All about Costochondritis, an unknown and painful sequel to COVID-19 | Omicron | Coronavirus | nnda-nnlt | PERU

Tedium and do you feel chest pain? More and more symptoms and sequelae due to the coronavirus are becoming known. There is talk of loss of smell, taste, hearing abilities, skin rashes, as well as muscle atrophy and lung damage, for example. The most recent consequence of the coronavirus is Costochondrites, an evil as complex as its name. Do you know what is it about?

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According to a publication on the website of the Johns Hopkins Pediatric Hospital, attached to the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, this pathology is one of the most frequent causes of chest pain also in children and adolescents, but it affects women more. girls.

And it is that, according to the United States National Library of Medicine, some cases of severe costochondritis have occurred in children who had the infection, symptoms and complications of this disease.

“New long-term consequences are being reported. Here, we report the case of severe costochondritis unresponsive to traditional treatment in a child who had a COVID-19 infection a few months earlier.. But what is it, how is it cured and what are the symptoms of the disease? Costocondritis?

WHAT IS COSTOCHONDRITIS?

Costochondritis is the medical term for inflammation of the cartilage that joins the ribs to the sternum, the bone in the center of the chest. It causes severe pain that can sometimes be accompanied by severe swelling, known as Tietze syndrome, explains the UK’s National Health Service.

WHAT CAUSES COSTOCHONDRITIS?

According to the Mayo Clinic, costochondritis is usually associated with an injury to the ribs or sternum, strain or overload caused by heavy lifting or strenuous exercise, and also, as would occur in the case of Covid, to recurrent cough that you have with the coronavirus disease.

WHAT ARE THE SYMPTOMS OF COSTOCHONDRITIS?

The main symptom is the pain caused by the inflammation in the cartilage that joins the ribs with the sternum, which can suggest a risk situation. The symptoms or pain associated with costochondritis are:

  • Pain in the left side of the sternum.
  • It is sharp, stabbing or gives a feeling of pressure.
  • Affects more than one rib.
  • It gets worse when you take a deep breath or when you cough.

Note: The pain can be confused with heart disease, lung disease, gastrointestinal problems, and osteoarthritis.

WHAT IS THE TREATMENT FOR COSTOCHONDRITIS?

Costochondritis may get better on its own after a few weeks, although it can last for several months or longer. The condition does not lead to any permanent problems, but can sometimes relapse.

HOW IS COSTOCHONDRITIS DETECTED?

At the moment there is no laboratory test to confirm a diagnosis of costochondritis, but some tests can help clarify if you have this pathology. An EKG, X-ray, CT scan, or MRI may be done to rule out other diseases.

WHAT ARE THE MOST FREQUENT SYMPTOMS OF PERSISTENT COVID?

Below, these are the most frequent symptoms of persistent Covid, according to research by the Sant’Orsola Hospital in Bologna:

  • Difficulty breathing.
  • Soft spot.
  • Tos.
  • Mental confusion.
  • Chest pain.
  • Tachycardia.
  • Balance disturbances.
  • Sickness.
  • Fever.

HOW LONG DOES IMMUNITY LAST AGAINST COVID-19?

The immunity generated by the person after contracting COVID-19 is an average of three months. After that period, the possibility of reinfection increases, according to what Luis Pampa, an infectious disease specialist at the National Institute of Health (INS), told the Andean news agency.

He explained that this is due to the duration of the antibodies that, after 90 days, begin to decline in both humoral and cellular immunity, which are responsible for defending the body against pathogens.

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