Many long-covid symptoms linger even after two years, new study shows

0 (Angie Wang/AP)

People who endured even mild cases of covid-19 are at heightened risk two years later for lung problems, fatigue, diabetes and certain other health problems typical of long covid, according to a new study that casts fresh light on the virus’s true toll.

The analysis, published Monday in the journal Nature Medicine, is believed to be the first to document the extent to which an array of aftereffects that patients can develop — as part of the sometimes debilitating syndrome known as long covid — linger beyond the initial months or year after they survived a coronavirus infection.

According to the findings, patients who suffered bouts of covid severe enough to put them in the hospital are especially vulnerable to persistent health problems and death two years after they were first infected. But people with mild or moderate cases are not spared from the consequences when compared with those who never had covid, showing an elevated risk of two dozen medical conditions included in the analysis.

The study highlights the burden that continues to confront millions of people in the United States and the nation’s health-care system even though the federal government canceled the coronavirus public health emergency three months ago and the World Health Organization has declared the pandemic no longer a public health emergency of international concern.

“A lot of people think, ‘I got covid, I got over it and I’m fine,’ and it’s a nothingburger for them. But that’s not everything,” said the study’s senior author, Ziyad Al-Aly, a clinical epidemiologist at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. After a couple of years, “maybe you’ve forgotten about the SARS-CoV-2 infection … but covid did not forget about you. It’s still wreaking havoc in your body,” said Al-Aly, chief of research at the Veterans Affairs St. Louis Health Care System.

Source : https://www.washingtonpost.com/health/2023/08/21/long-covid-lingering-effects-two-years-later

‘This Has Been A Matter Of My Life’: Russian Scientist Who Worked On Failed Luna-25 Moon Mission Hospitalised

A scientist who worked on Vladimir Putin’s failed Russian moon mission, Luna-25, has been rushed to hospital after the lander crashed on the moon.

Luna-25 had crashed on moon’s surface while attempting to land on south pole. ( Image Source : X (@SerbianRambler) )

A scientist who served as a key consultant in Russian President Vladimir Putin’s failed moon mission was hospitalised after Moscow’s first lunar expedition in 47 years, Luna-25, failed, reported the Independent. 90-year-old Mikhail Marov was rushed to a hospital following a “sharp deterioration” in his health after the Luna-25 spacecraft went out of control and crashed into the moon, the report added. Sharing pain over the development, he said that the project has been a matter of his life and how can he not worry about it.

“This was perhaps the last hope for me to see a revival of our lunar programme,” he said, according to Reuters, reported Independent.

He added, “It is so sad that it was not possible to land the apparatus,” after the failure of Luna-25.

Notably, Russia launched Luna-25, its first moon mission after 1976 aiming to land on the lunar south pole, where India’s Chandrayaan-3 is also heading. As per the plan, Luna-25 was planned to land before Chandrayaan-3 making Russia the first country to make a soft-landing on the moon’s south pole.

However, Russia’s state space corporation Roskosmos said it lost contact with the craft at 11.57am (GMT) on Saturday after a problem as the craft was shunted into pre-landing orbit. A soft landing had been planned for Monday.

“The apparatus moved into an unpredictable orbit and ceased to exist as a result of a collision with the surface of the Moon,” Roskosmos said in a statement, quoted Independent.

The space agency added that a special inter-departmental commission had been formed to investigate the reasons behind the loss of the Luna-25 craft.

Talking to Moskovsky Komsomolets newspaper, Marov said that he hoped the reasons behind the crash would be discussed and examined rigorously, as per Independent.

“There was a mistake in the algorithms for launching into near-lunar orbit,” he was quoted as saying by the Daily Mail, as quoted by the Independent.

Source: https://news.abplive.com/science/russian-scientist-who-worked-on-failed-luna-25-moon-mission-hospitalised-this-has-been-a-matter-of-my-life-1624565

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