Complications Coronavirus Can Cause

If you have COVID-19, the illness that comes from infection with the recently discovered coronavirus, your symptoms may be relatively mild and manageable at home. That’s true for most people. But if you’re older or have another illness such as diabetes or heart disease, you’re more at risk for the serious form of COVID-19.

Some people — about 1 in 6 — will have complications, including some that are life-threatening. Those complications may include the following.

Acute Respiratory Failure

When you have acute respiratory failure, your lungs might not pump enough oxygen into your blood or might not take enough carbon dioxide out. Both of these problems can happen at the same time.

In one study of 68 Chinese people who died of COVID-19, acute respiratory failure was the leading cause of death.

Pneumonia

A spike in pneumonia cases was the first sign of the new coronavirus in China. When you have pneumonia, the air sacs in your lungs become inflamed, making it harder to breathe.

Scientists who have studied images of very ill COVID-19 patients’ lungs found them filled with fluid, pus, and cell debris. In those cases, patients’ bodies weren’t able to transfer oxygen to the blood to keep their systems working properly.

Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS)

Early in the outbreak of COVID-19 in China, acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) was one of the most common complications.

With ARDS, the lungs are so severely damaged that fluid begins to leak into them. As a result, the body has trouble getting oxygen into the bloodstream. You may need mechanical help to breathe — such as a ventilator — until your lungs recover.

Acute Liver Injury

Research shows that the most seriously ill patients run the greatest risk of liver damage. Scientists aren’t sure yet whether the virus harms the liver or if it happens for another reason.

Acute liver injury and liver failure are life-threatening complications. (“Acute” means it happens suddenly.)

Acute Cardiac Injury

Studies of people in China who were hospitalized with COVID-19 found that some developed heart problems, including arrhythmias. Researchers studying people in Washington state who were very ill from COVID-19 and being treated in a hospital also found high levels of cardiac ailments. But it’s not clear whether the virus itself affected patients’ hearts, or if the damage happened simply because the illness caused such stress on their bodies overall.

COVID-19 also could cause cardiac problems that last long after people have recovered from the coronavirus infection. But since the illness is so new, that’s not clear yet.

Secondary Infection

A secondary infection means that you get an infection unrelated to the first problem you had. In this case, it means someone with COVID-19 gets infected with something else.

A review of several studies done so far on hospitalized COVID-19 patients found that secondary infection is a possible — but not common — complication. Sometimes, a person fighting off, ­or recovering from, a virus gets infected by bacteria. Strep and staph are common culprits. This can be serious enough to raise the risk of death.

Acute Kidney Injury

This doesn’t seem to be a common complication, but if it happens, it’s serious. If your kidneys stop working properly, doctors will start treatment to stop the damage. You might get dialysis (in which a machine filters your blood) until your kidneys get back to working normally. But sometimes, the damage doesn’t heal and people get chronic kidney disease, which would need to be managed long term.

Septic Shock

Sepsis happens when your body’s reaction to an infection misfires. The chemicals released into your bloodstream to battle the illness don’t trigger the right response, and instead your organs are damaged. If the process isn’t stopped, you can go into what’s called septic shock. If your blood pressure drops too much, septic shock can be fatal.

Septic shock affected some people with COVID-19 in China.

Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation

When you have disseminated intravascular coagulation, or DIC, the body’s blood-clotting response doesn’t work right. Abnormal clots form, which can lead to internal bleeding or organ failure.

In one study of Chinese COVID-19 patients, DIC was common among those who died.

Rhabdomylosis

This is an extremely rare condition, but it’s one that COVID-19 researchers are monitoring. In rhabdomylosis, the muscles break down and tissue dies. As cells fall apart, a protein called myoglobin floods the bloodstream. If your kidneys can’t flush it out of your blood quickly enough, it can overwhelm them and cause death.

Source: https://www.webmd.com/lung/coronavirus-complications#1

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