Painless, Silent Organ Damage Seen in Covid ‘Long Hauler’ Study Covid survivors are at increased risk for acute kidney injury Pandemic may stoke demand for dialysis and organ transplants Kidney damage is painless and silent, and it’s the latest ailment to be identified afflicting a large swath of Covid-19 survivors. Injury to the blood-filtering organ can occur among people who recover from the coronavirus at home, and escalates with the severity of Covid, a study found. Even non-hospitalized patients with no renal problems have almost a twofold higher risk of developing end-stage kidney disease, compared with someone who never had Covid. The findings, reported Wednesday in the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, highlight yet another pernicious burden of the pandemic that’s sickened more than 200 million people globally. The data show 7.8 extra people needing dialysis or a kidney transplant per 10,000 of these mild-to-moderate Covid patients. “This is not a small number, if you multiply by the huge number of Americans and also globally who might be ending up with end-stage kidney disease,” said Ziyad Al-Aly, director of the clinical epidemiology center at the Veterans Affairs St. Louis Health Care System in Missouri. “This is really huge, and it will literally shape our lives for probably the next decade or more.” Al-Aly, who led the study, and his colleagues in April mined data collected during the routine delivery of care from the Veterans Health Administration to document the cascade of debilitating effects that plague Covid survivors months after diagnosis, from blood clots, stroke, diabetes and breathing difficulties to heart, liver and kidney damage, depression, anxiety and memory loss. Al-Aly’s latest research compared the risks of kidney-related conditions in 89,216 VA users who survived Covid against more than 1.7 million counterparts without the pandemic disease. “What’s really problematic about kidney disease is that it’s really silent, that it doesn’t really manifest in pain or any other symptoms,” said Al-Aly, who also works as a nephrologist. Al-Aly and colleagues found non-hospitalized Covid patients have a 23% increased risk of suffering acute kidney injury within six months -- a condition that impedes the removal of waste and toxins from the blood. Doctors caring for Covid survivors must also be alert for a broad spectrum of kidney disease among these patients, according to Al-Aly. “If this is really happening at a wider scale -- and we think it is -- it’s just a matter of time before we see all of these people hitting the clinics, needing dialysis, needing transplantation that places a lot of burden on the patient himself or herself, and really is very costly to the health care system,” he said. https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-09-01/painless-silent-organ-damage-seen-in-large-long-hauler-study
Painless, Silent Organ Damage Seen in Covid ‘Long Hauler’ Study Covid survivors are at increased risk for acute kidney injury Pandemic may stoke demand for dialysis and organ transplants Kidney damage is painless and silent, and it’s the latest ailment to be identified afflicting a large swath of Covid-19 survivors. Injury to the blood-filtering organ can occur among people who recover from the coronavirus at home, and escalates with the severity of Covid, a study found. Even non-hospitalized patients with no renal problems have almost a twofold higher risk of developing end-stage kidney disease, compared with someone who never had Covid. The findings, reported Wednesday in the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, highlight yet another pernicious burden of the pandemic that’s sickened more than 200 million people globally. The data show 7.8 extra people needing dialysis or a kidney transplant per 10,000 of these mild-to-moderate Covid patients. “This is not a small number, if you multiply by the huge number of Americans and also globally who might be ending up with end-stage kidney disease,” said Ziyad Al-Aly, director of the clinical epidemiology center at the Veterans Affairs St. Louis Health Care System in Missouri. “This is really huge, and it will literally shape our lives for probably the next decade or more.” Al-Aly, who led the study, and his colleagues in April mined data collected during the routine delivery of care from the Veterans Health Administration to document the cascade of debilitating effects that plague Covid survivors months after diagnosis, from blood clots, stroke, diabetes and breathing difficulties to heart, liver and kidney damage, depression, anxiety and memory loss. Al-Aly’s latest research compared the risks of kidney-related conditions in 89,216 VA users who survived Covid against more than 1.7 million counterparts