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1 Loss of taste, hair loss... On February 18th, according to the overseas edition of the People's Daily, many people in Japan have long endured the after-effects of the new crown: loss of taste and nine months of diagnosis.
news pointed out that some patients said that after the diagnosis of neo-coronary pneumonia, thought they were mild patients, the condition will soon improve, but for a long time continued to endure burnout, hair loss, loss of taste and smell and other sequelae, recently such patients in Japan are not in the minority.
media said that the pathogenesis of these symptoms has not been solved, there is no cure.
Japanese doctors called on the public to continue to implement anti-epidemic measures, "can not rely on their own young, no old disease, got the new crown pneumonia and take it lightly."
, a 14-year-old high school student in Fukuoka City said he had "got strange toes" when he visited a hospital in January, according to the West Japan News.
his left, ring finger and middle finger swelled purple," "like being frosted."
the student was diagnosed with neo-crown pneumonia at the end of last year (2020), and that several confirmed cases had appeared in his classroom, where he attends weekly physical education classes.
the student had a fever of 38 degrees while recuperateing at home, as well as headaches and coughs, which improved in a day.
2 days after the fever, the toes began to swell and did not improve for a month.
the student returned to school, from time to time feel uncomfortable, nauseous, can not go to the community activities, eating also feel tasteless.
worried that he thought he was a new coronary mild illness, a little relieved, do not understand why this has become the case.
student's illness is not a case in point.
29-year-old woman who was diagnosed with new coronary pneumonia in December recently said she had difficulty tasting the dish, which lasted more than two months.
initially suspected she had been diagnosed because she couldn't eat the hamburger at all.
the first nasal congestion, tiredness and other symptoms soon improved, but then even the taste of spicy cabbage can not eat out.
"I've been wanting to eat strong food lately, " he says.
worried about whether my taste will recover.
50-year-old male patient in Fukuoka Prefecture, nine months after he was diagnosed with neo-crown pneumonia, is still feeling tired.
said his physique had completely changed and that "I am now as tired and breathing difficult as I was when I first contracted it."
every day I suspected that the disease again, tested and did not have a fever, so live, continue to this day.
Professor Cao Bin, director of respiratory medicine at the Sino-Japanese Friendship Hospital, published his findings in The Lancet, showing that about three-quarters of patients still reported persistent coronary symptoms six months after infection: 63 percent felt tired or muscle weakness, 23 percent were depressed, 26 percent had poor sleep, and the most severely ill still had breathing disorders six months later.
2 has memory impairment, according to CCTV news, as of the 15th local time, the Swedish capital Stockholm has been diagnosed with 214 children with new coronary long-term symptoms.
figures for the rest of the country are not yet available.
Astred Lindgren Children's Hospital in Stockholm recently found a surge in the number of children seeking medical attention for long-term symptoms of the new crown, Swedish television reported Wednesday.
, the hospital's chief physician for long-term childhood illnesses, said the average age of these children with new coronary long-term symptoms is 11 to 13.
fatigue, sore throat, headache and nausea, and recurrent infections are the most common symptoms in these cases.
some children also experience attention problems and memory impairments.
"some children can go on to school, and some are completely bedridden."
the new coronary long-term symptoms may be milder in children than in adults, "we have to invest resources in these children," Lind said.
, the hospital has organized consultations with psychologists, physiotherapists, cardiologists, pulmonologists and neurologists.
new British study suggests that long-term symptoms of the new crown may be more common than people think.
Office for National Statistics said in December that one in five new coronavirus infections had symptoms that lasted five weeks or more, and one in ten had symptoms that lasted 12 weeks or more.
, published last October, showed that about 2.5 percent of people infected with the new coronavirus in Sweden develop symptoms for two months or more.
the Swedish government last week decided to invest 50 million Swedish kronor ($6 million) to fund research into the long-term symptoms of the new crown, including how to treat sick children.
3 A large proportion of confirmed cases of children rose today (February 18), according to CCTV, ChinaNews.com and other media reports, according to Johns Hopkins University real-time statistics show that the cumulative number of new crown confirmed cases in the United States has exceeded 27.82 million, of which more than 490,000 deaths.
3 million children in the United States have been diagnosed with the new coronavirus since the outbreak began, according to a new report released by the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Children's Hospital Association.
reported that some 99,000 cases of the new coronavirus had been detected through testing in the last week alone.
two weeks, the number of cases of children infected with the new coronavirus increased by 8%.
currently 13 percent of all confirmed cases of coronary pneumonia in the United States.
, according to information provided by 24 states and New York City, children currently account for between 1.2 and 2.9 per cent of all hospitalizations for neo-crown pneumonia in the United States.
the United States, 4,030 people per 100,000 children are infected.
report counts new confirmed cases of childhood crowns reported across the United States.
the age of children vary from state to state, with most states defining the age of children as 0 to 19.
The American Academy of Pediatrics says new cases of coronary disease in children are now rare, but there is an urgent need to collect more data on the long-term effects of the new crown outbreak on children, including physical and mental health.