The first case of coronavirus reinfection has been confirmed in the U.S. in a 25-year-old Nevada man whose second case was more severe. It's the fifth confirmed reinfection case worldwide.
A health care worker tests a patient for the coronavirus in Nevada in July. Scientists say a 25-year-old Nevada man was infected with the virus twice. It is the first confirmed case of reinfection in the U.
S.S.A 25-year-old was infected twice with the coronavirus earlier this year, scientists in Nevada have confirmed. It is the first confirmed case of so-called reinfection with the virus in the U.S. and the fifth confirmed reinfection case worldwide. The cases underscore the importance of social distancing and wearing masks even if you were previously infected with the virus, and they raise questions about how the human immune system reacts to the virus.published Monday in the medical journal. The patient originally tested positive for the virus in April and had symptoms including a cough and nausea. He recovered and tested negative for the virus in May. But at the end of May, he went to an urgent care center with symptoms including fever, cough and dizziness. In early June, he tested positive again and ended up in the hospital. "The second infection was symptomatically more severe than the first," the authors of the study write. The patient survived his second bout with COVID-19. This is the second confirmed case of coronavirus reinfection in which the patient was sicker the second time. A patient inalso suffered a more serious case of COVID-19 the second time they were infected with the virus. Scientists are unsure why this might be. In theory, the body's immune system should make antibodies after the first infection that help it combat the virus more effectively if the person is exposed to the same virus again. "There are many reasons why a person might get sicker the second time around," explains Akiko Iwasaki, a professor of immunobiology at Yale University who was not involved in the Nevada study. For example,"they may have been exposed to a lot higher levels of the virus the second time around," she says, or the immune response from the first infection might be making the disease worse rather than better. But, she stresses,"this is all very speculative" because scientists still have very little information about the mechanisms at play. One of the biggest outstanding questions is how widespread reinfection might be. It's difficult to confirm cases in which a person is infected twice. Scientists must have the nasal swabs from both the first and second infection in order to compare the genomes of both virus samples. Only the most advanced hospital and laboratory facilities have the equipment and personnel to do the genome sequencing and analyze the results. As a result, most cases of reinfection are likely going undetected. Danny Altmann, a professor of immunology at Imperial College London, says it seems that about 90% of people who have experienced"a clear, symptomatic infection" have the antibodies to fight off another infection,"perhaps for about a year." "Of course, that leaves 10% who don't" have sufficient antibodies to fight off a second infection, he wrote in an email to NPR."[T]hey have precisely the same risk as anyone out there, thus a small but significant number of reinfections." The authors of the new study also raise the possibility that cases of people being infected multiple times could have implications for the efficacy of a coronavirus vaccine, since some people exposed to the virus may not be mounting sufficient immune responses to protect themselves from a second infection. But Iwasaki says such cases have no bearing on the efficacy of a future vaccine. The virus can deploy proteins to get in the way of the immune response, whereas a vaccine has none of those proteins, she explains."The good thing about a vaccine is that it can induce much better immunity, a much longer lasting immunity, than the natural exposure to the the virus," she says.
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Mexico's confirmed coronavirus cases rise to 814,328 -health ministryMexico's Health Ministry on Saturday reported 4,577 new confirmed cases of coronavirus infection and 135 additional fatalities, bringing the total in the country to 814,328 cases and 83,642 deaths.
Read more »
Los Angeles County Coronavirus Update: Public Health Confirms 28 New Deaths, 1,285 Positive CasesLos Angeles County Public Health reported 28 new deaths and an additional 1,285 new COVID-19 cases on Saturday. L.A. county is also seeing 701 current hospitalizations. The latest update from Los A…
Read more »
India cases cross 7 million as experts warn of complacencyNEW DELHI (AP) — India’s confirmed coronavirus toll crossed 7 million on Sunday with a number of new cases dipping in recent weeks, even as health experts warn of mask and distancing fatigue...
Read more »
Iran has highest day death toll from virus, currency plungesTEHRAN, Iran (AP) — Iran announced on Sunday its highest single-day death toll from the coronavirus with 251 confirmed dead, the same day local media reported two senior officials had been...
Read more »
Iran has highest day death toll from virus, currency plungesIran announced on Sunday its highest single-day death toll from the coronavirus with 251 confirmed dead, the same day local media reported two senior officials had been infected and the nation's currency plunged to its lowest level ever.
Read more »
Coronavirus live updates: U.S. air travel hits 7-month high; UK to reimpose controversial lockdownsThe coronavirus has infected more than 37.61 million people globally as of Monday, killing at least 1.07 million people so far.
Read more »