without the pandemic disease. “What’s really problematic about kidney disease is that it’s really silent, that it doesn’t really manifest in pain or any other symptoms,” said Al-Aly, who also works as a nephrologist. Al-Aly and colleagues found non-hospitalized Covid patients have a 23% increased risk of suffering acute kidney injury within six months -- a condition that impedes the removal of waste and toxins from the blood. Doctors caring for Covid survivors must also be alert for a broad spectrum of kidney disease among these patients, according to Al-Aly. “If this is really happening at a wider scale -- and we think it is -- it’s just a matter of time before we see all of these people hitting the clinics, needing dialysis, needing transplantation that places a lot of burden on the patient himself or herself, and really is very costly to the health care system,” he said. https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-09-01/painless-silent-organ-damage-seen-in-large-long-hauler-study 果小小 发表于 2021-12-28 19:04
Painless, Silent Organ Damage Seen in Covid ‘Long Hauler’ Study Covid survivors are at increased risk for acute kidney injury Pandemic may stoke demand for dialysis and organ transplants Kidney damage is painless and silent, and it’s the latest ailment to be identified afflicting a large swath of Covid-19 survivors. Injury to the blood-filtering organ can occur among people who recover from the coronavirus at home, and escalates with the severity of Covid, a study found. Even non-hospitalized patients with no renal problems have almost a twofold higher risk of developing end-stage kidney disease, compared with someone who never had Covid. The findings, reported Wednesday in the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, highlight yet another pernicious burden of the pandemic that’s sickened more than 200 million people globally. The data show 7.8 extra people needing dialysis or a kidney transplant per 10,000 of these mild-to-moderate Covid patients. “This is not a small number, if you multiply by the huge number of Americans and also globally who might be ending up with end-stage kidney disease,” said Ziyad Al-Aly, director of the clinical epidemiology center at the Veterans Affairs St. Louis Health Care System in Missouri. “This is really huge, and it will literally shape our lives for probably the next decade or more.” Al-Aly, who led the study, and his colleagues in April mined data collected during the routine delivery of care from the Veterans Health Administration to document the cascade of debilitating effects that plague Covid survivors months after diagnosis, from blood clots, stroke, diabetes and breathing difficulties to heart, liver and kidney damage, depression, anxiety and memory loss. Al-Aly’s latest research compared the risks of kidney-related conditions in 89,216 VA users who survived Covid against more than 1.7 million counterparts without the pandemic disease. “What’s really problematic about kidney disease is that it’s really silent, that it doesn’t really manifest in pain or any other symptoms,” said Al-Aly, who also works as a nephrologist. Al-Aly and colleagues found non-hospitalized Covid patients have a 23% increased risk of suffering acute kidney injury within six months -- a condition that impedes the removal of waste and toxins from the blood. Doctors caring for Covid survivors must also be alert for a broad spectrum of kidney disease among these patients, according to Al-Aly. “If this is really happening at a wider scale -- and we think it is -- it’s just a matter of time before we see all of these people hitting the clinics, needing dialysis, needing transplantation that places a lot of burden on the patient himself or herself, and really is very costly to the health care system,” he said. https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-09-01/painless-silent-organ-damage-seen-in-large-long-hauler-study 果小小 发表于 2021-12-28 19:04
🔥 最新回帖
有的人喜欢与众不同
别人都觉得危险的时候 也许自己是安全的
这个怎么说呢 有时候对有时候不对
事实上就是身边很多人都得了,但没有一个人死的,重症住院的都少。所以大家就更不把这病毒当回事了。 你看如果按照现在传播的速度,身边那么多感染的人,一旦死了几个,肯定就恐慌了。 现在的情况是,美国得新冠的人实在是太多了,身边无数例子。大家都是眼见为实,耳听为虚。不会被什么网上的数字吓着,只会看身边得病人的情况。这就是为啥很多欧美人不在乎的本质原因。
说活该可能听着有点mean了,但真的挺无语的。
为了吃点凉面,让这么多人得新冠,值当吗?又不是中国1958年那个年代,现在谁还缺那顿凉面。。。。。。
就算死亡率double, 很多人觉得自己运气格外好,只要不死自己,死别人都没关系。
🛋️ 沙发板凳
常在河边走。。。
我老公的公司,startup,30多个人,过去两个星期内,无一幸免,全部中招!!!!!! 一个都没落下。还好,都接种了疫苗,一半打了加强针,没有重症,也没有去ICU的。
这个新变种,比delta 猛太多了
据我小样本来看,不高。因为三样都占上的早就得了
楼主已经打了三针了
这个也得有条件才能塞50个人在一起啊
家属都还好吗?
那她也可以说的难听点啊,你活该孤独,难听的话谁不会说啊。。。
原来还是个show off贴
外食
外食的时候忘了戴口罩了
外食不戴口罩吧?
现在变种的症状很轻,传染率很高,再怎么注意都最终会传上的,除非打算下半辈子过铁面人的生活。
五十人的party,你这是求仁得仁,希望你们别再往外传染给别人吧
如果不是 ssRNA病毒,到可以指望群体免疫……
算了,千万别信那种想不出实在是在哪里得的这样的话。小红书里面经常有人说很严格防疫然后不知道怎么样阳性,然后你一翻她前两天帖子,就看带着孩子室内游乐场和中文学校上课都不戴口罩这样的照片。你说这个例子,外食,是只堂食?那还不知道自己怎么感染的么?
真想不出来么?
