rvallee
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Long-suffering SARS patients offer clues about the worrisome futures that may await COVID-19 long-haulers
https://www.businessinsider.com/covid-19-long-term-symptoms-sars-chronic-fatigue-2020-8
Now let's medicalize the crap out of this, shall well? Much less therapy, way more T-cells.
https://www.businessinsider.com/covid-19-long-term-symptoms-sars-chronic-fatigue-2020-8
Wow, sure looks like it wasn't super smart to dismiss those sick people as mentally ill and leave them off to fend for themselves. Or doing the same with every single past outbreak that lead to post-viral illnesses. One could actually describe that as a massive, catastrophic failure.
- Studies of SARS patients have shown that many suffered from symptoms resembling chronic fatigue syndrome years after their infections.
- Doctors are drawing a similar link between chronic fatigue and lingering COVID-19 symptoms.
- It's unclear how long these symptoms will last, since research into SARS diminished before treatments were developed.
- A SARS researcher thinks some people with long-lasting COVID-19 symptoms may never be able to return to work.
A 2011 study of 109 SARS patients in Toronto found that more than half hadn't returned to work a year after they were discharged from the ICU. And 2009 research in Hong Kong found that more than 40% of SARS patients studied there reported chronic fatigue four years after their illness began.
Ah, yes, the good old "we tried nothing so it's probably not real" strategy. Smart.But what will be crucial this time, Moldofsky added, is that funding continue for long-term follow-up research — unlike what happened when he sought to keep studying SARS.
Other than the fact that it happens with many outbreaks because it happens with many infectious diseases. Very smart that old "object permanence is overrated" strategy."Nobody wanted to touch it because there was no incentive to get involved in a disease that disappeared," Amesh Adalja, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins University Center for Health Security, told Business Insider. "If we would have had a countermeasure against SARS in 2003, we would have been in a much better place."
After studying the healthcare workers for an average of two years, Moldofsky found similarities between the SARS patients and people with chronic fatigue syndrome. Some of the healthcare workers, he added, wound up in and out of the hospital for years.
"They recovered from the acute illness, but they still had lingering symptoms," Moldofsky said.
His research also identified a bundle of symptoms — persistent fatigue, muscle pain, weakness, and non-restorative sleep — that were unique to SARS patients. He labeled the condition "chronic post-SARS syndrome."
"We showed that these were a distinct group of people, similar to the fibromyalgia [patients], but without as much pain," he said.
But after Moldofsky's paper was published in 2011, it fell into "relative obscurity" along with the rest of SARS research, he said.
Obviously not a forest, this is clearly just a bunch of trees."As happened after the SARS outbreak, a proportion of COVID-19 affected patients may go on to develop a severe post viral syndrome we term 'Post COVID-19 Syndrome,'" researchers at Manchester University wrote in June. They defined the condition as "a long term state of chronic fatigue" in which people experienced additional pain or brain fog after increased physical activity.
Can there be much more than talk and much less of that ME-denying jerk?A growing chorus of doctors, including Fauci, have likened long-lasting coronavirus symptoms to chronic fatigue syndrome, which is often characterized by cognitive impairment, muscle pain, and a debilitating lack of energy.
"There's talk in the the medical community about a chronic fatigue syndrome-like illness that could happen after coronavirus," Favini said.
Simon Wessely, former president of the Royal College of Psychiatrists, told New Scientist in April that he predicted the pandemic would lead to "many, many cases of post-infective fatigue syndrome."
Because those words are very familiar.Moldofsky said the current refrain among physicians is similar to the one he heard in 2011: "We don't know what to do with our patients. They're complaining they're sick, but they're not sick. We can't find anything wrong with them."
As more coronavirus patients struggle with the long-term aftermath of their infections, scientists have begun to investigate the drivers of these lasting symptoms. Researchers at King's College London are examining whether certain genetic or environmental factors might lead to post-COVID syndrome. In May, a coalition of scientists at the Open Medicine Foundation embarked on a multi-year study to see whether COVID-19 triggers chronic fatigue syndrome.
Rep. Jamie Raskin, a Democrat from Maryland, has also co-sponsored a bill in Congress that calls for $15 million in annual funding through 2024 to support research into COVID-related cases of chronic fatigue.
Now let's medicalize the crap out of this, shall well? Much less therapy, way more T-cells.