Covid Survivors at Higher Long-Term Risk of Cardiovascular Damage: Study

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Covid Survivors at Higher Long-Term Risk of Cardiovascular Damage: Study
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'We're going to see more heart disease, strokes, blood clots, and other problems,' warns one epidemiologist.

"We're going to see more heart disease, strokes, blood clots, and other problems," warns one epidemiologist.Covid-19 survivors are at an elevated long-term risk of developing heart disease, strokes, blood clots, and other cardiovascular disorders,, the study finds that individuals who survive Covid-19 are more likely to suffer from cardiovascular disease one year later.

The study's cohorts were composed before the widespread availability of Covid-19 vaccines and treatments in the U.S.—global access to these lifesaving tools remains starkly unequal due to Big Pharma's profit-maximizing intellectual property monopolies—and prior to the onset of the Delta and Omicron variants.

Beyond the first month after infection, researchers found, individuals with Covid-19 exhibited heightened risks and one-year burdens of a wide range of life-threatening cardiovascular problems, including cerebrovascular disorders, dysrhythmias, ischemic and non-ischemic heart disease, pericarditis, myocarditis, heart failure, and thromboembolic disease.

The new paper, by contrast, shows that increased risks and one-year burdens of cardiovascular damage are evident among people who were not hospitalized during the acute phase of Covid-19—the care pathway for a majority of individuals with the disease.

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