COVID-19 Symptoms: How It Affects Your Body?

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  • Doctors have discovered that COVID-19 has a range of clinical manifestations.
  • Life-threatening clots in the arteries of the lung known as pulmonary emboli.
  • Dysfunction in the lining of blood vessels, bleeding and clotting disorders may cause a stroke.
  • Red, puffy eyes referred to as pink eye and gastro problems.
  • Prickling or burning sensation in the hands and limbs indicate Guillain-Barré syndrome
  • The virus targets the epithelial cells by causing chest pain and shortness of breath.
  • Loss of the sense of smell known as anosmia and loss of taste known as dysgeusia.
  • Hive-like rashes, small red dots, and purplish discolorations on the legs.
  • Purple rashes that resemble chickenpox, measles, or chilblains may appear on the feet.

According to an article published in Bloomberg Quint and authored by Jason Gale et al., doctors are beginning to scope the coronavirus’s damage.

Clinical manifestations – a range of symptoms

Coronavirus is an enigmatic pathogen capable of harming the body in a myriad of unexpected, and sometimes lethal, ways. Clinical manifestations range from common cold-like symptoms and bronchitis to more severe diseases such as pneumonia, severe acute respiratory distress syndrome, multi-organ failure and even death.

The illness may occur as a direct result of viral infection, as well as the body’s response to it.

Here’s a snapshot of some of the symptoms Covid-19 causes, including some you might not have heard about.

Blood

Fever and inflammation may disrupt blood vessels, rendering blood cells more prone to clumping while interfering with the body’s ability to dissolve clots. That may trigger a clotting cascade that can lead to blood-vessel blockages in tissues and organs throughout the body. Life-threatening clots in the arteries of the lung, known as pulmonary emboli, may occur even after symptoms of the infection have resolved. Damaged blood vessels may become leaky and prone to bleeding. In children, inflammation of veins and arteries triggered by excessive immune activation may cause an illness similar to Kawasaki disease, an inflammatory disorder.

Brain

Dysfunction in the lining of blood vessels and the associated bleeding and clotting disorders may cause strokes and bleed in the brain. Patients may also experience headaches, dizziness, confusion, impaired consciousness, poor motor control, delirium, and hallucinations.

Eyes

Red, puffy eyes, sometimes referred to as pink eye, may result from infection in the conjunctiva, the tissue that lines the inside of the eyelids and covers the white part of the eye.

Gastrointestinal tract

Infection of cells lining the digestive tract may cause diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, and abdominal pain. Blood-vessel blockages caused by abnormal clotting have been found to damage the bowel, requiring emergency surgery and resection.

Hands

Prickling or burning sensation in the hands and limbs may indicate Guillain-Barré syndrome, a rare nervous-system disorder that may be triggered by aberrant immune responses to viral infection. Other symptoms of the syndrome include poor coordination, muscle weakness, and temporary paralysis.

Heart

Cardiac injury, sometimes leading to irregular heartbeat, heart failure, and cardiac arrest, may occur as a result of excess strain, inflammation of the heart muscle and coronary artery, blood clots, and overwhelming multi-organ illness. Infection, fever, and inflammation in people with existing heart-vessel blockages may cause their fatty plaques to break off, blocking or stopping blood heart-vessel blockages may cause their fatty plaques to break off, blocking or stopping blood flow in organs and tissues.

Limbs

Obstructions in large blood vessels may cause insufficient flow, or acute ischemia, in the limbs. Severe vascular complications can be lethal. At least one reported cases resulted in lower limb amputation.

Liver

Liver dysfunction may occur as a direct result of the viral infection, or more likely because of immune-mediated, systemic inflammation and circulatory blockages cutting blood flow to the organ.

Lungs

The virus targets the epithelial cells that line and protect the respiratory tract as well as the walls of the tiny grape-like air sacs, or alveoli, through which gas exchange occurs to oxygenate the blood. Damage to alveoli and inflammation in the lungs can cause pneumonia, characterized by chest pain and shortness of breath. In severe cases, the lack of oxygen can trigger respiratory distress syndrome, leading to multi-organ-system failure.

Kidneys

Acute kidney injury may result from clots and impaired blood supply, or as a direct result of infection.

Nose and tongue

While the virus can cause the sneezing and runny nose typical of a common cold, it can also disrupt the olfactory system, causing an abrupt full or partial loss of the sense of smell known as anosmia. The taste may also become distorted in a condition known as dysgeusia.

Skin

Hive-like rashes, small red dots, and purplish discolorations on the legs and abdomen are part of a complex category of so-called para-viral dermatoses that may result from the body’s immune response to the virus or from benign, superficial blood-vessel damage beneath the skin.

Toes

Purple rashes that resemble chickenpox, measles, or chilblains may appear on the feet, especially of children and younger adults.

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Source: BloombergQuint