Many patients with coronavirus defeat may experience long-term symptoms even after one year.
This was revealed in a medical study in China.
Remember that the term long code is used for patients with long-term symptoms of code.
The corona virus outbreak first began in the Chinese city of Wuhan, and the new study looked at people living with the disease there.
The study found that about 50 percent of the 1,200 people who defeated Cowde still had symptoms a year after the illness.
Specialists from hospitals in Beijing and Wuhan focused on patients in the Chinese province of Hubei, whose first cases of cod were reported in late 2019 in Wuhan.
The study found that 20% of patients who defeated Cod were still experiencing various symptoms such as fatigue or muscle weakness after 12 months.
Similarly, 17% had sleep problems and 11% had hair loss symptoms.
The researchers said that although several patients had recovered, some continued to have symptoms, especially those who had become very ill with the jump.
"The results indicate that some patients with COD do not fully recover after more than a year, and long-term medical care should be planned for them," he said.
He said it was by far the largest survey of patients recovering from the code who were being treated in hospitals.
The study included 1,276 people who had been beaten by Kood and discharged from Wuhan Hospital between January and May 2020.
The average age of the patients in the study was 59 years, and at 6 months and 12 months of their recovery, they were examined by medical examination, laboratory tests and a 6-minute walking test.
Fewer people reported symptom persistence than 6 months after completing one year, while 88% returned to pre-illness jobs.
According to the study, overall, these patients were healthier than those in Wuhan who did not experience code 19.
The researchers said that 3 out of 10 people had difficulty breathing even after one year, while they also had some degree of mental anxiety or depression.
4% of patients had respiratory problems even a year after recovery.
The study further found that a year later, 20 to 30 percent of patients with moderate to severe disease also had problems with oxygen in the blood, while 54 percent of patients on ventilator support had this problem.
To understand the long-term consequences of code, more research is needed, the researchers said.
"We have not yet fully understood the psychological symptoms, such as anxiety and depression, which were slightly higher a year later than six months ago," he said.
He said that it could be a part of the biological function of the disease caused by the virus or the physiological immune response may be behind it.
The results of the study were published in the medical journal The Lancet.