AGEING ARTERIES, LINGERING RISKS: COVID-19’S HIDDEN IMPACT ON HEART HEALTH
AGEING ARTERIES, LINGERING RISKS: COVID-19’S HIDDEN IMPACT ON HEART HEALTH
Introduction
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COVID-19, besides respiratory complications, has long-term cardiovascular consequences.
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The CARTESIAN study, the largest multinational investigation into this aspect, indicates that COVID survivors show accelerated vascular ageing, particularly women.
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Key finding: Arteries of survivors behave as if 5–10 years older.
Significance of Arterial Stiffening
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Arterial stiffness is measured by carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (PWV).
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Consequences include:
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Increased cardiac workload
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Elevated blood pressure
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Higher risk of heart attack, stroke, kidney disease, and dementia
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Stiffening is clinically silent until severe events occur.
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Global context: With ~700 million COVID survivors, even partial prevalence implies a substantial future healthcare burden.
The CARTESIAN Study
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Objective: Investigate whether COVID-19 leaves a long-term vascular imprint.
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Scope:
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2,390 participants, average age 50
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Across 18 countries and 38 research centers
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Groups: uninfected controls, non-hospitalised, hospitalised, ICU survivors
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Methodology:
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PWV measured at 6 months and 12 months post-infection
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Adjustments made for age, sex, blood pressure, diabetes, smoking
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Key Findings
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Overall Impact:
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Every COVID-positive group had stiffer arteries than controls
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PWV difference: ~0.4 m/s → equivalent to 5 years older arteries
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Gender Differences:
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Women showed more pronounced stiffening, independent of severity
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ICU women: arteries aged by ~10 years
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Persistent long COVID symptoms (fatigue, breathlessness) correlated with greater stiffening
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Immune Response Factor:
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Women mount stronger immune responses
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Lingering inflammation post-COVID may damage blood vessels
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Vaccination and Recovery
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Vaccination Effect:
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Lower arterial stiffness in vaccinated individuals, especially women
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Recovery Patterns:
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PWV stabilised or slightly improved after one year
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Complete return to baseline not observed
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Diverging Clinical Opinions
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Skeptics:
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Indian cardiologist Balbir Singh emphasizes lack of pre-COVID baseline data
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Notes no observable spike in hypertensive or ICU survivor heart issues in practice
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Supporters:
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US researchers (Cleveland Clinic, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Mount Sinai) note:
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History of COVID should guide cardiovascular prevention
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Observed myocarditis, palpitations, autonomic dysfunction (POTS)
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Mild COVID can still cause heart and vessel inflammation
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Implications for India
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CARTESIAN’s European focus limits South Asian representation
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Initial observations:
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Asians had less stiff arteries pre-COVID
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COVID eliminated this “ethnic advantage”
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India faces high cardiovascular disease burden, highlighting urgent need for domestic research and surveillance
Conclusion
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COVID-19 may accelerate vascular ageing, with women disproportionately affected.
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Long-term cardiovascular monitoring and preventive strategies are crucial.
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Vaccination mitigates risks, but invisible vascular damage persists in many survivors.
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Policy implication: India needs home-grown data to plan post-pandemic healthcare strategies.
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