提示一下:出门的时候都戴口罩。。。 出去之后,就不一定戴了,比如,外食的时候。。。
外食的话就不要说戴口罩外出小心啊……外食你总不能隔着口罩吃东西吧
外食这一条足够感染很多次了。
还有不是懒的去医院测,而是像我同事那样的,全家都想测,但是最早只能预约到节后1月2号这种
lol, 你打算坚持不“二” 多少年?我觉得你同情他们的病得同时,说不定她们也同情你过的很凄苦。还是都各自收起廉价的同情吧
不同人感染的几率不同,就算感染了,症状也可能不同,这有啥不可思议的?
简单点儿说,出门频率高了些外食多了些,这就不能叫非常小心(当然,她没义务非常小心)。她觉得别人没感染“不可思议”也好,但说想不出自己是哪里感染到的,这就叫自欺欺人。
是的,前几波得的都是朋友的朋友,同事的亲戚这样间接的关系,这波都是亲戚朋友同事本人。
“我觉得你同情他们的病得同时”。。。 这从何说起呢?楼上明明是说不同情他们啊。。。
凄苦不凄苦,身体说了算,过几年再看,笑到最后的人才笑的最好。难道还是你觉得这些感染的疾患也许过不了几年身体健康的日子了所以才今朝有酒今朝醉?
笑到最后笑的最好,今朝有酒今朝醉,你说的好像得了covid 就是得了绝症似的,这才是你觉得内心恐怖的原因啊。你可以到时候问问楼主,是不是他们全都死光光了。还是全都long covid 下辈子没指望了。
外食啊
都是自己的日子,自己觉得值得就好,不要出来judge别人
呵呵,得了covid很多轻症然后感觉自愈的,其实伤了脏器,比如肾脏,有的还有微血栓,现在无痛无感觉,以后就知道后悔了。
那些阳性的也得活下去,不多想心大点也是对的
因为也许他们的生活本来就孤独凄苦没有乐趣,不靠party不靠旅游调剂一下就跟在山洞中过活一样,然后觉得别人的生活都和他们一样凄苦。
只要人多地方摘了口罩就有风险啊 这是自欺欺人还是脑子不行
有的也不是心大,而是真的感觉就是普通感冒,连普通感冒和流感也分不清。
你自己都没办法保证自己是不是无症状传染过啊。难道你是一个人与世隔绝的生活着的?你这样想岂不是给自己很大的心理压力。都不知道自己哪个脏器已经坏了。
“樓主真是....民不畏死”,下一句,奈何以死惧之?
我朋友里面只有丁克家庭现在还能做到离群索居,有孩子的基本上孩子实际去学校上学了以后就没办法离群索居了。孩子们都熬不下去了。
现代科技未必需要什么事情都in person,可以wfh, 可以网购。。。我一点压力都没有,每天过得都挺好的,身体一直健康,吃得好睡得香,你诅咒也没用,那些二的你不诅咒也没了健康,这就是差别
那些为了生计不得以去上班的,孩子们去上学的是没有办法,这种当然不在二之列。我说的二的就是现在party, 旅游,游轮的,为了一时享乐,搭上自己的身体健康。当然更二的人一直觉得covid只是普通感冒,所以才无所畏惧
好了,不和你聊了, 我看到了你深深的恐惧感。足够了。适当的时候看看外面的真实世界吧,别越幽居越害怕,自己吓死自己就行了。
我当然恐惧身体不健康了,身体不健康,挣多少钱也没用啊。我可不想病病歪歪这里疼那里痛的活着。外面的世界很美好,也要有个好身体才能享受的了,更何况我想享受的更长久一点。谁愿意为了一次party, 一次旅游,一次游轮年纪轻轻就给身体埋个炸弹呢
也许人家就是想融入,也像美国人一样潇潇洒洒搞个party对抗big flu
是的,还经常看到超市父母带孩子购物,自己戴口罩,孩子啥都不带,不知道怎么想的
你怎么知道的?
看新闻,bloomberg上,自己搜
又在那里危言耸听了。新冠流行至今都两年了吧。轻症有啥后遗症的话早就发现了。
为啥两年之内就一定发现了?当初非典有后遗症可是在接下来的十年内陆陆续续挂了的
感冒病毒也是终身携带的。人体本身携带十几种病毒呢。
打疫苗不妨感染啊,要说多少次呢
那我们要不要打赌啊。新冠轻症恢复的没有后遗症你要怎么说?十年后我们来看看吧。
你要多看些书。当年非典的后遗症都是药物导致的。重症住院后不得已上了一些药物导致脏器损伤。 而不是病毒本身造成了什么后遗症。多看看书好一点。
莫名其妙,你根据什么来打赌呢?你手里有什么筹码?
