Micro Clots & Endothelial Dysfunction in Long COVID:
Plus new Epidemiology in @JAMA_current some say proves #LongCOVID is a hoax⁉️
Truth is…endothelial dysfunction plus inflammation can lead to life-altering brain & body dz.
Micro-clots are being found in some LC pts. This can occur from ongoing endothelial dysfunction, which is linked with inflammation & can lead to problems with vascular reactivity.
Let’s explore some angles…
2/ Remember that none of these Vascular flow problems occur in isolation from inflammation. This new piece by Jamie Ducharme balances the discussion well and opens our mind to these micro-clots as real pathology…
It’s time for great studies, not immediate widespread treatment with blood thinners.
https://bit.ly/3He2FCj
4/ Recent epidemiology studies “inspire” us see the scope of our challenges ahead, but they do NOT undermine the realities of #LongCOVID.
Take the INSPIRE study in JAMAOPEN of 1,000 patients. What did we learn?
https://bit.ly/3H6Rdso
5/ 1,000 patients with infectious symptoms in the height of early COVID self-enrolled into an online cohort. (75% w COVID and 25% without).
They self-report problems they feel at baseline and 3 months later. Baseline systemic problems 87% covid pos vs. 55% covid neg.
https://bit.ly/3h3SDZR
6/ Overall, as the primary author says, “40% of the COVID-positive and 54% of the COVID-negative group reported moderate to severe residual symptoms 3 months after enrolling.”
https://bit.ly/3iAevwp
7/ Some who tend to “diss” Long COVID jumped on these data with the excitement of a puppy, saying, “See, I told you so, Long COVID isn’t real.”
Look into the eyes & lives of the disabled with LC, believe, and don’t be taken in by such rhetoric.
8/ The authors themselves pointed out well their take is that the pandemic’s negative impact on peoples’ SUBJECTIVE self-report was widespread across COVID and non-COVID illnesses like pneumonia, RSV, and pharyngitis. I agree.
@WesElyMD I'd suggest the cohorts in this study weren't well matched to begin with - "those in the COVID-19–negative group were older and more likely to be of non-White race (eg, Black or African American); be unmarried; have lower annual family income; have public insurance; be unemployed; receive COVID-19 testing in an ED; and have a higher prevalence of moderate or severe asthma, hypertension or high blood pressure, or diabetes" 1/3
And don't get me started on using subjective questionnaires when objective assessments such as activity tracking, heart rate monitoring or exercise testing are available. 3/3