It has been revealed that there are 60,000 patients in the UK in whom the symptoms of Code 19 persisted for more than 3 months.
This was revealed in a new medical study and such patients were found to suffer from long code.
According to the researchers, some people had mild to moderate symptoms but others were severely affected.
The study found that some people with long-term symptoms said they were fit and healthy before but are now confined to a wheelchair.
People with long-term symptoms reported difficulty breathing and fatigue, while some said that shopping or climbing stairs also forced them to stay in bed for several days.
According to Professor Specter of King's College London, the user data was obtained from the app, which found that 300,000 people reported symptoms for more than a month, dubbed Longcode.
Of those 300,000, 60,000 had symptoms for more than three months, while Matt Hancock, the UK's health secretary, said this week that some people still had symptoms six months after the illness.
Young people are still experiencing symptoms several months later, he said.
The term long code means that people whose symptoms of corona virus persist after 2 weeks.
The researchers also identified 16 symptoms seen in people with long codes, including fatigue or disability, vomiting, cholera, high body temperature, hair loss, chest pain, hallucinations, hallucinations, and respiratory problems. Nail discoloration of the nails, chills, loss of sense of time and place, body or muscle discomfort, insomnia, changes in heartbeat, rapid heartbeat such as more than a hundred times a minute, mental problems Such as memory impairment and confusion.
The study comes after a separate study recently found that patients recovering from Code 19 could have lung damage weeks later, while experiencing symptoms such as shortness of breath and coughing.
A study in Austria examined patients who had been hospitalized after contracting the corona virus.
Preliminary results of the study revealed that even 6 weeks after discharge from the hospital, 88% of patients had a dust-like pattern on the glass in their lungs, indicating organ damage, while 47% had difficulty breathing. Complained
"People who recover from code 19 experience a decline in lung function even after weeks," said Dr Sabina Shank, a researcher at the University of Innsbruck.
The results suggest that although code 19 may prolong the recovery process, the disease does not trigger the process of increasing lung scratches over time.
The findings were presented at the European Receptive Society International Congress.