Coronavirus patients can suffer irreversible heart damage as a result of their battle with the disease, a study of hospital patients has found.
More than half of infected patients who had heart scans while in hospital with Covid-19 showed abnormal changes to their organs.
One in eight had signs of ‘severe dysfunction’ in their heart and doctors couldn’t find any other explanation except the coronavirus.
In the UK around one in four people admitted to hospital with Covid-19 die of it but even survivors may be left with long-term illness, this research suggests.
The study, done by the British Heart Foundation, adds to concerns that coronavirus can cause widespread damage to the vital organs and leaves some ‘long-haulers’ with health problems that will last for months and even years after the infection.
Long-term effects can include coughing, shortness of breath, and reduced lung capacity, and there is also evidence the virus can affect the brain and kidneys. A lung doctor who helped treat Boris Johnson said the virus is ‘this generation’s polio’.
One British Heart Foundation researcher referred to Covid-19 as a ‘multi-system disease’ that can spread all around the body.
Fifty-five percent of them showed signs of damaging changes to their hearts which were affecting how well they pumped blood – and most of them had had healthy hearts before.
A further 13 percent of the patients showed severe dysfunction in their heart, which likely raised their risk of death or of having permanent illness.
Doctors and researchers in other studies have found that the virus can cause blood clots to form in the lungs and other vital organs.
Clots can be severely damaging and even fatal if they travel to their heart, brain, and lungs.
Coronavirus is thought to damage the heart and circulation system by triggering harmful internal swelling, called inflammation, which puts extra strain on the body.
The study was only done on patients who had their hearts scanned, meaning it is not clear how coronavirus affects the hearts of people who aren’t critically ill.
Heart scans are only generally given to people who doctors already suspect have a heart problem, so the proportion of those with serious issues is particularly high in this group.
Professor Dweck added: ‘Damage to the heart is known to occur in severe flu, but we were surprised to see so many patients with damage to their heart with Covid-19 and so many patients with severe dysfunction.
‘We now need to understand the exact mechanism of this damage, whether it is reversible and what the long-term consequences of Covid-19 infection are on the heart.’
Professor Dweck and his colleagues said more coronavirus patients should have their hearts scanned so doctors can pick up on problems and treat them.
Because the scans – called echocardiograms – involve physical contact with a patient they are generally not done unless doctors suspect something is wrong.
But of the patients in the study, one in three had their treatment changed because of what medics picked up on the scans.
They were given heart failure drugs, for example, or had their fluid intake controlled more strictly. These changes in treatment may have saved lives, the scientists said.
People with heart disease are at a higher risk of dying if they catch the coronavirus than other people, data has shown – and research like this may shine a light on why.
If people’s hearts are already damaged, they may have less capacity to cope with and recover from further damage that the coronavirus can cause.
Dr Sonya Babu-Narayan, associate medical director at the BHF, added: ‘Severe Covid-19 illness can result in damage to the heart and circulatory system.
‘We urgently need to understand more about why this is happening so we can provide appropriate care – both short and long term.
‘This global study – carried out at the height of the pandemic – shows that we must be on the lookout for heart complications in people with Covid-19 so that we can adapt their treatment if needed.’
The long-term effects of the virus are increasingly coming to light now that the virus has been around for months and millions of people have recovered.
The UK’s Department of Health has now launched a study into how people get affected in the long run amid concerns they might suffer from breathing problems and mental health issues.
In March, one doctor who helped treat Prime Minister Boris Johnson when he was intensive care with the virus, likened the illness to polio.
Professor Nicholas Hart, a lung doctor at St Thomas’ Hospital, said on Twitter: ‘Covid-19 is this generation’s polio. Patients have mild, moderate, and severe illnesses.
‘Large numbers of patients will have physical, cognitive, and psychological disability post-critical illness that will require long-term management.
‘We must plan ahead.’
The BHF study was published in the European Heart Journal – Cardiovascular Imaging.