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Wales Online
Wales Online
National
Mark Waghorn, SWNS & Richard Blackledge

Catching Covid 'increases risk of getting heart disease and diabetes'

People who catch Covid are at a heightened risk of developing heart disease and diabetes, a study has found. Infected patients were more likely to be diagnosed with the potentially deadly illnesses within three months, researchers say.

Cases of cardiovascular disease - conditions affecting the heart or blood vessels - rose by six times. Meanwhile diabetes rates almost doubled.

The findings were based on the medical records of more than 850,000 people across the UK. These included 428,000 Covid patients and the same number of controls.

They were matched by age, sex and family practice. Researchers then tracked them from the peak of the first wave in April 2020 until January 2022.

Covid patients had 81% more diagnoses of diabetes in the first four weeks after contracting the virus. Risk remained 27% higher for another eight weeks.

Covid was also associated with a six-fold increase in cardiovascular diseases - mainly due to the development of blood clots in the lungs and irregular heartbeats. The risk began to decline five weeks after infection and returned to baseline levels or lower within 12 weeks to one year.

The study was published in the journal PLOS Medicine. It identified no long-term increase in incidence for either condition.

Scientists are increasingly recognising Covid as a multi-system condition that can cause disease throughout the body - likely by triggering inflammation. The virus has also been linked with increasing the risk of Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases.

Co author Professor Ajay Shah, of King's College London, said: "The information provided by this very large population-based study on the longer-term effects of Covid-19 on development of cardiovascular conditions and diabetes will be extremely valuable to doctors managing the millions of people who have had Covid-19 by now. It's clear particular vigilance is required for at least the first three months after Covid-19."

Lead author Dr Emma Rezel-Potts, also from KCL, added: "Use of a large, national database of electronic health records from primary care has enabled us to characterise the risk of cardiovascular disease and diabetes mellitus during the acute and longer-term phases following Covid-19 infection.

"Whilst it is in the first four weeks that Covid-19 patients are most at risk of these outcomes, the risk of diabetes mellitus remains increased for at least 12 weeks. Clinical and public health interventions focusing on reducing diabetes risk among those recovering from Covid-19 over the longer-term may be very beneficial."

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