
Covid may increase the risk of heart attack and stroke by prematurely aging blood vessels
by five years, a new study has found. According to research published in the European Heart Journal, this would impact particularly women. Vaccinated individuals have a lower risk of stiffening in their arteries and showed stabilised symptoms over time, compared to people who had not been protected against Covid. Nearly 2,500 people from around the world were tested in the new study. They were categorised according to whether they already had Covid and according to its intensity. The tests were taken six months after an infection and then repeated after 12 months.

"If that is happening, we need to identify who is at risk at an early stage to prevent heart attacks and strokes."
Immune systems could be causing the difference between men and women, according to Bruno. She said that women have a more robust and rapid immune response, which can protect them from infection. But the same response can also damage blood vessels after the initial infection.
The number of hospital patients with respiratory symptoms testing positive for the virus has increased from 5.8% on 26 July to 7.6% on 10 August, according to the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA). Last month, a new Covid strain called the Stratus had spread across the UK, accounting for the highest proportion of cases - approximately 30%. Experts said the new strain resisted immunity and gave people a unique symptom of hoarse voice.

A variant of Covid is spreading faster in Ireland as health authorities issue a list of symptoms to look out for. The country is seeing a sharp rise in Covid cases linked to the XFG variant, also known as Stratus, which is fast spreading and has a symptom that those infected with it may miss.
461 new cases have been reported across Ireland in just the last week, as well as 158 hospitalisations. The official figures from the country's Health Protection Surveillance Centre (HPSC) also show the variant's share of confirmed cases has leapt from 33% six weeks ago to 87.5% this week.
461 new cases have been reported across Ireland in just the last week, as well as 158 hospitalisations. The official figures from the country's Health Protection Surveillance Centre (HPSC) also show the variant's share of confirmed cases has leapt from 33% six weeks ago to 87.5% this week.
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