ing that the por­tion of COVID-19 sur­vivors who get long COVID will change with the omi­cron vari­ant.

Dr. Lin­da Geng of Stan­ford Uni­ver­si­ty, who co-di­rects one of the many clin­ics spe­cial­iz­ing in long COVID, said that though she can’t say for sure, a new wave of pa­tients is like­ly.

“We have to be very cau­tious and very care­ful and pre­pared,” Geng said.

In the mean­time, sci­en­tists are rac­ing to fig­ure out what’s be­hind the mys­te­ri­ous con­di­tion. Some the­o­ries? It may be an au­toim­mune dis­or­der. Tiny mi­cro-clots may be caus­ing the dis­abling symp­toms. Or per­haps la­tent virus­es in the body have been re­ac­ti­vat­ed.

Sci­en­tists are al­so look­ing at whether vac­cines could be part of the an­swer. A Yale Uni­ver­si­ty team is study­ing the pos­si­bil­i­ty that vac­ci­na­tion might re­duce long COVID symp­toms. And two oth­er stud­ies of­fer ear­ly ev­i­dence that be­ing vac­ci­nat­ed be­fore get­ting COVID-19 could help pre­vent the lin­ger­ing ill­ness or at least re­duce its sever­i­ty.

COVID-19Health


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