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COVID-19 is normally associated with the lungs and respiratory system. Most people think of symptoms such as coughing and shortness of breath when they think of COVID-19. However, COVID-19 can impact the entire body and cause a wide range of symptoms and complications.
Strokes, a vascular system condition, are among the most common complications for people hospitalized with severe COVID-19. This led many researchers to question if COVID-19 is a vascular disease with respiratory symptoms.
Like so many things about COVID-19, we’re still not 100 percent certain of the answer to that question. However, the latest research shows that the vascular symptoms of COVID-19 are caused by inflammation and not COVID-19.
This means COVID-19 is still considered a respiratory disease, but it can have serious effects on the vascular system. Read on to learn more.
Why COVID-19 is considered to be a respiratory disease
Medical professionals and researchers have been studying the link between COVID-19 and vascular symptoms since the beginning of the pandemic. They have learned that people with severe COVID-19 are at a risk of strokes, blood clots, and other vascular complications.
These observations led to several hypotheses that COVID-19 was a vascular disease with respiratory symptoms and not a respiratory disease.
Studies in 2020Trusted Source and 2021 supported this theory. These studies concluded that although people with mild to moderate COVID-19 only had respiratory symptoms, COVID-19 was primarily a vascular disease. However, additional studies published later in 2021Trusted Source and into 2022Trusted Source have contraindicated these findings. New studies indicate that COVID-19 doesn’t attack the vascular system at all.
Instead, these studies found that strokes and other vascular complications occur when infected respiratory cells cause extreme inflammation in other parts of your body.
This means that the virus itself isn’t attacking the lining of blood vessels; the blood vessel damage is coming from your immune system trying to attack those cells as they travel through your body. When your immune system over-responds to infected cells or if your blood vessels were already weak or damaged, it can lead to clotsTrusted Source and other vascular complications.
Knowing how COVID-19 affects the vascular system can help determine treatment
Many people who are hospitalized for COVID-19 are at increased risk of vascular complications. Knowing that these complications are part of an inflammatory immune system response can help doctors lower the risk of stroke and other serious vascular complications.
For example, people with SARS-CoV-2 infections who are at risk of vascular complications may be given blood thinners to help lower their risk. Doctors, medical researchers, and other professionals might also look for ways to lower inflammation while still helping the body fight COVID-19.
Understanding how COVID-19 affects the vascular system can also help researchers identify people who are most at risk of vascular complications, leading to targeted treatments and better outcomes.
Like many things related to COVID-19, more research about this connection still needs to be done.
Short and long-term effects of COVID-19 on the respiratory and vascular systems
COVID-19 is known to have both short-term and long-term symptoms and complications. Some of these symptoms are respiratory and sensory. For instance, you might’ve read articles about people who lost their sense of smell for months following the development of COVID-19.
There are also long-term complications and symptoms associated with the vascular symptom. Not everyone will have these symptoms, but studying them has been an important part of researchers understanding how COVID-19 affects the vascular system.
Long-term vascular complications of COVID-19 include:
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