新闻上说的很清楚在轻症自愈的病人里发现在很大一部分都是肾脏已经受损,现在无痛无感觉,以后会诱发什么疾病还不知道。你听不见看不见愿意当缩头乌龟自己当呗,我犯得上跟你打什么赌?我可不愿意为了一次享乐就让承受肾脏受损的风险
我身边得过新冠轻症的起码几十个了吧。没听说过任何一个人有啥后遗症。 你真是张嘴就胡说八道啊。 你说的新闻贴出来看看呗。
我给你举非典的例子就是想告诉你,你不要信誓旦旦觉得所有后遗症两年就都可以显现了。不管是药物还是遗留的病毒后遗症,有些可以在身体里潜伏很久,比如水痘的病毒。更何况这个不仅仅是病毒的潜伏,这是有实例已经有脏器受损了。
新冠后遗症研究的paper还是挺多的。就是轻症也有。 你可以自己google一下。版上也见过讨论。
碰不上当然幸运,但是碰上了影响还是很大的。说白了就是拼基因。
所谓的后遗症就是丧失味觉啊什么的。最多丧失几个月而已。什么脏器损伤就是胡说八道。轻症病人很多病毒感染都没到达肺部。 我觉得很多人把轻症和重症没分清楚。
轻症很多人都没发烧,除了泰诺维生素啥都没吃。怎么造成药物损伤了? 先把轻症和重症搞清楚再说吧。
当然不是丧失味觉这种了。
我记得最危险的是会造成很多小血栓。然后就有可能造成各种器官损害。
这种研究见过不止一俩个的。
当然,这个是概率。不是每个人都会有。但是也不是个例。
就想问问你,如果感染上的人后果那么严重,是不是中国永远不能放开,结束隔离?
你凭什么说我是胡说八道?我告诉你我是看的新闻。倒底谁在张嘴胡说八道?还你身边的人?你身边及天下?和你这种没文化的人说话真是耽误时间。
Painless, Silent Organ Damage Seen in Covid ‘Long Hauler’ Study
Covid survivors are at increased risk for acute kidney injury Pandemic may stoke demand for dialysis and organ transplants
Kidney damage is painless and silent, and it’s the latest ailment to be identified afflicting a large swath of Covid-19 survivors.
Injury to the blood-filtering organ can occur among people who recover from the coronavirus at home, and escalates with the severity of Covid, a study found. Even non-hospitalized patients with no renal problems have almost a twofold higher risk of developing end-stage kidney disease, compared with someone who never had Covid.
The findings, reported Wednesday in the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, highlight yet another pernicious burden of the pandemic that’s sickened more than 200 million people globally.
The data show 7.8 extra people needing dialysis or a kidney transplant per 10,000 of these mild-to-moderate Covid patients.
“This is not a small number, if you multiply by the huge number of Americans and also globally who might be ending up with end-stage kidney disease,” said Ziyad Al-Aly, director of the clinical epidemiology center at the Veterans Affairs St. Louis Health Care System in Missouri. “This is really huge, and it will literally shape our lives for probably the next decade or more.”
Al-Aly, who led the study, and his colleagues in April mined data collected during the routine delivery of care from the Veterans Health Administration to document the cascade of debilitating effects that plague Covid survivors months after diagnosis, from blood clots, stroke, diabetes and breathing difficulties to heart, liver and kidney damage, depression, anxiety and memory loss.
Al-Aly’s latest research compared the risks of kidney-related conditions in 89,216 VA users who survived Covid against more than 1.7 million counterparts without the pandemic disease. “What’s really problematic about kidney disease is that it’s really silent, that it doesn’t really manifest in pain or any other symptoms,” said Al-Aly, who also works as a nephrologist.
Al-Aly and colleagues found non-hospitalized Covid patients have a 23% increased risk of suffering acute kidney injury within six months -- a condition that impedes the removal of waste and toxins from the blood.
Doctors caring for Covid survivors must also be alert for a broad spectrum of kidney disease among these patients, according to Al-Aly.
“If this is really happening at a wider scale -- and we think it is -- it’s just a matter of time before we see all of these people hitting the clinics, needing dialysis, needing transplantation that places a lot of burden on the patient himself or herself, and really is very costly to the health care system,” he said.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-09-01/painless-silent-organ-damage-seen-in-large-long-hauler-study
bless
没办法,很多人就是想做鸵鸟
我也同感
10万个中轻度得过新冠的病人只有7-8个肾脏出现了问题。请问这个比例是多大啊?算算几个零?并且这是把中度新冠病人都算上的。
10万个?不是1万么?
就像那种“意外”怀孕的……
就是,有的人以为自己的”同情”很值钱呢
那些闲不住的不知道这个世界有很多人都是宅男/女。 不出门呆家一辈子都可以。