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| Photo Credit: Kelly Sikkema |
The study from King’s College London, which is published on the pre-print server MedRxiv and has not been peer-reviewed, shows that while two thirds of individuals with post-COVID illness were healthy before infection, individuals with long illness duration were significantly more likely to have similar symptoms 1-2 months before developing COVID-19.
Most people with COVID-19 recover completely within a few days or weeks. However, some report ongoing symptoms including fatigue, ‘brain fog’, sneezing, a runny nose and headache long after infection. For some individuals, this may manifest as long COVID.
In this study, researchers first analyzed data from over 23,000 ZOE Symptom Study app users, who reported their health (whether healthy or unhealthy) at least once weekly, both before and after they had COVID-19. They found that individuals who had symptoms before they caught SARS-CoV-2 infection were significantly more likely to have a longer illness duration.
The researchers then assessed 1350 adults who reported long-term symptoms after COVID-19 (at least eight weeks, with nearly a thousand having symptoms for more than 12 weeks), matched with 1350 individuals whose symptoms had resolved within four weeks.







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