Published by: Diana Luai Awad, Dr Pharmacist on Wednesday 16. December 2020
COVID-19 reinfection. Can you get coronavirus twice
COVID-19 is not chickenpox: not when we are talking about 100% virulence or about lifelong immunity formation. While scientists are researching the interaction between human body and SARS-CoV-2 and possible ways their future coexistence, 5 cases of reinfection by the new coronavirus strain have been officially registered. We have been living with this virus for almost 1 year, but there still is not a definitive opinion about immunity stability after recovery.
Until recently, there was a hope to survive the disease in a light form and breathe in relief, but… the pandemic coronavirus reinfection has been detected in Hong Kong - a 33 years old man got COVID-19 again after 4,5 months since he recovered. Since then scientists have analysed every officially confirmed case of reinfect. The research results are being published by the influential medical journal The Lancet.
The last case examined by a scientific research group - a 25-years old Nevada (USA) citizen, who catched the coronavirus twice at a several weeks interval - in April and June 2020. In spite of expectations, the reinfection was symptomatically more severe than the first one: it was a different SARS-CoV-2 strain. The patient experienced hyperthermia, headache, cough, dizziness and indigestion. The situation evolved rapidly, and he needed urgent care along with artificial ventilation.
Before this case, patients from Belgium, Hong Kong, the Netherlands and Ecuador got coronavirus twice as well - the latter (from Ecuador) had more severe reinfection than he had initially.
The Reinfection Cases: 3 reasons to get coronavirus again
Past severe acute respiratory coronavirus syndrome does not provide protection against reinfection. The researchers are about to conceive an immunity response to COVID-19. By this moment, they have discovered 3 possible reasons of such a phenomenon:
- The researchers assume the subsequent viral load that causes strong reaction is acuter than the previous one, or a person faces a more virulent virus strain.
- The possible reason for exacerbation during reinfection can be the antibody-dependent enhancement of infection - coronavirus may use the patient immunity for massive attack on the body. This effect is nothing new - it has been already observed by doctors during beta-coronavirus and other infectious diseases, for example, dengue fever. If this occurs, human antibodies do not fight the virus, but help it capture a healthy cell and replicate pathogens.
- There is a hypothesis about simultaneous infection by both coronavirus strains, one of which went unnoticed during the first test.
Experts opinions
Dr Akiko Iwasaki, an immunologist at Yale University (USA) is convinced: “With every new reinfection case the scientific community is approaching to understanding the body's defense response to the invasion of the SARS-CoV-2”. The information will help to improve vaccinations to develop specific immunity from COVID.
Pulmonologist at Gandhi Medical College Dr Lokendra Dave says people should not worry:
"Reinfection is rare but it is not clear that it does not happen. So people should be cautious about Covid norms. Reinfection of corona is detected on the basis of blood test in which antibodies are tested. If patient was infected earlier, his blood must have antibodies. On the basis of antibodies, it is detected that whether it is case of reinfection or fresh case".
Florian Krammer, an immunologist at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai is sure: catch the coronavirus twice is rare:
“There are some people who just don’t develop good immune responses to certain pathogens. What is causing that? We’re not sure, but it’s rare, usually.”
Professor of immunology at Imperial college in London doesn’t provide the public with accurate forecasts about how long immunity to COVID will protect the body. She “supposes that those who have recovered from Covid-19 will probably have 90% protection “for a while”. But she also adds:
“I would bet my house on you being safe for possibly a year but not much longer,” he said. “The problem is that whenever an immunologist says anything about Covid immunity to a journalist, it’s right for about two weeks and then it’s completely wrong.”
Trust in your immunity, but remember to take care of yourself
Even if you have had the coronavirus, the risk of re-infection is not excluded. So, all the precautionary measures at the pharmacy and outside are still necessary and important:
- masks
- sanotizer
- gloves
- hands washing
- the sanitary schedule compliance
Be well!
Join our webinars about various pharmaceutical topics and ask questions: https://pharmacourses.ae/en/webinar/index
You can discuss the latest news with your colleagues in the MENA region in our chat in Telegram