izentrop wrote:When I don't know, I leave it to the specialists....
Well you should be careful then, because every day you have your double who practices exactly the opposite!
What do you call it again
izentrop wrote:When I don't know, I leave it to the specialists....
https://www.tf1info.fr/sante/epidemie-c ... 16078.htmlThis is the first study of its kind and it should be of interest to patients with long Covid for whom anosmia (loss of smell), intense fatigue, headaches or even memory and concentration disorders have lasted for months. According to surveys, they are 10 to 15% in this case, among the 471 million people infected with the SARS-CoV2 virus (as of March 1).
the researchers showed that a year after the first manifestations of the disease, 85% of patients with long Covid still had symptoms. The researchers also noted that the infection changed over time. For example, for cough, smell disorders and taste disorders, the number of people reporting this problem gradually decreases over time. For fatigue it does not change, but it increases for hair loss.
The researchers also noted that one year after the onset of symptoms, 60% of patients reported a very significant impact of the disease on their personal, professional and social life.
roughly vaccinated or not, it's the same thing: the most fragile have side effects. Some limp on the right side, others on the left side, but all limp!The researchers also noted that one year after the onset of symptoms, 60% of patients reported a very significant impact of the disease on their personal, professional and social life.
https://www.tf1info.fr/sante/epidemie-c ... 16078.html
https://www.franceculture.fr/emissions/ ... avril-2022a study published in The Lancet Regional Health – Europe on the persistent symptoms of long CoVid.
The current problem with the long CoVid is that the symptoms (except for the loss of taste and smell) are symptoms that are very little specific to a particular state of health. Being tired or being out of breath can be found in a whole host of pathologies. An Inserm team therefore wondered if there were more frequent symptoms in people who had had CoVid. The researchers then worked with a cohort in the general population, which makes it possible to see the impact of a disease on a population scale. Thanks to the "Constances" cohort, the 26.000 participants answered questionnaires from the first wave, then took serological tests 8 months later. This work proves that in the case of CoVid, there is an increased risk of developing certain persistent symptoms.
izentrop wrote:Conclusion by Olivier Robineau, [trou du Luc] lecturer in infectious [propaganda] at the University of Lille and at the hospital in Tourcoing. He is the co-author of this [kk par la bouche]: "Vaccination protects against long [nervous kk]"
https://www.washingtonpost.com/health/2 ... protectionA large US study to find out if vaccination protects against long covid showed that injections had only a slight protective effect: being vaccinated seemed to reduce the risk of lung disorders and blood clots, but did little to protect against most other symptoms.
The new paper, published Wednesday in Nature Medicine, is part of a series of studies by the Department of Veterans Affairs on the impact of the coronavirus, and was based on 33 people who experienced infections after vaccination.
The data confirms the large body of research that shows that vaccination significantly reduces the risk of death or serious illness.
Six months after their initial diagnosis, vaccinated study individuals had onlya slightly reduced risk of contracting long covid - 15% in total. The biggest benefit seemed to be the reduction in blood clotting and lung complications. But there were no differences between the vaccinated and the unvaccinated when it came to long-term risks of neurological problems, gastrointestinal symptoms, kidney failure and other conditions.
They don't have these symptomsChristophe wrote:The long covid is not an imaginary disease: https://www.courrierinternational.com/a ... covid-long
Blood abnormalities highlighted in patients suffering from long Covid
Low levels of a key hormone, depleted T cells and reactivated viruses. That's what researchers found in the blood of people with persistent symptoms following Sars-CoV-2 infection.
And among the vax?
This discovery is not a surprise: symptoms such as fatigue or muscle weakness are often associated with a decreased level of this hormone. But “the cause remains a mystery”, underlines the scientific journal.
izentrop wrote:They don't have these symptoms
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